website statistics
Jump to content
  • Register/Login on Totallympics!

    Sign up to Totallympics to get full access to our website.

     

    Registration is free and allows you to participate in our community. You will then be able to reply to threads and access all pages.

     

    If you encounter any issues in the registration process, please send us a message in the Contact Us page.

     

    We are excited to see you on Totallympics, the home of Olympic Sports!

     

Road Cycling at the Cycling UCI World Championships 2023


Recommended Posts

25 minutes ago, mpjmcevoy said:

I think you just have to tell yourself that the Olympic Road Race is a unique proposition - it's not just the World Champs+ or an extra classic - rather it's a rather back to basics design - very small teams, if teams at all, no radios - the 'team' element that is quietly ubiquitous in cycling is deliberately undercut. It's a feature, not a flaw - or both a flaw and a feature if you are a semi-traditionalist.

 

If you are a dutch, or belgian, I dare say that pisses you off. If you are an Austrian part time pro, or an ecuadorian, it's a positive boon. At the moment, to be fair there are about half a dozen 'once in a generation superstars all riding at once, an astonishing thing (think of the Big 4 in tennis), and maybe another half a dozen super dangerous riders, covering about 8-10 nations; it's kinda cool, once in 4 years, to see them unmoored from their team support, and just riding on fumes and instinct - it lets clever riders like Carapaz steal a march!

It's not about nationality, as sports in general shouldn't be, why I don't like it. I don't like it as a road cycling fan, since the Olympic road race will have a very depleted field of starters because of these things. A field with a bunch of top riders, a bunch of riders who are there mostly to show themselves on TV for a bit in the early attack, and not really anything in between. Keep in mind that, unlike in most other sports, road racing definitely doesn't have a single-digit number of realistic winners, one could easily come up with 100 riders who would all not be super sensational winners.

 

Team support is not even that much of a thing in world championships anyway. A little, of course, and some teams more than others, but for example Evenepoel is definitely not going to be happy to see Van Aert break away (and Van Aert was just chasing after Evenepoel even) :p 

.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/18628-road-cycling-at-the-cycling-uci-world-championships-2023/page/14/#findComment-568567
Share on other sites

27 minutes ago, mpjmcevoy said:

The men's pros have only ridden since '92, that's why you don't remember them - as soon as you rode a pro race, you were barred (see Kelly, Séan)

1992 was barely two years after I was born, that's more of a reason than the pro/amateur thing. It was also barely two years before I started watching cycling, I'd say :p 

 

I've definitely seen all the Olympic road races since 2000 or so, but even right now I'd have to very seriously dig in my memory to name the past two or three Olympic champions, and one of them is only memorable because he bought his gold medal in a bit too obvious manner :p 

.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/18628-road-cycling-at-the-cycling-uci-world-championships-2023/page/14/#findComment-568568
Share on other sites

Not even sure why cycling road race should have more than 3 athletes per nation (as pretty much every other sport)?

Attachment is the great fabricator of illusions; reality can be obtained only by someone who is detached.
 

 

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/18628-road-cycling-at-the-cycling-uci-world-championships-2023/page/14/#findComment-568607
Share on other sites

12 minutes ago, OlympicsFan said:

Not even sure why cycling road race should have more than 3 athletes per nation (as pretty much every other sport)?

Because it's secretly a team sport, but only one person wins a medal.

 

Though honestly with the IOC getting rid of the team aspect, there isn't a huge reason other than the need to get more bodies in the race.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/18628-road-cycling-at-the-cycling-uci-world-championships-2023/page/14/#findComment-568611
Share on other sites

Was looking back at the history of the Olympic Road Race on Wikipedia - had an idea that pre 1992 it was usually won by the "amateur" riders of Communist Europe, in the way that football etc usually was. Turns out this wasn't true, and that actually some fairly well-known people won, presumably then going onto pro careers.

 

However, here's what happened at Munich 1972

 

"Irish protesters


Seven members of the National Cycling Association (NCA) were arrested for disrupting the event. The Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) recognised separate national federations on either side of the Irish political border. The NCA was an Irish Republican all-Ireland body not affiliated to the ICU. Three NCA members delayed the start by distributing leaflets,[4] and the other four joined mid-race to ambush Irish competitor Noel Teggart, causing a minor pile-up.[5]"

 

So there's previous for idiot protestors from Celtic nations!  :facepalm:

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/18628-road-cycling-at-the-cycling-uci-world-championships-2023/page/14/#findComment-568615
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, heywoodu said:

1992 was barely two years after I was born, that's more of a reason than the pro/amateur thing. It was also barely two years before I started watching cycling, I'd say :p 

 

I've definitely seen all the Olympic road races since 2000 or so, but even right now I'd have to very seriously dig in my memory to name the past two or three Olympic champions, and one of them is only memorable because he bought his gold medal in a bit too obvious manner :p 

My point is, when you get into cycling (I was a Tour junkie from the age of about 11, in the mid 1980s) you reasonably quickly get into the lore, because cycling is like that. History really sells.

