Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta Ciclismo. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta Ciclismo. Mostrar todas las entradas

jueves, 30 de enero de 2020

Noticiero El Big Picture del Deporte: Martínez, Quintana y Bernal, Un podio de la CRI colombiana de gran nivel


Colombia, el país con una de las mejores canteras de ciclismo en el mundo, disfrutó en la contrarreloj individual en la categoría élite de los campeonatos nacionales de ciclismo colombiano 2020 el duelo de 3 ciclistas de gran prestigio mundial. Ganó la medalla de oro, Daniel Martínez (EF Education First), el especialista, con un tiempo de 48:02 y un promedio de 51.714 kms/hora. La medalla de plata fue para Nairo Quintana (Team Arkéa Samsic) a 28 segundos, con un promedio de 51.216 kms/hora. El bronce fue para el campeón del Tour de Francia 2019, Egan Bernal (Team Ineos), a 32 segundos, con un promedio de 51.146 kms/hora. 

La cuarta posición la ocupó Brandon Rivera (Team Ineos) a 1:51, con un promedio de 49.796 kms/hora. El quinto fue Esteban Chaves a 1:57, y un promedio de 49.697 kms/hora. 

Las diferencias con el resto de competidores fueron enormes. El sexto Carlos Ballesteros perdió 4:20 y el séptimo Winner Anacona 4:24.  


ProCyclingStats, 2020 National Championships Colombia - ITT (NC), Jan 30, 2020.

Time trial  »  Pesca  ›  Pesca   (41.4k).
Date: 30th January 2020
Avg. speed winner: 51.71 km/h
Race category: Men Elite
Start/finish: Pesca › Pesca

jueves, 16 de enero de 2020

Noticiero El Big Picture del Deporte: Cycling Tips, Why Egan Bernal climbed 20,000 meters in a week, and why you probably shouldn’t


Three hundred kilometers on a time trial bike. Twenty thousand meters (65,000ft) climbed in a single week. Four thousand kilometers ridden in a single month. These stats, from Geraint Thomas, Egan Bernal, and Chris Froome, point to a purposeful use of massive rides ahead of the professional season. But the pros, quite clearly, are not like the rest of us.
  • Froome put in about 4,000 kilometers of training – with plenty of climbing on top of the distance, of course – in January of 2018. Thomas uploaded a photo of his Garmin, mounted to TT bars, in December of 2019 with the odometer at 309.4 kilometers. While most of us were sleeping in, eating leftovers, celebrating, or recovering over New Year’s week, Bernal got in around 1,100 kilometers in on the bike.
  • For the pros, the weeks before racing kicks off again in mid-January to February offer and a chance to focus fully on building fitness without the stress of getting ready for a big race right around the corner. Often, it is a time to build back into form after a period away from rigorous training. For Ben Day, a high-performance coach with Mitchelton-Scott and for other athletes, that break in the action is the critical starting point for any offseason training program.
  • The idea is that these long rides stimulate adaptations related to aerobic endurance and also mitochondrial density, and improve the body’s ability to burn fat as fuel. Development in those critical areas ideally allows cyclists to work harder and more efficiently in training moving forward. Their bodies move oxygen better and use energy more efficiently.
  • Neal Henderson, who counts Rohan Dennis (Ineos) and Kasia Niewiadoma (Canyon-SRAM) among his many esteemed coaching clients, says he is a known “heretic” when it comes to base miles.
    “Some athletes will clearly perform pretty well off of a more volume and lowered intensity approach for certain types of efforts,” Henderson says. “You will find some other athletes who try to do that same type of training and will not gain the same benefit from it. They would find greater yield from doing three- or four-hour rides with more high-intensity efforts.”
  • Indeed, that specificity of training for each individual athlete is a major factor at play for the pros posting monster rides to Strava ahead of the season. There is value in such rides for the pros regardless of their opinions on base miles.

References: 

Cycling Tips, Why Egan Bernal climbed 20,000 meters in a week, and why you probably shouldn’t, Dane Cash, Jan. 16, 2020.

jueves, 9 de enero de 2020

Noticiero El Big Picture del Deporte: Velo News, The Grind: Gravel racers forge a new business model for U.S. racing


Gravel racers have become the new entrepreneurs of the American cycling space, pushing the business model of professional cycling into bold—if uncharted—new directions. They are taking risks and using their creativity to create business opportunities where they previously did not occur.
  • These riders piece together privateer racing programs funded by brands who pay for access to their social media, jersey space, word-of-mouth endorsement, and world-class talent. It’s a model that’s been popular amongst mountain bikers and cyclocross racers for years, however it’s one that’s totally new to the roadies who are entering the gravel space.
  • A few years ago I would have laughed at the concept of a professional gravel racer who spends five hours a day agonizing over tweets and Instagram video. I’m not laughing anymore. These riders are earning enough cash from their endorsements to make mortgage payments. And chapeau to them—they have made gravel racing a legitimate professional undertaking. 
  • Let me reiterate myself: These riders are helping push the business of American pro bike racing in a new direction. You’ve likely read our coverage of the changing landscape of American cycling. The Amgen Tour of California has gone the way of the dinosaurs. Domestic pro road teams are heading overseas to get racing days. Amateur racers like Justin Williams can grab more media attention than WorldTour pros. Anyone, it seems, can launch their own mass-participant cycling event. And yes, big time gravel events are booming.

References: 

Velo News, The Grind: Gravel racers forge a new business model for U.S. racing, Fred Dreier, January 8, 2020.


Complementary content:

Global Cycling Network, GCN's Top Five Gravel Events, May 31, 2018.



Check out GCN's top five must-do gravel events. From the Dirty Kanza to the epic Silk Road Mountain Race, which one will you choose next!?


Global Cycling Network, Can Simon Survive A True US Gravel Race? | Racing the Steamboat Epic, Aug 25, 2019.



Can Si survive a proper gravel race? The Steamboat gravel race in Colorado is a true American gravel race, with a mixture of professional and amateur riders tackling the challenging high altitude route together.
 

martes, 7 de enero de 2020

Noticiero El Big Picture del Deporte: L'Équipe, Emmanuel Hubert, patron d'Arkéa-Samsic, nourrit « de fortes ambitions » sur le Tour 2020

L'Équipe, Emmanuel Hubert, patron d'Arkéa-Samsic,  nourrit « de fortes ambitions » sur le Tour 2020, 7 janvier 2020. 

