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Jul 18 2006

Le Tour after Stage 16: Alpe d’Huez

Traditionally the first day in the Alps is considered the day when the race leaders go for the kill to assert their supremacy. It is generally the day when the riders who are in the contention for the top honors in the General Classification take the climbs seriously and put on a show of their life. After all the Alps are the toughest mountains in the sport and when it is Alpe d’Huez, no one can afford any letups.

On the final climb of the day, the tough Alpe d’Huez with an average gradient of 10d and the avg. speed not exceeding 8m/hr, the serious contenders of the race finally came to the fore to show why they are the best in the field. With the peleton breaking up at the start of the mountain and all the riders in the initial break falling away the leaders – Landis, Sastra, Leipheimer, Menchov, Evens and Kloden put up a show worthy of the best of the tours.

Even though the day was won by a relatively young rider named Frank Schleck, who by the way is a rider of the future, the leaders came home close on his heels to set up the race for the final showdown in its last week. 6mins is all that which separates Landis, who is leading the race, to Leipheimer who is currently in the 9th place. All the above leaders are in there and with 2 more days left in the Alps, it’s anyone’s tour now.

Landis looks like the firm favorite as he is yet to crack in any of the stages. He was rather unfortunate in the individual time trial last week when he had to change his bike but expect for that he has looked totally in control. His only weakness could be his team who cannot support him in chasing down break-aways but if the peleton decides to give him a hand, he could take the tour easily.

With none of my favorite riders in the tour this year I am backing Leipheimer to take the yellow jersey at the Champs-Elysees. Even tough he is quite down in the overall I think he has what it takes to spring a surprise in one of the remaining mountain stages. He has the Vinokourov style of riding which appeals to me and his composure is a sight to watch. Had he been lucky in the first week he would have been in the top 3 now but that’s what makes this tour so amazing.

Once again the tour showed why the sport takes men of out of world character to compete in it. Jens Voigt, who has already won a stage in this tour, sacrificed himself on the Alpe d’Huez to the extent that even after an accident which injured his shoulder, he got back on the bike to set up Schleck for the victory. Such is the courage and strength of character of the men in the tour that when Voigt finally finished the day the whole tour stopped to applaud him. It’s a great race, this Le Tour and its sad that so few people follow it in India.

Every race is a story worth repeating a zillion times for the sheer strength and courage of all the 190 riders in the tour where each and every rider is a true hero. Anyone who can ride 3500 miles in 21days, in hot sun and bone-chilling cold showers, without breaking any rules, sitting up for riders who have fallen off even when there is a chance to win and having the camaraderie of waiting up when the opponent is lagging behind in order to beat each other in a fair sprint is something that needs to be applauded in the highest of decibels. It’s unfortunate that the skeptics of this sport are so many. I just hope that they realize what it takes to do what these riders do in 21days.

4 comments   |  tags: Tour de France | posted in Sports, Tour de France


Jul 13 2006

Tour de France 2006

The first real mountain stage of this year’s tour is complete and the leader board has finally corrected marking the favorites in the top slots. It took 11 stages and 5 different yellow jersey holders to finally have this year’s top-guns in the top slots but when the big stage finally happened, after 5 horrendous climbs in 6hrs, the men who will take the race home have stamped their authority.

This year’s tour is quite different from the ones we had for many-many years as the last minute pull outs of the biggest names meant the whole pack and the individual teams were confused as to who will tame the peaks and who will break the timing bars. For 11 days the teams struggled without leaders who they can ride for and quite a few times the break-aways never succeeded because of the chaos at the tete de la course.

The crown tournament of the toughest sport in the world began this year amid horrendous controversies. 24hrs prior to the start at Strasbourg, some of the biggest names in the sport and serious contender’s to this year’s tour bowed out due to alleged Operacion Puerto where 23 riders were black listed on the account of doping.

This year with no Lance Armstrong, the loyalist’s of cycling finally had a chance to see if the likes of Ivan Basso, Alexander Vinokourov, and Tyler Hamilton along with the favorite Jan Ullrich would fight out for the coveted title, the champion of the canal le tour. The turn of the perennial second had come, for Jan had a chance to prove once and for all that his triumph in 1997 was no fluke and that he was justified for his 5 second place finishes, and claim that he is the best after Armstrong.

