Cyclist of the Decade

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anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Wednesday 11th December 2019
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10. Annemiek van Vleuten. I really thought about putting Lizzie Deignan here but van Vleuten get the nod becuase her victories bookend the decade too nicely. Victory in Flanders in 2011 and then that win in Yorkshire earlier this year, 100kms solo break? yeah good luck with that.... oh... Easily one of Marianne Vos' strongest competitors throughout the decade and after that horror crash in the 2016 Olympics, many wondered if she would even ride again.

9. Vincenzo Nibali. I dont like the guy, dont trust the guy but I respect the guy. His victory in 2018 at Milan-San Remo was such a well executed attack that you couldnt help but smile. 4 Grand Tours, all won with the casual chaos you would expect from an Italian. Add dozens of stage wins and countless attacks seemingly just for the hell of it and without an intricate plan developed by the DS, nutritionalist, domestiques, soigneurs, coach driver..... Even the association with Astana and the blatant, embarrasing cheating in the 2015 Tour cant dull his talent. He has cracked too often in recent Grand Tours to be any higher than 9th for me though.

8. Tony Martin. 4 times World Time Trial Champion but thats not, in my humble opinion, the most interesting statistic, the winning margins seem massive in what are races against a collection of the world's best time triallists, 1m 26s over 46kms in 2011 to Wiggins no less, 46s over 57kms in 2013 to Wiggins again, 45s over 40kms in 2016 to Kiyienka... I'm a bit sentimental too so to see the heartbreak of losing the sixth stage of the 2013 Vuelta by seconds after a 175km solo break avenged at Le Tour the following year was pure nostalgia, that the 2014 solo break was only 60kms is not the point, that he managed to drop the peloton on a fairly flat stage shows the power of the guy.

7.Mark Cavendish. I dont feel particulary patriotic about including Cav, his record says it all. He has had the benefit of some well-drilled lead out trains but has also demonstrated on many occassions, including his World Championships win in 2011, that when it all goes tits up and you lose your wheel, he can find another, re-orientate himself, time a sprint and still win. Go watch him on a track even now, and his timing is still as sharp as ever. Sprinting changed, it was no longer the small man, aero position that could guarantee a victory. Kittel, Gripel demonstrated a different approach but later in the decade Cav could still use his track nous to spot wheels and open up a gap where there really was no gap. Who knows how long he suffered with the Epstein-Barr virus before it became known, could he have been, actually, even faster?!

6. Greg Van Avermaet. There felt like a few seasons of Spring Classics where the BMC jersey was omnipresent on the podium. From 2015 onwards, you could guarantee that even in a hugely competitive spring classics field, he would be in the lead group animating the race, poised, tracking, attacking and winning. I would watch hoping for bad weather because thats when GvA would come good, half the field would give up at the start, a few would feel optimistic but GvA would just batter them across Northern France and Belgium for fun.

5. Phillipe Gilbert. If GvA owned the last five years of the decade, Gilbert had the first five. He won pretty much everything a puncheur could expect to win. To be honest, he didnt even need five years, he did it in about 18 months. He even had some wilderness years before coming back late in the decade to win races all over again.

4.Chris Froome. You cant win that many Grand Tours and not be good. I dont care how many people bleat about the "sky train", dodgy tactics or asthma or a squad of the greatest domestiques cycling as seen in decades. He could drop his competitors on a whim and the Finestere attack, on gravel, with 80kms to go was just an amazing spectacle to watch. Yates was already dropped, he didnt really need to do that but he could, so he did. And yes, he does fall off a lot.

3. Jason Kenny. Kenny was already a genuine world class track cyclist before the decade started but cemented his place in the list in 2012 winning 2 gold medals and following it up a year later with a world championship in the keirin. 2014 and 2015 were barren and many questioned whether he still had the appetite to train let alone win medals. He came back to win 3 gold medals in Rio and even had the drama of a potential DQ in the keirin to manage whilst sat on the start line waiting for the gun watching as commisaires presided over the screens looking for signs of foul play. He was written off by many and proved them all wrong. Kenny is in the list because the best sprinter on the track in a hugely competitive period with Hoy, Pervis, Bauge, Levy......

2.Marianne Vos. Vos would complete pre-season training with the Rabobank Men's squad becuase she found the Women's squad training too easy and her palmares says cyclo-cross world champion x7, track world champion, road world champion x3. Multi-discipline, fast on any surface, ultra combative and a joy to watch. I watched her at a Revolution track event once and the whole field watched her, waiting for the attack, Vos just rode on the front and when the attack eventually came, no one came close to catching her wheel. Far from making the sport dull, by winning everything she has made Women's cycling watchable.

1. Peter Sagan. It just is. If cycling history isnt so rose-tinted and obsessed with dead dopers he will be remembered as the greatest cyclist ever. He is so much more than the 7 times green jersey winning, 3 times world champion, multiple classics winning cyclist that we have know. He is fun, he pulls wheelies, he is the rouleur's rouler. He is so predictable and yet wins races at a canter, the green jersey is wrapped up by the end of the second week, on his day, no one can beat him. Just remember Richmond, that attack, the sheer audacity of it....

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Thursday 12th December 2019
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There were many honourable mentions.

Jens Voight for reigniting the hour record
Steve Abrahams for that annual distance attempt Kenny de Ketele for being a six day legend
Rachel Atherton for winning pretty much everything in women's downhill for a decade

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Tuesday 17th December 2019
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I think more people will have taken up cycling, entered sportives and maybe even competed as a result of Wiggo et al compared to the bloke who thought up “everesting” but I appreciate that for some he was influential.

If you want the real cyclist of the decade it’s Martin Ashton... you already known the “back” story...


anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Friday 20th December 2019
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Dizeee said:
Sagan, and his consistency?
pablo said:
1. Peter Sagan. It just is. If cycling history isnt so rose-tinted and obsessed with dead dopers he will be remembered as the greatest cyclist ever. He is so much more than the 7 times green jersey winning, 3 times world champion, multiple classics winning cyclist that we have know. He is fun, he pulls wheelies, he is the rouleur's rouler. He is so predictable and yet wins races at a canter, the green jersey is wrapped up by the end of the second week, on his day, no one can beat him. Just remember Richmond, that attack, the sheer audacity of it....

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Saturday 21st December 2019
quotequote all
Dizeee said:
Exactly that
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