Emmanuel Hubert (manager général d'Arkéa-Samsic) : « Notre recrutement 2020 a clairement été effectué afin de pouvoir participer aux plus grandes courses du calendrier. Nous nourrissons de fortes ambitions (sur le Tour de France 2020). Les arrivées de Nairo Quintana, Nacer Bouhanni et Diego Rosa avaient pour but de démontrer nos intentions à ce niveau-là. Le prochain Tour de France a été dessiné pour les grimpeurs et nous avons construit une équipe riche tant au niveau individuel que sur le plan collectif, aussi bien pour cette année que pour les suivantes.
  • Nairo Quintana a gagné une étape du Tour de France en 2019(la 18e étape, entre Embrun et Valloire). Il a aussi déjà terminé par deux fois deuxième du classement général du Tour en 2013 et 2015, et une fois troisième en 2016. Le champion de France Warren Barguil s'est quant à lui classé dixième du Tour l'an passé en étant au contact des tout meilleurs pendant trois semaines. Avec deux grimpeurs d'un tel niveau, nous pouvons espérer de belles choses sur cette édition du Tour de France 2020.

lunes, 6 de enero de 2020

Noticiero El Big Picture del Deporte: Cycling Weekly, Being physically fit and strong isn’t enough. Mental resilience is the final pillar of success.


It is clear that mental fortitude is an essential part of racing; it is not necessarily the strongest who wins, but the rider with the most grit. You can be as fit as you like, but if you can’t hack it when the unexpected is thrown your way, that’s a missed opportunity to excel. When the going gets tough, others will crumble. Your mental resilience can be improved through adversity training, whether this is by the conscious inclusion of specific sessions, or just by re-thinking how you factor-in the unplanned stresses of life. Indoors or outside, doing it once a week is all that’s needed for progression. Engage your mind, add grit, and your legs will do the rest.
  • The ability to stay alert, resilient and motivated in adverse situations – critical for all cyclists – can be trained.
  • Sports psycho-biologist Professor Samuele Marcora, who researches mental fatigue at the University of Bologna, points out that “mental fatigue increases your perception of effort for the same power output, and so will decrease your performance.” Therefore, instead of burying yourself to notch up your FTP by a watt or two, improving your resilience to mental fatigue might allow you to more effectively access your fitness reserves.
  • As well as having physiological effects, mental fatigue can cause a “decline in your ability to perform cognitive tasks and your ability to concentrate,” says Marcora. Given the tactical nature of road racing – or the cognitive challenge that is avoiding the potholes of our Great British B-roads – resilience to mental fatigue could make the difference that gets you in the winning break or means you stay rubber-side-down on an all-day ride.
  • There are two ways to approach increasing your mental resilience. The first is concurrent brain-endurance training: this is where a cognitive task is performed at the same time as the physical task of cycling. In this way “your brain is more engaged,” says Marcora. The second is the pre-fatiguing method, which involves performing a cognitive task before a session on the bike.

References: 



Complementary Content:


Outside, Fatigue Is All in Your Head, Nick Heil, Sep 19, 2016.

Samuele Marcora, the 47-year-old director of research at the School of Sport and Exercise Sciences at England’s University of Kent, doesn’t consider himself an endurance athlete. But he’s fast becoming one of the most talked-about researchers in the field. The article, titled “Mental Fatigue Impairs Physical Performance in Humans” and published in the Journal of Applied Physiology, suggested that fatigue and the role it plays in endurance sports might be mostly in your head.
  • The implications are huge. If fatigue is grounded in perception, the logic goes, then an athlete can train to manage it, opening up new frontiers of performance. The theory, which Marcora calls the psychobiological model of exercise tolerance, because it combines the fields of psychology and biology, revises the long-dominant “central governor” theory, attributed to South African exercise physiologist Tim Noakes. Noakes argues that fatigue is a largely physical phenomenon that occurs when the brain signals depleted muscles that they’re out of gas.
  • Marcora believes that perception is the regulatory mechanism and that it slows you down before you reach your biological limit. “There’s no physical reason for exertion to feel any harder, but when you’re mentally fatigued, it does,” he says. “Therefore you reach what you perceive as a maximal effort earlier.”
  • Marcora’s research doesn’t mean that fatigue is entirely imagined. Both the brain and the body experience very real factors of exhaustion, including reduced glycogen. The point, he says, is for athletes to understand that most of us can keep going after our brains start telling us to stop.

University of Kent, Mind over muscle? Limits to Endurance Performance | Professor Samuele Marcora | Think Kent, Mar 7, 2016


Muscle fatigue due to limited oxygen delivery and lactic acid accumulation is thought to set the speed an endurance athlete can sustain during a competition (e.g. the marathon). This is because above that speed, muscle fatigue would develop too quickly and the athlete would reach exhaustion before the finish line. In this lecture, Professor Samuele Marcora from the University of Kent challenges this physiological model of endurance performance, and proposes an alternative model in which perception of effort and motivation are the main factors determining endurance performance. He also discusses how this psychobiological model can be used to develop innovative interventions aimed at further improving endurance performance.

Andy Kirkland, The Psychobiological Model: Prof Sam Marcora, Nov 17, 2017




domingo, 5 de enero de 2020

Noticiero El Big Picture del Deporte: Velo News, Mathieu van der Poel, cyclist of the year


VeloNews Awards 2019: Mathieu van der Poel, cyclist of the year

In 2019 Mathieu van der Poel redefined what it meant to be a successful bicycle racer, taking huge wins across road, cyclocross, and cross-country mountain biking. 
  • Primož Roglič had more wins. Julian Alaphilippe had 14 days in yellow. Annemiek van Vleuten had rainbow stripes, again and again.
  • Yet Mathieu van der Poel’s accomplishments throughout the 2019 season stand apart from these great champions. Why? This season van der Poel accomplished something so incredibly rare in our sport. At age 24 he won at the highest international level in cyclocross, mountain bike racing, and professional road cycling.
  • His victories came in thrilling fashion, against champions who are at the very pinnacle of their discipline. And he did it for months on end.
  • The sport of cycling finds itself at the end of 2019—waiting to see what challenge van der Poel will tackle next. His stated goal is to win the 2020 Olympic mountain bike race in Tokyo. Beyond that, virtually any cycling race, from Paris-Roubaix to the Absa Cape Epic, seems well within his grasp.

