shouldbeinbed
Rollin' along
- Location
- Manchester way
Millers book is good if a little self serving IMO.
I really enjoyed the movie and found it really interesting and revealing, especially the behind the scenes insights like when Contador attacked the Schlecks and Bruyneel was cursing him in the team car.
I find it hard to include LA in my compassionate view because if he did get drawn in to doping/cheating reluctantly at first (I don't know either way), once he was there it didn't seem to make him at all uncomfortable. In fact he bullied and coerced people who challenged him about it, and in effect wholeheartedly joined the structure that made the cheating so endemic in the first place. The other riders I've been reading about seem to have been dismayed and full of regret, in Pantani's case with devastating results.
Of course I wouldn't dare post anything so naïve in Pro Cycling - I've seen other people get flamed by the mafiosi in there for as much (sound familiar?).![]()
Come and post in Pro Racing.
I think that is mostly the view of those in the Pro Racing section. Apart from a few who know bugger all.![]()
Which really sums up the attitude in that forum
Unless you fit the mafioso view than you know nothing
If I remember correctly you posted some nonsense and repeated it over and over which demonstrated you had no desire to engage in discussion unless everyone accepted you were correct, which you weren't. And I see you still can't let it go...
You clearly read something that was not there then if that is what you think.I rest my case.... only the Omerta were allowed opinions..... suggesting that Armstrong needed to be brought down by proof and dealt with formally by the authorities did not fit with the lynch mob mentality
You clearly read something that was not there then if that is what you think.
Anyway, I have no intention of resurrecting that one here. Move on.![]()
I fully understand the bullying aspect of the hate for LA, but I don't understand why no one understands why he felt he had to challenge every time something looked like it was about to burst out in to the open. He like all the others was earning a substantial income from doing something he appears to really enjoy doing (cycling and winning) the lie was far too out of control to come clean without being caught in the act.I find it hard to include LA in my compassionate view because if he did get drawn in to doping/cheating reluctantly at first (I don't know either way), once he was there it didn't seem to make him at all uncomfortable. In fact he bullied and coerced people who challenged him about it, and in effect wholeheartedly joined the structure that made the cheating so endemic in the first place. The other riders I've been reading about seem to have been dismayed and full of regret, in Pantani's case with devastating results.
Of course I wouldn't dare post anything so naïve in Pro Cycling - I've seen other people get flamed by the mafiosi in there for as much (sound familiar?).![]()
Having seen the Pantani film and read David Millar's book I find it much more difficult than I might have thought to simply condemn them as 'cheats' in such a black-and-white way. I thought both the film and the book showed how insidious were the pressures to conform on relatively young, enthusiastic, and naïve riders, and how step by small step they were drawn into behaving in ways that they might previously have shunned.
I think I ended up with a more compassionate view of their mistakes, and a feeling that many of us have flaws that can be exploited by power, competitiveness, and money. The riders who refused to cheat, and whose careers suffered as a result, are obviously much more admirable, but I don't necessarily despise outright the ones I've learned about who succumbed. I'm not including LA in any of that though.
I find it hard to include LA in my compassionate view because if he did get drawn in to doping/cheating reluctantly at first (I don't know either way), once he was there it didn't seem to make him at all uncomfortable. In fact he bullied and coerced people who challenged him about it, and in effect wholeheartedly joined the structure that made the cheating so endemic in the first place. The other riders I've been reading about seem to have been dismayed and full of regret, in Pantani's case with devastating results.
Of course I wouldn't dare post anything so naïve in Pro Cycling - I've seen other people get flamed by the mafiosi in there for as much (sound familiar?).![]()