The Black Friday operation that opened the flood gates of allegations against team managers and rider’s alike after the Giro d’Italia, the signature street race of Italy, where in the final time trail Ullrich decimated all competition by winning 28secs ahead of Ivan Basso who is considered the best sprinter in the world of cycling. Also the above mentioned front runners notched up some unbelievable time that sent controversy hunters into frenzied activity and they were rewarded well after unearthing some compromising conversations between team doctors’s and dope suppliers.

All this meant that the top cyclists were forced to withdraw from the signature event in the world of cycling while the teams were left with no choice but to let the riders of the teams fight out among themselves to elect a leader whom everyone would rally around.

The race with the likes of Landis, Menchov, Evans, Sastra, Hincapie, Moncutie, Leipheimer and Kloden never really lacked the drama but by not having Lance and Ullrich, the peleton was scattered like a bunch of amateurs for a long time. The flat stages hardly saw any break-aways succeeding with the sprinters like Boonen and McEwen always finishing off in style. But as always the real test lay in the mountains and today the leaders finally got there act together.

Five Category 1 climbs meant that the peleton would dissolve by the last climb and that’s exactly what happened. In the end, the big 3 and the favorites, Landis, Leipheimer and Menchov came home to give some semblance to the race. The tour is all about working collectively together and kicking in the last possible minute and for these 3, today was that chance. There teams, Phonak, Gerolesteiner and Rabobank have finally found there men and the next 12 days will be all about bringing these 3 men out in front on every climb. Team T-Mobile will join them soon am sure but if there is one team that’s finally cracking after years its team Discovery, the former team of Lance Armstrong.

Unlike many years where Armstrong and Ullrich rode days after days in amazing tandem and sticking together when all the other 188 riders have fallen by to decide the better one in the final gradients of the Pyrenees and the Alps, the likes of Landis, Sastra, Evens and Kloden have to work very hard to get the camaraderie among themselves going and trust each other to be together to the final lengths in the mountains. It’s like that Lance and Jan dominated the race and sport providing some of the greatest displays of human strengths, character and quality that the tour is famous for.

I have followed this sport for a while now and every time when I watch the races this year I could hardly stop myself from thinking how the race would have been in Ullrich and Basso were around. Such was the strength of these guys along with Lance that they made this sport such a pleasure to watch.

The rivalry of Lance and Ullrich may no longer be there but by the end of this race I am sure there will be there worthy successors in place who will make this tour simply the greatest tournament of human spirit in the world.

no comments   |  tags: Tour de France | posted in Sports, Tour de France


Jul 9 2006

Kirimakki

Ok, before I start, I want to say that I was never a big fan of WWF or WWE. Yes, as a kid I had my days of playing those superstar’s cards where we would pit the statistics of a wrestler against the other to win the entire pack from our opponents, but that was it. I haven’t watched a match for ages now and I have no clue what’s happening in there.


But this guy, “The Great Khali” as WWE christened him, made me think as to whether India is the biggest market for wrestling audience so much so that Indian Wrestlers are making an impact on two federations.


Can you believe this man! He stands 7 feet 2 inches tall and weighs a whooping 191 kilos.



Dalip Singh Rana, his original name, hails from Punjab and is a former constable.

He moved to the US in 1999 where he became big in the local wrestling scene from where he moved to Japan to compete in the wrestling tournaments.

This guy also acted in a movie where he played the role of a maniac with limitless energy.



He’s been in WWE only for a couple of months now but has apparently taken smackdown, an event in WWE by storm.

He’s said to have defeated The Undertaker, someone I remember from my childhood for his rituals – and am honestly surprised he still around, twice already and is tipped to be the next champion.



I guess after Sonjay Dutt, whose mannerisms I have seen in the ads of TNA wrestling, The Great Khali is the second Indian in professional Entertainment Wrestling.


Just look at this guy man, what a build. Cha…



Hoping that he learns English real soon and kicks some ass real bad.

11 comments   |  tags: Sports | posted in Sports


Jun 13 2006

World Cup Diary – 1

1) France will not win this time too.

2) Brazil is not invincible.