References:

Velo News, VeloNews Awards 2019: Mathieu van der Poel, cyclist of the year, Fred Dreier, January 2, 2020. 

sábado, 4 de enero de 2020

Noticiero El Big Picture del Deporte: Cycling Weekly, Julian Alaphilippe on the brink of a first French winner of the Tour de France since 1985


Julian Alaphilippe (Deceuninck-Quick-Step) has so far declined to confirm whether or not he intends to target the yellow jersey in 2020, but we have a sneaky suspicion that the yellow jersey is already in his sights. It is in his interest to play down expectations so that he can again enter the race as an underdog. But we might just be on the brink of a first French winner of the Tour de France since 1985.
  • The Frenchman was able to become a yellow jersey contender in 2019 partly because nobody expected him to put in such a defence of it. For that matter neither did he – he attacked exuberantly in the first few weeks of the race without expecting to have a GC race to fight, and surprised himself by the strength of his legs in the time trial and the mountains, before fatigue at last caught up with him during the final week.
If he makes the yellow jersey his primary target, and plans a training routine around it, could he ride even better this time?

References: 

Cycling Weekly, Seven bold predictions for the 2020 racing season, Stephen Puddicombe, January 1, 2020.

viernes, 3 de enero de 2020

Noticiero El Big Picture del Deporte: Cycling News, Team Ineos has elevated winning the Tour de France to a fine art, leaving just a few crumbs for their rivals


Team Ineos has elevated winning the Tour de France to a fine art, leaving just a few crumbs for their rivals. Team Sky – and now Team Ineos – have shaped the last decade of the men's WorldTour and look set to continue their Tour de France dominance for another decade with Egan Bernal. They could even aim to win all three Grand Tours in 2020. Team Ineos have used their big budget, talented riders and disciplined approach to stack up marginal gains and emerge as the very best super team in the men's WorldTour.
  • Team Ineos are arguably the best team of the last decade, having won the Tour de France six times since 2012 while in their former guise of Team Sky, and then a seventh time with Egan Bernal as Team Ineos in 2019.
  • Team Ineos are the marmite of pro cycling, with their detractors as numerous as their fans. The team management and sponsors do not seem to care, and Dave Brailsford makes sure his bot-like riders are focused and successful rather than outgoing and original.
  • Thomas and Bernal started the Tour de France as joint team leaders, avoiding mishaps and marking Julian Alaphilippe before Bernal made his move on the Col de l'Iseran during the shortened stage to Tignes. He went on to become the first-ever Colombian to win La Grande Boucle and, at just 22, the youngest winner in more than 100 years. Thomas joined him on the podium to give Team Ineos a rare, but indicative, 1-2 in Paris.

Key riders

Egan Bernal: The former mountain-bike racer has always appeared destined for greatness and confirmed it in 2019 with victory at the Tour de France. Bernal oozes class and calm, with his climbing and bike skills making him perfectly suited to the three-week demands of Grand Tour racing. Gianni Savio, who helped Bernal turn professional at 19 and then sold him on to Dave Brailsford, warned it was the start of the Bernal era. It definitely feels like it, and Bernal will be back at the Tour de France in 2020.

Chris Froome: Multiple fractures, including an open femur fracture, would have convinced most 34-year-old riders to retire, but Froome is determined to make a comeback and ride the 2020 Tour de France, even if he faces a race against time to be at his best in July.

Geraint Thomas: The likeable Welshman insists his 2018 Tour de France victory has left him wanting more. However, he turns 34 in May and may have to work for Bernal if he turns down the chance to lead at the Giro d'Italia.


References: 

Cycling News, 2020 Team Preview: Team Ineos, Stephen Farrand, Jan. 3, 2020.

viernes, 22 de noviembre de 2019

The Big Picture of Sport News: Total Sportek, 25 World’s Most Popular Sports (Ranked by 13 factors)


Sports journalists have been facing this conundrum of ranking sports for some time now.  For ranking any sport’s popularity it is imperative that we set the criteria for ranking first. For us (Total Sportek) TV viewership isn’t the only criteria for a sports popularity rather it should be the number of other factors combined to get the best popularity ranking.

  • These are the factors we consider in ranking the top 25 sports in the world. So lets begin our countdown for the biggest, most popular sports in the World.
  • CRITERIA USED.
    1. Global base & audience
    2. TV  Viewership numbers
    3. Number Professional leagues around the world
    4. TV rights deals
    5. Endorsement & Sponsorship deals
    6. Average athlete salary in top league
    7. Biggest competition & (number of countries represented)
    8. Social media presence
    9. Prominence in sports headlines on media outlets (websites, tv)
    10. Relevancy through the year
    11. Regional dominance
    12. Gender equality
    13. Accessible to general public worldwide

#1. Football/Soccer



With over 4 billion followers of football, it is by far the most popular sport in the world. Football is one of the most accessible sport in the world and there is hardly anyone in this world who has not kick a ball at some point in their life. Football dominate sports headlines in some of the major countries in the world including almost all European nations like United Kingdom, Germany, France, Spain etc. In South America football is more than just a game, it represent dreams and joy for kids in Brazil, Argentina and other latin countries.

Most watched competition in the world: Football World Cup is by far the most watched sports competition in the world. 3.9 billion people tune in at some point during the FIFA World Cup 2014 making it by far the biggest sport competition. While the final of 2014 world cup was watched by as many 700 million people all around the globe.

Highest paying sports competitions: $1.5 Billion is awarded in prize money and bonuses every year in UEFA Champions league, which is the european elite club competition where clubs from 54 countries participate. in fact four of the top 5 competitions with highest prize money are football events (Champions League, FIFA World Cup, Europa League, UEFA Euro).

Most expensive sports TV rights deal: English Premier League (English top football division) is the most watched professional sport league in the world. it broadcast in 212 territories across the world with over 5 billion viewer tuning in to live action at some point every season. SkySports and BT Sports paid over £5.3 billion to get premier league rights in the UK for three years while another £3 billion will be generated from international rights.

Highest Paid Athletes: Top players like Ronaldo and Messi are paid around £300,000 a week in salary by their respective clubs while Ronaldo and Messi also feature in the top 5 of the most endorsed athletes in the world.

Richest Sports Teams: If we talk about the richest sports team in the world, around 30 clubs feature in the top 50 list of most valuable sports teams.



#2. Basketball


Basketball has over 1 billion followers. Its a major sport in USA with NBA generating over $4.75 billion a year in revenue. Established Professional leagues in Spain, Greece, Turkey, Italy, France, Argentina, China and more leagues getting setup every year makes it the fastest growing sport in the world.

