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Non-traditional cycling stronghold? Legolas Send a noteboard - 22/07/2013 05:38:09 PM

View original postYou wait a hundred years for one to win, then two come along at once.

Yeah, funny how that happened... Team Sky is definitely a huge success.
View original postJokes out of the way, it was a great victory by Froome. Also, I know he's from Kenya, I find it a bit funny how the British media claimed him as one of their own so quickly. He led the Tour nearly the whole way through so his victory was deserved.

Heh. Everybody likes a winner? It's funny how everybody beforehand seemed to take his victory as a given, and so it became almost a self-fulfilling prophecy.
View original postQuitana was also impressive. he gave a great performance for such a young rider, and was a surprise coming from such a non-traditional cycling stronghold.

I beg to differ with the last part. Colombia has a proud tradition of extremely good climbers, starting with Luis Herrera in the eighties, and continuing with people like Botero, Cardenas, in more recent years Soler and Uran and Henao, and now Quintana. Though he does look like he may become the best of them all. Herrera managed to win a Vuelta, but Quintana could win the Tour (then again, he also could not; the list of extremely promising youngsters who never really did fulfill expectations is long indeed, its most recent addition seeming to be Andy Schleck).
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British Tour de France winners are a bit like buses. - 22/07/2013 12:24:34 PM 717 Views
Non-traditional cycling stronghold? - 22/07/2013 05:38:09 PM 477 Views
I was thinking more in relative numbers. - 22/07/2013 06:19:00 PM 546 Views
Next year Brailsford wants both Wiggins and Froome in. - 22/07/2013 10:23:27 PM 527 Views
It was a good tour. - 23/07/2013 07:53:57 PM 498 Views
He's doping. People still pay attention to cycling? *NM* - 24/07/2013 12:30:48 AM 216 Views

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