 

The Olympics doesn't really have that lore on the road because it banned professionals, though, like Tennis, it has changed a bit now to the point were people really do want it, and while it's not quite a Monument, or the Worlds, or a grand tour of course, it has started to really matter - and really irritate some riders because of the odd nature of the field!

 

Similarly, when Tennis first returned, John McEnroe, famous for his patriotism and playing for the US, skipped it because there was no real history - it meant nothing to him. 20 years later, in 2012, he admitted it was one of his single biggest regrets at the Olympics at Wimbledon - where Murray's gold all but meant as much as a grand slam. anyone who has seen Del Potro and Djokovic's tears on Olympic courts know that this weird, underpowered little tournament now matters hugely.

 

You can see the beginnings of the same in golf, with former cynics more or less bought in to it.

 

The olympic TT, I would argue, is at least the equal of the world TT. But the road race isn't the same as the Worlds, though it's pretty important these days.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/18628-road-cycling-at-the-cycling-uci-world-championships-2023/page/14/#findComment-568616
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, Grassmarket said:

Was looking back at the history of the Olympic Road Race on Wikipedia - had an idea that pre 1992 it was usually won by the "amateur" riders of Communist Europe, in the way that football etc usually was. Turns out this wasn't true, and that actually some fairly well-known people won, presumably then going onto pro careers.

 

However, here's what happened at Munich 1972

 

"Irish protesters


Seven members of the National Cycling Association (NCA) were arrested for disrupting the event. The Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) recognised separate national federations on either side of the Irish political border. The NCA was an Irish Republican all-Ireland body not affiliated to the ICU. Three NCA members delayed the start by distributing leaflets,[4] and the other four joined mid-race to ambush Irish competitor Noel Teggart, causing a minor pile-up.[5]"

 

So there's previous for idiot protestors from Celtic nations!  :facepalm:

Yes, it was closer to an 'amateur worlds' And don't TALK to me about the idiocy of politics in Irish sports admin!

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/18628-road-cycling-at-the-cycling-uci-world-championships-2023/page/14/#findComment-568619
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, Grassmarket said:

Was looking back at the history of the Olympic Road Race on Wikipedia - had an idea that pre 1992 it was usually won by the "amateur" riders of Communist Europe, in the way that football etc usually was. Turns out this wasn't true, and that actually some fairly well-known people won, presumably then going onto pro careers.

 

However, here's what happened at Munich 1972

 

"Irish protesters


Seven members of the National Cycling Association (NCA) were arrested for disrupting the event. The Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) recognised separate national federations on either side of the Irish political border. The NCA was an Irish Republican all-Ireland body not affiliated to the ICU. Three NCA members delayed the start by distributing leaflets,[4] and the other four joined mid-race to ambush Irish competitor Noel Teggart, causing a minor pile-up.[5]"

 

So there's previous for idiot protestors from Celtic nations!  :facepalm:

Back then protesters were preventing you from watching the race, nowadays it is commercials ...

Attachment is the great fabricator of illusions; reality can be obtained only by someone who is detached.
 

 

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/18628-road-cycling-at-the-cycling-uci-world-championships-2023/page/14/#findComment-568620
Share on other sites

19 minutes ago, JoshMartini007 said:

Because it's secretly a team sport, but only one person wins a medal.

 

Though honestly with the IOC getting rid of the team aspect, there isn't a huge reason other than the need to get more bodies in the race.

I get that (of course), but it doesn't have to be that way. There are already a million races a year that are decided by team tactics, not sure why we need another one. Also surprising to me that someone says that it shouldn't be about nationalities but then argues for a rule that makes team (= nation) tactics more likely. I think with 3 riders per nation the races would get less predictable. It would be a different kind of race than we usually have.

Something else that is interesting (at least for me): In cross-country skiing we never see tactics like in cycling. The top athletes in cross-country skiing just go fast from the start and destroy the field.

 

Attachment is the great fabricator of illusions; reality can be obtained only by someone who is detached.
 

 

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/18628-road-cycling-at-the-cycling-uci-world-championships-2023/page/14/#findComment-568625
Share on other sites

I don't know where to put this, so. Here the medal table plus point table (IAAF system), counting only Elite events in the UCI World Championships 

 

Medal Table After Day 5

 

:GBR 08-02-03 [13]

:NED 03-02-00 [05]

:BEL 03-01-01 [05]

:USA 03-00-02 [05] 

:GER 02-01-04 [07]

:AUT 02-01-00 [03]

:ITA 01-02-02 [05]

:NZL 01-01-03 [05]

:DEN 01-00-00 [01]

:BRA 01-00-00 [01]

:POR 01-00-00 [01]

:AUS 00-04-00 [04]

:FRA 00-02-04 [06]

:CHN 00-01-02 [02]

:SUI 00-01-01 [02]

:JPN 00-01-01 [03]

:CAN 00-01-01 [02]

:RSA 00-01-00 [01]

:IRL 00-01-00 [01]

:COL 00-01-00 [01]

:CZE 00-01-00 [01]

:TTO 00-01-00 [01]

:NOR 00-01-00 [01]

:SLO 00-00-02 [02]

 

 