Third most powerful sports league in the world: NBA (American basketball league) is the third biggest professional league in all sports behind NFL (American football) and Premier League (Football/Soccer) in terms of revenue over $4.75 billion was generated in 2014 in terms of revenue.

Highest Average Salary:
NBA average yearly salary for athlete is around $4.4 million a year, thats second highest average wage of any sport league in the world. While top 40 players in NBA earn more than $13 million a year in salary while top 10 earn more than $22 million a year with Kobe Bryant earning as much as $25 million a year.

Endorsement Deals: Lebrone James, Kevin Durant and Kobe Bryant features in the top 10 list of highest paid athletes with their massive salaries and endorsement deals with take their yearly income well over $50 million a year.

Fastest growing sport: Basketball is also the fastest growing sport on every scale from revenues, to competitions/leagues. More and more professional leagues are getting established in countries across the world, specially in easter european countries like Poland, Hungary, Czech Republic, Serbia, Lithuania where basketball is easily the second favorite sport.


#3. Cricket


Estimated 2 billion+ followers makes cricket one of the most popular sport mainly in commomwealth countries like England, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Australia, New Zealand, Carribeans and South Africa.

Cricket is a dominating sport in many countries specially from indian-sub continent. Pakistan, Indian, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh while England, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa are other big cricketing nations with cricket as second favorite sport. Cricket is also very popular in Caribbeans with international team callled West Indies is comprised of players from different countries across Caribbeans. Cricket also has its roots in countries like Ireland, Zimbabwe, Kenya, Holland.


#4. Tennis


A global reach and over a 1 billion followers makes Tennis the most popular individual based sport. It comes up triumph in many of our criteria factors.

Highest prize money in individual sport: All four grand slams, Australia Open, French Open, Wimbledon and US offer huge prize money and the prize money given to winners mens and women singles event is the highest in any of the individual sport.

The most global calendar year: Tennis events divided in four categories (ATP 250, ATP 500, ATP Masters and Grand Slams) takes place around the world throughout every years. Only football has more global venues than Tennis which is coverage in almost every part of the world.

Most prestigious sport event:
Wimbledon is not only the most prestigious tennis event but also in all sport. Over 1 billion people tune in at some point during Wimbledon 2015 and 2014. While 17.3 million viewers tuned in to BBC One only in UK in 2013 Wimbledon final.


#5. Athletics


Athletic is by far the most global sport of them all which include several disciplines of course with Running, long jump and other track/field events. Athletics is also the high point of Olympic games as Athletics based sports are the most watched during any Olympic event.

Most countries represented in Athletics: Athletics is the most represented sport in the olympics with athletes from almost all countries participating in some form of the diciplines in Athletics.

Most watched single olympic event: 100m final gold medal sprint race in 2012 Olympics was the most watched event in Olympic history with over 1 billion tv views across the world.


#6. Rugby


Rugby is a major sport in some of the most economical developed countries like All four home nations of United Kindom (England, Wales, Ireland and Scotland) in souther hemisphere countries like Australia, New Zealand and South africa also boost huge popularity in Rugby.

Second most lucrative Sports World Cup: 2015 Rugby World Cup was the biggest Rugby event in history which took place in England and Wales. It generated in access of £250 million in revenue which was alot more than what was expected.

Second most watched & Attended competition: Rugby world cup 2015 was the most attended sports event behind FIFA World cup 2014. Over 2.47 million tickets were sold with around half a million (480,000) fans traveling from oversees (24 countries).

Highest ever TV ratings in UK: ITV’s coverage of opening ceremony and opening England match was watched by 8.7 million UK viewers on average making it the most watched sports event in UK.


#7. Formula 1


550 million people tune in every year at some stage of Formula 1 season which runs from March to November. F1 is by far the most popular motoSport in the world.

Most lucrative motor-sport: As far as the yearly revenue is concerned Formula 1 generate somewhere between $1.5 to $2 billion a year. Which is soundly distributed among 10 f1 teams who in return spend between $100 million to $500 million a season on elite level motor engineers, research & development and of course on driver salaries.

Massive driver contracts: On formula 1 drivers makes around $5 million a year while the top drivers like Sebastian Vettel who has a $50 million a year contract with Ferrari, current world champion Lewis Hamilton who signed a new deal worth $40 million a year two of the highest paid athletes around.


#8. Boxing


Only combat sport in the list, boxing is truly global just like Tennis and Athletics. Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao has dominated the rich list in last 10 years while boxing also boost some of the greatest athletes to have ever lived. Boxing is major sport in countries like USA, Mexico, Latin America, United Kingdom, Philippines, Japan, Russia and some eastern European countries like Ukrain, Poland, Romania.

Highest grossing fight of all times: Floyd Mayweather vs Many Pacquiao was the highest grossing boxing fight of all times generating over $400 million in revenue. While Mayweather took home record $250 from nights work while Pacquiao earned $120. Both fighters has kind of dominated forbes athlete rich-list for best part of last 8 years.


#9. Ice Hockey


By far the biggest winter sport in the world and although it is popular or played in specific countries like Canada, Russia, USA, Scandinavian countries like (Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden) some easter european countries like Poland, Slovakia, Czech Republic it can still boost huge popularity specially during the world championships and european championships.


#10: Volleyball


With no intricacies involved, this sport is as simple as you like. And probably it is the simplicity of this sport that makes it so famous among its fans. Take a trip to the hunger struck African countries or try going to the beaches of Australia, you will find people playing this sport everywhere. On professional level, players with tall heights are preferred because of the extra reach they have so if your height is somewhere to the north of 6 feet, you should fancy your chances in this sport.

Most popular in developing countries: It is quite popular in some of the developing countries with the likes of Brazil, Turkey, South Korea, some easter european nations like Poland, Ukrain other european countries like France, Italy and even in Asian region like China, Japan.


#11. Golf


Just lagging by few million fans, golf is the 8th most famous game. A very docile sport involving no real physical competition and can be played by people of all ages. For too long American Golf Star, Tiger Woods, overawed all his competitors through his exquisite playing abilities but now the sport has got some more representatives who are spreading this game to the farthest of places.

Massive earning potential: Golf’s very own Tiger Woods dominated the athlete rich-list for best part of last 15 years largely down to his very lucrative sponsorship deals with Nike, EA Sports, Gillette and countless other endorsement deals. 


Most Popular Sports In The World (Countdown 11 to 17)

11 Baseball
Most lucrative sport in USA and Japan. MLB (US) and Nippon League (Japan) are two of the top 10 biggest pro league of all sports
12 American Football 
Biggest sport in USA and the most lucrative and powerful professional sport league of all sports is NFL which generates over $10 billion a year in revenue. Super bowl is the most watched sport event in US.

