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Amanuel Ghebreigzabhier
Cycling
Vermote's comeback complete with contract extension at Visma | Lease a Bike: "A nice gesture"
08 August 2024
Sjoerd Valkering
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Latest Comments
rjb
13-07-2026
We're witnessing an existential crisis, and waht it means to be human in the midst of a soul-crushing rush to achieve the maximum physiological performance and race results for the benefit of sponsors and the men who ride in the cars and who live their lives in air-conditioned splendor. It's sad, but inevitable, a by-product of the continual arms race to produce the best machines and the best specimens to ride those machines, whatever the cost to the riders' wider life (or life span). We have witnessed similar developments in many sports and other types of businesses, as well as in the actual arms race, involving weapons of mass destruction, and now A.I., which some of its leaders admit may bring an end to human life. But if it does, they want to get there First, before their tech competitors or a foreign government. And the band played on. PS Actually, I do seen one small glimmer of hope: an effective labor uprising by riders that would set limits on training scheules, and that would provide on-site accommodations for the families (or relationships) of riders, so that they could live their full lives while training, as do most other athletes and people, in general.
rjb
13-07-2026
We're witnessing an existential crisis, and waht it means to be human in the midst of a soul-crushing rush to achieve the maximum physiological performance and race results for the benefit of sponsors and the men who ride in the cars and who live their lives in air-conditioned splendor. It's sad, but inevitable, a by-product of the continual arms race to produce the best machines and the best specimens to ride those machines, whatever the cost to the riders' wider life (or life span). We have witnessed similar developments in many sports and other types of businesses, as well as in the actual arms race, involving weapons of mass destruction, and now A.I., which some of its leaders admit may bring an end to human life. But if it does, they want to get there First, before their tech competitors or a foreign government. And the band played on. PS Actually, I do seen one small glimmer of hope: an effective labor uprising by riders that would set limits on training scheules, and that would provide on-site accommodations for the families (or relationships) of riders, so that they could live their full lives while training, as do most other athletes and people, in general.
rjb
13-07-2026
We're witnessing an existential crisis, and waht it means to be human in the midst of a soul-crushing rush to achieve the maximum physiological performance and race results for the benefit of sponsors and the men who ride in the cars and who live their lives in air-conditioned splendor. It's sad, but inevitable, a by-product of the continual arms race to produce the best machines and the best specimens to ride those machines, whatever the cost to the riders' wider life (or life span). We have witnessed similar developments in many sports and other types of businesses, as well as in the actual arms race, involving weapons of mass destruction, and now A.I., which some of its leaders admit may bring an end to human life. But if it does, they want to get there First, before their tech competitors or a foreign government. And the band played on. PS Actually, I do seen one small glimmer of hope: an effective labor uprising by riders that would set limits on training scheules, and that would provide on-site accommodations for the families (or relationships) of riders, so that they could live their full lives while training, as do most other athletes and people, in general.
rjb
13-07-2026
We're witnessing an existential crisis, and waht it means to be human in the midst of a soul-crushing rush to achieve the maximum physiological performance and race results for the benefit of sponsors and the men who ride in the cars and who live their lives in air-conditioned splendor. It's sad, but inevitable, a by-product of the continual arms race to produce the best machines and the best specimens to ride those machines, whatever the cost to the riders' wider life (or life span). We have witnessed similar developments in many sports and other types of businesses, as well as in the actual arms race, involving weapons of mass destruction, and now A.I., which some of its leaders admit may bring an end to human life. But if it does, they want to get there First, before their tech competitors or a foreign government. And the band played on. PS Actually, I do seen one small glimmer of hope: an effective labor uprising by riders that would set limits on training scheules, and that would provide on-site accommodations for the families (or relationships) of riders, so that they could live their full lives while training, as do most other athletes and people, in general.
rjb
13-07-2026
We're witnessing an existential crisis, and waht it means to be human in the midst of a soul-crushing rush to achieve the maximum physiological performance and race results for the benefit of sponsors and the men who ride in the cars and who live their lives in air-conditioned splendor. It's sad, but inevitable, a by-product of the continual arms race to produce the best machines and the best specimens to ride those machines, whatever the cost to the riders' wider life (or life span). We have witnessed similar developments in many sports and other types of businesses, as well as in the actual arms race, involving weapons of mass destruction, and now A.I., which some of its leaders admit may bring an end to human life. But if it does, they want to get there First, before their tech competitors or a foreign government. And the band played on. PS Actually, I do seen one small glimmer of hope: an effective labor uprising by riders that would set limits on training scheules, and that would provide on-site accommodations for the families (or relationships) of riders, so that they could live their full lives while training, as do most other athletes and people, in general.
rjb
13-07-2026
We're witnessing an existential crisis, and waht it means to be human in the midst of a soul-crushing rush to achieve the maximum physiological performance and race results for the benefit of sponsors and the men who ride in the cars and who live their lives in air-conditioned splendor. It's sad, but inevitable, a by-product of the continual arms race to produce the best machines and the best specimens to ride those machines, whatever the cost to the riders' wider life (or life span). We have witnessed similar developments in many sports and other types of businesses, as well as in the actual arms race, involving weapons of mass destruction, and now A.I., which some of its leaders admit may bring an end to human life. But if it does, they want to get there First, before their tech competitors or a foreign government. And the band played on. PS Actually, I do seen one small glimmer of hope: an effective labor uprising by riders that would set limits on training scheules, and that would provide on-site accommodations for the families (or relationships) of riders, so that they could live their full lives while training, as do most other athletes and people, in general.
merganzer
10-07-2026
No teammates on the Tourmalet. Too fast up the Tourmalet.
rjb
10-07-2026
Reef is whistling past the graveyard by denying what was plain to see: Tadej crushed Jonas, beating him in the ascent and, even more decisively on the descent, where most of the gap was created. In the world of reality, rather than the fantsay that Reef related, Jonas will not become a better descender between now and Paris, and Tadej won't get less adept at the skill. Moreover, it wasn't only about the mano y mono, between the two Tour leaders, but the unraveling of Visma, and the dominance of UAE, especially IDT. Barring injury or some other anomalous occurrence, we'll look back at Tadej's win on stage six as the day he won the 2026 TDF.
rjb
10-07-2026
Remco continues alternating between Dr. Jekyl and, as he did today post-race, Mr. Hyde, lashing out as others for not racing according to his preferences. This isn't the first time he's complained about opponents' tactics, but it's the first time I've heard him do it to a teammate, and that lack of discretion and team loyalty may come back to haunt him. I though he'd outgrown these childish pouts; obviously, I was mistaken.
robert65
06-07-2026
- How many times has Pog actually worn yellow now? The article hints he’s lost count—anyone got the exact stat?
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