Points Table After Day 5

:GBR 146

:NED 80

:GER 73

:FRA 69

:BEL 61

:AUS 59

:ITA 59

:USA 46

:NZL 46

:CHN 39

:JPN 29

:CAN 26

:SUI 26

:DEN 25

:AUT 23

:POL 17

:POR 16

:SLO 12

:RSA 10

:IRL 9

:BRA 8

:NOR 8

:TTO 6

:COL 7

:CZE 7

:BIH 5

:CRO 4

:ESP 4

:MEX 3

:LTU 3

:NAM 2

:LAT 1

 

Tomorrow Elite Finals

  • Track - Men's 1km TT
  • Track - Men's Madison 
  • Track - Women's Point Race
  • Road - Mixed TTT
Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/18628-road-cycling-at-the-cycling-uci-world-championships-2023/page/14/#findComment-568705
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Posts around Totallympics

    • Some of the small nations have competed in the past but usually lost 30-0 to the Aussies
    • Officials persons (include Head) of RLF are still in ban. For example, Vaelbe has spoken even more terrible words but, however, CAS obliged to gave them AIN status. And it's the same situation here - FIL must to implement CAS's decision. But it's not clearly FIL's criterias for AIN status and that too strange
    • For Modern Pentathlon, it's interesting that Africa only gets one continental championship spot, considering how well Egypt does in the event.  (But then again, it's max 2 athletes per NOC per gender.)  Presuming that an Egyptian wins the African CCh, I suppose their performance in the other major competitions will allow the second competitor to come through.
    • Statement from the president of the russian Luge federation (yesterday): "Our team is in Kazakhstan and is preparing to apply for U.S. visas. We are setting an example for our entire country, especially for the younger generation. They see that a difficult path is not a reason to give up. It teaches perseverance. In this perseverance lies our shared strength, our mission to millions of young people for whom sports are a guiding point and a shining star. I believe in our country, in our strong-spirited guys. I sincerely love and respect our president, Vladimir Putin. He is the best president in the world. May God grant him strength and good health."   Do they deserve neutral status?
    • I did not think it would happen again but... I created similar post for Paris - 2024 https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/27489-ain-athletes-qualification-for-paris-2024-olympic-games-and-reallocation-of-quotas-post1-updated-1507/#comments  I was not sure if that reallocations would really happen but the reality was even more serious than the expectations. According to this research 43% of the neutral statuses issued by the IFs were fake AIN  - https://razom22.com/neutrality-research/  And the figures are based on the IOC decisions - not on the evaluations by Ukrainian NOC or sport ministry. Right now the situation is absolutely unclear. As usually )) Some notes: 1. Russians will not reject quotas for 2026 as they did for 2024 in judo and wrestling. 2. AINERP may be more loyal to russians due to the new member - Watanabe. His federation issued AIN status to Melnikova who took part in the primaries of the russian ruling party, had phots with Z and e .t.c. 3. I do not expect a lot of reallocations becaues of the total small number of the rus/blr athletes in qualification events right now. 4. BUT, even with these small numbers we see that FIS allowed to compete several incompliant persons.        Short notes from the IOC statement before Paris - 2024:   1. IOC`s decisions to reject quotas are final. 2. IOC`s decisions to approve quotas are not final - new facts may lead to the rejection of invitation. 3. IOC`s decisions cannot be appealed - NOCs were not invited to the Games, so it is a good will to invite individual athletes... or not   russians Sports Athlete(s) Discipline Possible Reallocation NOC IOC Decision + IF reallocation if happened Figure skating Adeliia PETROSIAN Women's singles Stefania Yakovleva Confirmed by IOC Figure skating Petr GUMENNIK Men's singles Davide Lewton Brain Confirmed by IOC belorussians     Sports Athlete(s) Discipline Possible Reallocation NOC IOC Decision + IF reallocation if happened Figure skating Viktoriya SAFONOVA Women's singles Stefania Yakovleva Confirmed by IOC  
    • I would say they will not be eligible. But it realy abotut the wording every federation has in its papers. World Aquatics changes their policies several times (especially after Mazepin "solved the issues" persoanlly - as witnessed one russian Olympic champion)   Inoirtnat notes on FIS decisions:   FIS points are frozen for ruissns and belorussians - so the situation is not so complicated for a lot of them. The list of the AIN`s is not final as the list from ISU was. It means that persons mau be not only removed from the list but added as well. I expect russians to try some freestyle applications before the stage in China, for example. FIS has not problems with the deny of visa or entris by the host countries. So they kept the possibility to close the doors for the russians for all the countries as ICF did. No sanctions for this, no removing events from the Olympic qualification list, no host changes,   * * * * * Here is the the relevant extract from FIS papers for Aerials tram event. What do you think?
    • Not only Korostelev but all 3 russian entries. I will bring the detail 
    • And will bet that the IBU is a lot richer than the FIS because their wealth is based on German TV contracts.  
    • Russians filed an appeal to CAS against IBU. But I do not believe they will get any result in time to grab quotas. I suppose IBU will not agree to have "fast" hearings as FIS did. And i suppose IBU will fight in CAS without intention to lose as FIS did.
×
×
  • Create New...