13 MMA 

Mixed Martial Arts is getting more and more popular with the emergence of UFC. Its a big sport in Brazil, USA while spreading across Europe slowly. It highly rewarding financially and might overtake Boxing in a few years.
14 MotoGP 

It is one of the motorcycle racing series. MotoGP is the premium class competition with huge TV following around the world. Mostly popular in Spain, Italy, Netherlands but growing in England, USA, Germany and Middle-east.

15 Field Hockey

Field Hockey has fallen from grace even where it was most popular India, Pakistan. It still has some varied interest but nothing like 20 years ago where it was major sport in India, Pakistan and fairly popular in Australia, Malaysia, Holland, Germany, England and South Africa.

16 Badminton

Huge popularity in Asia specifically countries like Malaysia, China, India, Korea etc. Its more of a hobby sport in Europe and Americas.

17 Cycling 

Very popular in some major european countries like France, Germany, Italy, Spain, England and Netherlands. Tour de France is one of the most watched competition in the world. Cycling is part of school games around the world.


References:



jueves, 21 de noviembre de 2019

Opinión: Team Ineos intentará ganar el Tour 2020 con su ejemplar liderazgo compartido



Los hechos confirman que el Team Ineos (antiguo Team Sky) es brillante en el manejo del liderazgo compartido. Este equipo es fabuloso en su planificación estratégica y va al Tour a ganar con un plan claro, que sus líderes y el equipo seleccionado han apropiado perfectamente. En 2018 Geraint Thomas ganó el Tour con su compañero de equipo y co-líder Chris Froome ocupando el tercer lugar. En 2019 Egan Bernal maravilló al mundo ganando el Tour a los 22 años con su compañero de equipo y co-líder Geraint Thomas siendo subcampeón a 1:11. 

Algunos hechos que demuestran la brillantez del Team Ineos en el manejo del liderazgo compartido:

  1. Sus líderes son excelentemente bien protegidos por el equipo y juegan sus cartas de la mejor manera posible casi como si fueran líderes únicos. Este hecho hace que nadie se sienta que ha sacrificado sus posibilidades de triunfo por culpa del liderazgo compartido. Por ejemplo, en 2018 Thomas demostró estar más fuerte que Froome y tuvo luz verde para atacar y sacar ventaja. Nadie frenó a Thomas para proteger al ganador de 4 Tours, Froome. En 2019 Egan Bernal en la montaña demostró ser el más fuerte y el equipo lo apoyó en sus ataques. Thomas tuvo sus oportunidades igualmente, pero la carretera mostró que Egan lo superaba.  
  2. Los líderes saben que el equipo actúa con honestidad, lealtad y compromiso, y que es la carretera la que dicta su veredicto. El Team Ineos tiene como objetivo esencial ganar el Tour sin importar con quien. 
  3. Los líderes entienden que cuentan con el mejor equipo posible para ayudarlos a hacer su mejor carrera posible. Los líderes están felices en el equipo. Hay armonía gracias al respeto de valores sólidos.
  4. Los líderes no son sacrificados en ningún momento. Team Ineos desarrolla sus estrategias preservando siempre las opciones de sus líderes. Hasta ahora no se ha visto a un líder de Ineos actuar como gregario de otro líder. Por ejemplo, en el Tour 2019 luego de la CRI, etapa 13, Thomas era segundo a 1:26 de Julian Alaphilippe y Bernal era quinto a 2:52. En muchos equipos Egan hubiese sido sacrificado en función de Thomas. En Ineos los dos líderes, Thomas y Bernal, siguieron progresando, avanzando en sus opciones, casi como si cada uno fuese el líder único.
  5. Los líderes tienen una sólida planeación de su temporada que tiene en cuenta los recorridos de las competencias más importantes. Los líderes en Ineos explotan sus ventajas competitivas de forma impecable. 
A manera de conclusión lo que se puede esperar es que para intentar ganar el Tour de Francia 2020 el Team Ineos siga en su línea de manejo brillante del liderazgo compartido. Para el Tour 2020 hay un nuevo factor a tener en cuenta. El poderoso Team Jumbo-Visma puede potencialmente llevar 3 líderes al Tour: Primož Roglič, Tom Dumoulin y Steven Kruijswijk.  Luego de su maravillosa temporada 2019 Egan Bernal debería ser uno de los co-líderes del equipo para el Tour 2020. El segundo co-líder pareciera ser Chris Froome por respeto a su sueño de ganar su quinto Tour. Podría darse el caso de que el equipo lleve al Tour a Geraint Thomas como un tercer líder.  

miércoles, 20 de noviembre de 2019

The Big Picture of Sport News: Velo News, How Remco Evenepoel, Egan Bernal, and other Generation Z riders are changing pro cycling


There’s an undeniable surge of youth within the peloton. It isn’t just one exceptional young rider, but a swarm. What do all these riders have in common? And how could they achieve so much so soon? Other than being fast and young, there are some interesting threads and commonalities. First off, many of today’s new stars have the right DNA. Many of today’s most astonishingly successful young riders also have unbridled ambition. 


  • Quite literally, they were born to race. Bernal’s father, though never a pro, was a top-rated amateur in Colombia, and gifted his son with his legendary VO2max that dips into the low 90s.
  • Of course, van der Poel’s DNA is almost an unfair advantage. His father was Adri van der Poel, a fabled pro with a nearly 20-year career who won such races as Tour of Flanders and Liège-Bastogne-Liège. His grandfather is French legend Raymond Poulidor, whose career stretched across cycling’s glory days from Jacques Anquetil to Merckx.
  • The riders of Generation Z are here, and they’re suddenly making an impact in every race they start. The leading lights of today were all born in the late 1990s. Or, in Evenepoel’s case, in 2000. The prodigiously talented Belgian is the first WorldTour winner born in this century.
  • In many ways, today’s generation is the peloton’s disruptor. Today, Bernal, van der Poel, and those like them, look poised to turn cycling on its head. It’s too early to say how far this vanguard can go, but early indications suggest they could rewrite how we view modern cycling.
  • The arrival of these young prodigious riders is disrupting the traditional inner workings of teams at another level. Team Ineos brought Bernal to the Tour last year even though he had never raced more than eight days in a row up to that point. Why? The numbers proved it. 
  • The flood of young, charismatic talent certainly comes at a good time for the sport.
  • To attract a new generation of fans, professional racing needs young, exciting, charismatic riders. And suddenly the sport is overflowing with candidates to fill the void.
  • What’s more impressive is the depth and quality of performances that today’s young riders have been able to deliver. It’s not as if they’re winning a stage at a second-tier event. They’re taking home the biggest trophies on the calendar.
  • Cycling’s history is full of riders who make immediate and dramatic imprints in their rookie seasons. Eddy Merckx won the first of his record seven Milano-Sanremo victories at the age of 20. Greg LeMond finished third in his Tour de France debut at 23, and won two years later. And even the controversial Lance Armstrong won the world title at 21, still the youngest ever to earn the rainbow stripes.


