Is he or isn't he? Did he or didn't he? Will he or won't he? This series of
questions could go on forever - and probably will. Is Lance Armstrong clean?
Did he use EPO in 1999? Will he come back in 2006 and ride the Tour again? Did
Beltran, Caselblanco and Hamburger all use EPO in the 1999 Tour Prologue? Are
those all the names from 1999? And what about those alleged 40 positives from
1998?
And back to the real world - or as close as cycling gets to the real world.
The Vuelta is turning out to be a lot more interesting than expected. Most
everyone predicted that Roberto Heras would do a Lance Armstrong imitation and
run away with the title. Instead Denis Menchov grabbed the leader's jersey tight
and held on to it tightly for quite a while, performing spectularly better than
expected in the time trial and in the mountains.
Unfortunately, all good things
must end and Sunday afternoon he could only plug along and watch the other
favorites pull away from him. 1999 was the last time a non-Spaniard won the
Vuelta and it looks like that record will stand another year.
As of Stage 16, 140 riders were still in the race, a whopping 57 having
dropped out already. The Vuelta always has a high drop-out rate, because so
many riders use it as training for the upcoming Worlds. But some nasty crashes
this year and as the nasty weather - as well as the ever-popular "stomach
problems" - have done their part this year as well
Speaking of the weather - the first stages were much too hot, the riders
said. Then it was too rainy. It reminds me of the farmers - it's always too hot
or too cold, too wet or too dry. But somehow the job always gets done!
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