3) Stars, irrespective of their status in club football will have to build up a reputation in the world stage.

4) EPL employs the worst type of football; the “beautiful” game is still European and Latin American.

5) Patrick Vieira, Lillian Thuram, Emerson and Ronaldo should think again about donning their nation’s colors.

6) Henry will not walk away with any golden stuff, neither will Ronaldo.

7) There is every chance of a minnow reaching up to the semi-final stage and it would be wonderful if it is an impoverished African nation.

8) In 10yrs one will be able to count the number of non-blacks in the international game with a pair of hands.

9) The language spoken on the field when the referee is an Egyptian, the teams are soviet and Latin American countries are either Spanish or French; but never English.

10) Argentina Vs Côte d’Ivoire is still the game of the tournament; Brazil’s game comes in a close second.

11) Cafu at 36 can today beat Marc Overmars when he was 20.

12) And finally we have Harsha Bhogle, Ranvir and Vinay doing what they do best.

vivo en futball

6 comments   |  tags: Sports | posted in Football, Sports


Jun 12 2006

Federer misses, Again!

I was reading this article in Haftamag last week about Sampras being the greatest player ever to have played the game. The article also talks about how this guy’s ability to mask all emotions on court, dedicate himself to winning and his religious fervor towards the game made him an icon for all the aspiring people who want to achieve such greatness in their lives. It was a nice article but I was just telling myself that only if the author would have waited till the end of the French Open Finals before publishing it because this one time I felt Federer would dethrone Sampras as the player with the near complete game. I was wrong as Federer will have to wait for a while before that can be said of him.

Federer Vs Nadal, French Open Men’s Final. 2006. This would have been the match of the year. This would have been the game in which Federer would have been crowned the undisputed champion of the open era. After the first set, he was almost there. But one magnanimous gesture on his part and Nadal came back. And once the return began, there was absolutely no looking back.

Tennis on clay is a tricky business. It’s not a Pre-Eminent Championship like Wimbledon (or so they claim, BRITISH!!!), neither it’s an all guns blazing tournament like the US Open, but French at some level constitutes the real challenge because how much ever skill or finesse one possess, it come down to stamina, hard-work and perseverance. That’s why some of the most wonderful exponents of the game, so they are called – like Sampras, fail at Roland Garros.

Clay court play, unlike grass or hard-court requires patience. Here the rallies are long, almost entirely on the baseline and never ever quick. When the average rally on Clay is 9 strokes, one can imagine how much preparation and strength is needed to win here regularly. That’s the reason why, except for Bjorn Borg, no other player has managed to win more that twice here on a trot. In Contrast, the Wimbledon, U.S. and Australian have been won time and again by loads of payers consecutively for years.

In yesterday’s game, after the first set demolition of Nadal, Federer looked like he finally broke the code of Nadal and found a way to win. 12 unforced errors from Nadal was unheard of especially on his favorite surface, such was Federer’s domination. But the moment the second set began, Nadal had the edge because of the heat, which Federer is not used too, and the pace of the court which was decreasing by the game. And the moment the court started to break into dust, Nadal’s resurgence began.

All through the remaining sets, Federer was forced into corners by long rallies, some of them crossing 20 strokes frequently, rallies which only one player could win. The only time when Federer looked like taking control was when he finished the point in 2 or 3 strokes. But such chances were far and few and by the fourth set, unforced errors read 40-18 Federer. No one can recover after hitting such a low in such a match.

Like Sampras, Federer has only the French Open left to win to stamp his authority on the game. Sampras’s remark once about exchanging a couple of grand slams with French Open may be true for Federer too. All through the final set when he was loosing, there could have been only one thing that Federer must have been saying to Nadal. “Dude, come onto Grass and I will show you”. A face off between the two on grass is out of question as Nadal will not survive for so long in the tournament as these two players are ranked 1 & 2 in the world. It will be the French again next year and another chance at the Open for Federer.

On a different note, what a day at sports it was yesterday. Tennis, F1, Football. And all at the same time. At one point, I was toggling between three channels, all with nail-biting stuff. Total paisa vassol. And yes, there was cricket too…

no comments   |  tags: Sports | posted in Sports


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