Another key factor is that today’s riders are at the cutting edge of the incremental advances that have steadily improved human performance over the past 20 years.

  • Better science, nutrition, and technology, which helps any bike racer, only acts as an accelerant when applied to today’s über-talented youngsters. Lighter frames, aero helmets and skin-suits, calibrated diets and recovery, coupled with the granular attention to detail in training programs means young riders can advance their racing development at a staggering rate. If they have the motor, and the skills to back it up, they can expect to perform almost immediately.


Many insiders cite a cleaner peloton for helping to clear the path for young talent to shine.

  • The fact that a 22-year-old can win the Tour is viewed by many as a sign that cycling has leveled the playing field dramatically since the days of a peloton at two speeds.
  • The world’s blossoming talent pool has delivered a Colombian, a Russian raised in France, a Belgian, and a Dutchman of royal pedigree, revealing the peloton’s ever-larger international reach.



Egan Bernal is poised to dominate the Tour de France unlike any rider in a generation.

  • The mild-mannered Colombian has the skills, the temperament, the motor, and the team to potentially reel off one yellow jersey after another. Even Armstrong said Bernal could beat his redacted record of seven Tour titles.
  • Egan pedaled into cycling nirvana, breaking the barrier to become the first Latin American to win the Tour de France, and becoming the youngest winner, at 22, since World War II.
  • Bernal, is riding to heights unimagined when he joined Team Sky at the start of the 2018 season. Everyone knew he was good, but what he’s been able to realize in the first 18 months of his WorldTour racing career—winning Colombia Oro y Paz and the Amgen Tour of California in 2018, and Paris-Nice, the Tour de Suisse, and the Tour de France in 2019—is beyond words.
  • Team Ineos astutely signed Bernal and Sivakov, and counts nine riders who are 24 or younger on its 29-rider roster. Ineos has been on a recruiting campaign the past two years to bolster its aging line of confirmed leaders.
  • “At 33, 34, Geraint and Chris are coming to the twilight of their careers,” Brailsford said during the Tour. “I wanted a ‘new’ Chris Froome, basically. So I set myself the challenge of finding him.




Evenepoel ripped through the junior world championships last year, winning both the road race and time trial titles, he catapulted straight to the WorldTour, and bypassed the U23 ranks altogether.

  • Something extraordinary happened in the final hour of racing on the twisting roads of northern Spain in early August. Remco Evenepoel, the swashbuckling 19-year-old Belgian phenomenon, rode everyone off his wheel on the final climb at Clásica San Sebastián. Despite a chase from some of the biggest motors in the international peloton, including Olympic champion Greg Van Avermaet and world champion Alejandro Valverde, Evenepoel tearfully crossed the line all alone, more than 30 seconds ahead of the charging group. The victory was as emphatic as it was astonishing. 
  • More than a coming-of-age moment, Evenepoel’s victory was a declaration of a new era. 
  • “This is exceptional,” said Eddy Merckx. “We know that Remco has a large engine. The fact that he is already showing it proves that he is mature early. He is ready for the big job. Can he follow in my footsteps? Maybe he will even get better. Remco has all the qualities to make it happen.”




Mathieu van der Poel has all the makings of a true international superstar for a new age. The Dutch phenom is so talented he can dominate any discipline he chooses. Perhaps van der Poel’s biggest challenge, much like Sagan’s before him, is to stay engaged and motivated (i.e. to not get bored) with the intensity and demands of performance at the highest level of road racing. 


  • That’s one reason why van der Poel, led by his father Adri and backed by a multi-year deal with Canyon bicycles, is creating a multi-discipline platform on which his prodigious son can perform.
  • He’s already world champion in cyclocross, and is emerging as a dominant force in mountain biking. (He’s won three of six rounds of the XCO World Cup series.) This spring was just a taste of what lies ahead on the road for van der Poel, but first he’ll target the Olympic gold medal in mountain biking in Tokyo.
  • Van der Poel is gleefully embracing the various roots and branches of modern cycling. It’s no longer only about the Tour de France. Performance and greatness can be measured not just in results, but in engagements, in interfacing with fans, and with the pure joy of racing.




Tadej Pogačar, the 2018 l’Avenir winner, became the youngest WorldTour stage-race winner at the age of 20, after coming out on top at the Amgen Tour of California in May.

  • Similar to Bernal’s five-year deal with Ineos, Pogačar is under contract with UAE through the end of 2023.
  • Perhaps it’s no mistake that Joxean Matxin Fernández, now lead sport director at UAE-Emirates, was a talent scout for Lefevere and Klein Constantia.
  • “There have always been good riders coming up,” Fernández said. “The big difference today is that a lot more teams are investing in young riders and in developing talent. Before you had to prove yourself to get a contract. Now teams give riders a chance to grow.”

References:



lunes, 18 de noviembre de 2019

The Big Picture of Sport News: The Washington Post, WADA has concerns with U.S. anti-doping legislation that seeks to clean up sport



The Rodchenkov Anti-Doping Act, named after the whistleblower who helped shine a light on Russia’s state-sponsored doping scheme, has passed through the House and has bipartisan support in the Senate. The bill calls for fines of up to $1 million and prison sentences of up to 10 years for bad actors involved in doping schemes designed to cheat athletes.


  • While the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency has been a major champion of the bill, its international counterpart, WADA, has voiced concerns about the legislation’s reach. The matter came to a head last week at the WADA world conference in Poland, where U.S. anti-doping officials said the proposed legislation was being intentionally mischaracterized.
  • “They don’t want to understand it,” Travis Tygart, the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency’s chief executive, said in an interview this week. “They’re just playing a political game now to a large extent because I think they’re seriously concerned about it actually cleaning up sport to a large extent around the world. And that makes it uncomfortable for some of their friends.”
  • The Rodchenkov Act would allow the United States to pursue prosecution for conspirators involved in tainting competitions that involve American athletes and, importantly, U.S. money. Tygart likens the bill’s wide-reaching prosecutorial authority to what’s provided by the Bank and Wire Fraud Act, the RICO Act and the Travel Act, saying “the U.S. government, from a policy standpoint, certainly wants to protect investment by U.S. companies around the world.”
  • “It’s a fantastic effort that recognizes that doping is fraud,” he said, “and when it’s done by organizations or institutions — whether it’s a sport organization or a nation — that it’s going to be put on the same level as other types of fraud.” 
  • The legislation does not target the athletes necessarily, thus allowing them to step forward as whistleblowers.
  • The AP reported last week that WADA has budgeted at least $250,000 for lobbying efforts related to the bill. That surprised some U.S. anti-doping officials, who are quick to note that the United States provided $2.5 million of WADA’s annual budget.


Complementary content:


The Economist, Doping in sport: why it can't be stopped | The Economist, Oct 25, 2019.



Netflix, Icarus | Official Trailer [HD] | Netflix, Jul 6, 2017.



viernes, 15 de noviembre de 2019

The Big Picture of Sport News: Media, The complex case of Dr Freeman is undermining cycling credibility


Dr Richard Freeman was absent when his medical tribunal hearing began again in Manchester on Thursday, with his lawyer Mary O'Rourke saying her client had "an adverse reaction to what happened here Tuesday," when O'Rourke had a tense exchange with Shane Sutton and he abandoned the hearing after calling Freeman "spineless". 


  • Freeman's legal team has claimed that the Testogel was for Sutton, who allegedly bullied Freeman into ordering the drug for personal use to treat erectile dysfunction. Sutton denied suffering from the condition and hit back when O'Rourke accused him of being a "habitual and serial liar," and "a doper, with a doping history." 
  • O’Rourke said she was very disappointed that Sutton had not returned for further questioning and there was discussion on if Sutton's comments would be struck from the record or retained.
  • "I don’t need to be dragged through this shitfight that this individual is trying to bring on me,” replied Sutton according to The Guardian newspaper. “I was asked to come here and answer whether I ordered Testogel. I did not."
  • The General Medical Council (GMC), that is looking to discipline Freeman for a total of 22 charges including ordering 30 sachets of Testogel testosterone "knowing or believing it was to be administered to an athlete to improve their athletic performance," called Team Ineos consultant psychiatrist Dr Steve Peters as their second witness.
  • Like Sutton and Freeman, Peters worked for both Team Sky and British Cycling for almost a decade including the period when the Testogel was sent to the Manchester velodrome in 2011. Peters is a renowned pyschiatrist and was the former head of medicine at British Cycling and held a similar role at Team Sky. He remains at Team Ineos in a consultancy  role.


Shane Sutton, the former head coach of British Cycling and Team Sky, has refused to return to Dr Richard Freeman’s medical tribunal despite efforts to persuade him to change his mind after he stormed out on Tuesday.


  • Sutton was the General Medical Council’s star witness in its case against Freeman, who faces charges that he ordered the banned substance Testogel in order to dope an unnamed cyclist.
  • Freeman has already accepted 18 of the 22 charges against him, including ordering Testogel, trying to cover his tracks and lying to UK Anti-Doping when questioned about the case.
  • On Tuesday Sutton strenuously denied allegations that he bullied Freeman into ordering the Testogel in 2011 in order to treat his erectile dysfunction, telling O’Rourke: “You are telling the press I can’t get a hard on – my wife wants to testify that you are a bloody liar.”
  • Sutton did not reply when O’Rourke accused him of sending Freeman “some pretty hostile texts”, before reading one out: “Be careful what you say,” it read. “I can drag you in – you won’t be the only person I can hurt.”
  • Sutton addressed Freeman, who was hidden behind a screen while he was giving evidence because he is considered a vulnerable witness. “He was like the Scarlet Pimpernel. I covered his backside while he was there. Two critical cases of athletes ill and we couldn’t get hold of him. If you bring Steve Peters in, he would verify it all.


Dr Steve Peters, a former head of medicine for both organisations, took the stand but failed to provide any answers as to why a drug that is banned in and out of competition was ordered and stored at the facility or for whom it was intended.


  • "I don't know what happened here," Peters said according to the BBC's Dan Roan and the Guardian's Sean Ingle who live-tweeted the hearing. "We've got two men and clearly one of them is lying. There has to be an answer but I'm not in a position to say."
  • The GMC alleges that Freeman ordered the testosterone in order to enhance the performance of an unnamed athlete, but Peters doubted that claim, too, calling the allegation "a leap" by the GMC.
    "If we start speculating, an amazing team who've worked so hard for 20 years have this cloud over them, it seemed so unfair."


British Cycling's former head of medicine has cast doubt on Dr Richard Freeman's claims that testosterone was delivered to its headquarters on behalf of Shane Sutton, a tribunal has heard.


  • Dr Steve Peters told Freeman's fitness to practise hearing that if 30 sachets of Testogel were ordered for Sutton in 2011, he would have known about it. 
  • "It feels like I'm being asked being to solve the crime," Dr Peters said.
    "I have a man who's lied to me, another man who is untrustworthy. It's much more likely [Freeman] has used this for himself and there are reasons for that, which I don't want to go into.
  • Peters, who was at British Cycling until 2014 and was Freeman's boss, said he doubted the General Medical Council's claim that testosterone would be ordered to the National Cycling Centre if it was to be used for doping.
  • During several hours of cross-examination, he revealed the dysfunctional nature of British Cycling at the time and how he did not question why Dr Freeman claimed the testosterone was for Sutton. 
  • During the tribunal, it was also revealed:
    I) How Dr Freeman had been previously diagnosed with bipolar disorder.
    II) How Dr Peter's relationship with Dr Freeman had broken down.
    III) That Viagra was allegedly also part of the Testogel order in 2011. 


British Cycling and Team Sky kept a stock of Viagra for riders in a cabinet because riding for so long gave them “nerve issues”, Dr Richard Freeman’s medical tribunal was told on Thursday.


  • On another day of revelations at the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service in Manchester it was also claimed both organisations put glory before athlete welfare and employed two senior staff members who could not be trusted.
  • Peters denied the Viagra had been for performance reasons. He also revealed that British Cycling had brought back Sutton into the organisation despite serious incidents with riders after the Beijing 2008 Olympics because he was so good at helping the team win medals. “When he was good he was excellent, everyone said that, provided he wasn’t stressed,” Peters said, before describing Sutton’s “aggressive behaviour” and how he would “go on the warpath”.
  • Peters said he was sceptical of the GMC’s case that Freeman had ordered Testogel to dope a rider. “At no time did I see any evidence it was for a rider. That’s a ‘huge leap’.”


Dr Freeman’s QC, Mary O’Rourke, put to Dr Peters: “If it was ordered to dope a rider, that’s not how you would do it unless you were mad.” Dr Peters agreed and also suggested that an athlete using such a patch would quickly fail a doping test.


  • Dr Peters added: “What didn’t make sense is if someone were to cheat they wouldn’t go through the supplier for British Cycling where there’s a paper trail. Initially I thought it must be someone forging his (Dr Freeman’s) signature.”
  • Dr Peters painted a picture of Dr Freeman, who he described as a friend, as a disorganised man who was unable to properly keep records and who found a lot of things hard to cope with.
  • It was revealed that Dr Freeman had previously been diagnosed with bipolar disorder and had been admitted to hospital on several occasions, including in 2011 when he was struggling with the break-up of his marriage.
  • Dr Peters did not offer an opinion who he believed was telling the truth out of Sutton and Dr Freeman, saying: “We’ve got two men and clearly one of them is lying. None of it seems to make sense.

jueves, 14 de noviembre de 2019

The Big Picture of Sport News: L'Équipe, Raymond Poulidor, La legende touchante d'un cycliste qui est entré dans le coeur des gens pour toujours


Légende du cyclisme tricolore, Raymond Poulidor n'est pourtant jamais parvenu à remporter le Tour de France, ni même à revêtir le Maillot Jaune. Mais sa popularité auprès du public était au moins équivalente à celle des grands vainqueurs.


  • « Poupou » incarnait selon Philippe Brunel le panache à la française. Bien que malchanceux, il était un coureur qui donnait tout sur son vélo. « C'était une popularité compassionnelle », affirme notre journaliste.




Raymond Poulidor était entré dans le coeur des gens. Sur le Tour de France et partout ailleurs, le célèbre octogénaire, obsédé par la peur d'être oublié, faisait revivre leur jeunesse à ses admirateurs. Auréolé de l'un des plus beaux palmarès du cyclisme français, Raymond Poulidor restera pourtant dans la mémoire collective pour sa réputation de poissard.


  • Pour notre journaliste Philippe Brunel, Raymond Poulidor, décédé à l'âge de 83 ans, a su retourner en sa faveur ses malheurs sur la route pour entrer dans le coeur des Français.
  • Tour de France 1975 : distancé dans les grandes largeurs par Merckx et Thévenet
    Deuxième l'année précédente, Poulidor est hors du coup cette fois-ci. Peut-être rattrapé par le poids des années, à 39 ans, le héros des Français sombre dans les Alpes (ici entre Valloire et Avoriaz), incapable de suivre le rythme des Peugeot emmenés par Thévenet, futur lauréat, ni celui de son coéquipier Zoetemelk (4e à Paris). Relégué à près d'une heure, Poupou établira son plus mauvais classement (19e) en 14 participations. Il prendra sa retraite sportive deux ans plus tard, après un dernier Tour en 1976 (3e).





« Des fois je me pose la question : est-ce que je serais là devant votre micro si j'avais gagné trois Tours de France ? » Voilà comment Raymond Poulidor revenait sur sa carrière juste avant le Tour de France 2019, il y a quelques mois.

  • Le Limousin, décédé mercredi à 83 ans, expliquait alors «qu'on l'avait catalogué comme une vedette dès [s]es premières courses. » 




La carrière de Raymond Poulidor s'est étirée de 1960 à 1977, avec un ultime podium sur le Tour de France décroché à plus de quarante ans.

  • 20 ans : la révélation. 
  • Voilà trois ans déjà qu'il a remporté sa première course, en mars 1953, le prix de la Quasimodo à Saint-Léonard-de-Noblat. Mais, en 1956, c'est le grand tournant de sa vie. En qualité de meilleur coureur régional, il est invité à participer au fameux Bol d'Or des Monédières, à Chaumeil, un critérium prestigieux disputé en Corrèze où il côtoie les grandes vedettes internationales. 
  • « À vingt ans, j'étais aussi fort que cinq ou six ans plus tard. Je pense que j'aurais pu faire le Tour de France sans problème », estimait Poulidor bien des années plus tard. 
  • 30 ans : la resignation.
  • En 1966, Jacques Anquetil, son grand rival, fait ses adieux au Tour, non sans avoir la certitude que son partenaire Lucien Aimar va l'emporter aux dépens de Poulidor (3e). Le Limousin a déjà manqué l'occasion l'année précédente, lorsqu'il a sous-estimé un jeune champion italien néophyte, Felice Gimondi, qui a remplacé au pied levé un certain Polidori, forfait. 
  • « Poupou » a peut-être laissé passer sa chance dans ces années charnières de la trentaine. Après Anquetil, Eddy Merckx va bientôt arriver...
  • 40 ans : la continuation.
  • Merckx n'est déjà plus Merckx en 1976, mais Poulidor est toujours là. À plus de quarante ans, il va encore monter sur le podium du Tour, troisième derrière Lucien Van Impe et Joop Zoetemelk. « Je sentais que j'étais limité », avoue celui qui réalise quand même une très belle montée du puy de Dôme, douze ans après son coude-à-coude légendaire avec Anquetil. 




Christian Prudhomme (directeur du Tour de France) : « Ce qu'il remue en moi est très personnel car c'est lui qui m'avait donné l'amour du Tour. Poulidor était le cyclisme. Il réconciliait des générations sur son nom. »


  • Il était de cette génération avec (Eddy) Merckx, (Bernard) Thévenet, qui m'a ébloui.
  • Poulidor était le cyclisme. Il réconciliait des générations sur son nom, je me souviens que dans la fameuse étape du Mont Revard (gagnée par Guimard) en 1972, il avait attaqué trois fois, et je revois ma mère et ma belle-mère côte à côte, devant la télévision, partager la même admiration. Je m'étais dit, il fait du bien aux gens. 
  • Aujourd'hui je veux retenir sa longévité et son humour. Il y a deux ans, à la présentation du Tour, au Palais des Congrès, nous l'avions fait monter sur scène, face au public, avec Merckx, (Bernard) Hinault, (Miguel) Indurain. Il avait dit : « À nous quatre on a gagné quinze Tours de France. » C'était ce même humour. En dépit des années, l'homme n'avait pas changé. »