Categories: GeneralRacing

The A.C. Enigma

With the Spring Classics now turning to debates over motorized doping and the hardman’s GT over, perhaps it’s time to start turning our gaze toward the Tour de France. Sure, there’s some sure-to-be good racing between now and then, but who cares? The TdF is next up on the VSP and we here at Velominati need to start conjuring up picks.

When Alberto Contador won the Vuelta in 2008 I was pretty excited for the guy.  I walked down the hall to a fellow cycling fan and colleague’s office after reading the race report on VeloNews and asked if he’d heard.  “Dude, Contador just won the Vuelta!” I said.  “That’s the past three consecutive Grand Tours he’s entered and three consecutive wins, really impressive. (15 months to be accurate but who’s counting)  Guys just don’t do shit like that anymore!”  And now he’s four for four.

But oh if things were that simple for me.  Pesky investigations, rumors and accusations stemming from Operation Puerto led to subsequent inquisitions of El Pistolero.  This eventually led to both the UCI and Spanish courts issuing statements that no legal action or sanctions would be pursued.  Later his new team, Astana, was banned from the Tour in 2008 because Veino was doped to the gills and swung through the Jiffy Lube for a 20 minute oil change the year before.  And then the whole media-fueled shitstorm started with that guy from Texas joining Astana.  Blech!  Trying to ignore the A.C. – L.A. drama of last year’s Tour was probably about as difficult as riding the Tour itself.  If anyone managed to get through the Tour without hearing about that B.S. they deserve an honorary Maillot Jaune and a kiss from two podium girls.

Throughout all this, perhaps even in spite of all this, A.C. continued to win races.  Okay so he didn’t make the podium at Paris-Nice last year, a race he won in 2007 and again this year.  The coverage would make one think that a 4th place finish in the Race to the Sun was disgraceful and that he’d lost his touch.  He bonked and bonked hard on the sixth stage.  But with wins at Volta a Algarve, Vuelta a Pais Vasco, a podium finish at the Dauphine, and becoming the Spanish National TT champion, A.C. was proving himself to be the best all-arounder in the peloton.

So what are the impressions we get of Contador?  Bruyneel has tossed out mixed messages.  On the one hand he’s the most explosive and gifted climber he’s ever seen.  On the other he’s some type of prima donna who rides for himself.  I would too after having to buy my own TT wheels and proving myself to be the strongest rider in the peloton only to be treated like a neo-pro.  Of course don’t even bother asking a Livestronger about Alberto.  Anyone who get’s in the way of another coronation for The Boss (read COTHO) has got to be arrogant, selfish, and just plain mean.  Okay, so Contador’s pistol shot salute is sort of lame and contrived but so what?  It’s a hell of lot better than playing telephone.  And he’s certainly not the most entertaining guy in interviews.  But I haven’t seen anything that makes him out to be anything other than pragmatic and perhaps even introspective.   He actually seems kind of chill.

In a recent interview in Cycle Sport America, David Millar had a few things to say about Contador (of course, Millar has a few things to say about a lot) . The gist was that Alberto went to war against Johan and Lance last year both in the press and on the road.  He won on both fronts.  He also spoke of the respect A.C. is garnering in the peloton, his strength on the bike, and the perseverance he’s maintained through all this.  On that classic bonk and subsequent stage in 2009’s P-N, he had this to say:

When you watch a race, you want to believe riders can stay away in a break.  That’s what’s exciting. It does still happen, like with Contador in the last stage of Paris-Nice (2009).  He’d been humiliated the day before.  He got the hunger knock and blew his nuts off.  Lost the jersey and was lying third or fourth.  Tragedy.  I said, ‘Watch Alberto go tomorrow.  First mountain.’ Nobody believed me. I said, ‘He will, he will, it’s Alberto.’  First Mountain, he went, from the bottom.  That’s old school.  His team didn’t set him up, he just went.  There were still 100k to go.  He attacked the whole peloton and he was still away at the end.

We saw this on the much bigger stage of last year’s Tour as well.  After getting caught out of a decisive split in stage three the L.A. show was supposedly on.  If you believed 1/3 of the guys on Versus and most everyone else you would’ve thought El Pistolero was now second fiddle.  Lance’s smart riding aside, THIS WAS ONLY STAGE THREE PEOPLE!   Enter the Arcalis.  A.C. took off to the consternation of the entire Astana team and  1/3 of the guys calling the race on Versus and turned a 20 second deficit into a 2 second lead over his soon-to-be-former teammate.   He was letting it be known that he was the strongest rider on the Astana team and the whine fest was on.

So what can we say more objectively about Contador?  Well, his light-as-a-feather climbing style has been compared to Charly Gaul and Marco Pantani.  Suffice it to say, there’s not another rider in the peloton who can really compete, day in, day out, with Alberto in the mountains.  He’s proven he can rip a TT course as well.  His performance in last year’s final ITT at the Tour was decisive.  Maybe he’s not the greatest at reading a race or making it into all the splits but I’m afraid to say that those are dying skills.  With race radios and directors barking orders into a headset non-stop, what rider really needs to think for himself?   And as far as needing a strong team to win this year, let’s not forget last year.  I’m not entirely convinced he needs a squad of super-domestiques to pull him through the Tour.  Maybe just a few solid riders will do.

When A.C. won the Vuelta in ’08 and pulled off the virtual Grand Tour trifecta I was a fan.  Then, for reasons I don’t fully understand, I thought I didn’t like him.  Then I was confused about why I was trying not to like El Pistolero.  I really still don’t know what to think of the guy. I guess I’m indifferent towards him. Regardless of what I or any of you think, the promise that he’ll continue to ride with dominance on the climbs and strength in the TT is going to shape the Tour this year .  This time, it’d be nice if there were a few guys who could keep up.   It’s not his fault he wins races, it’s everyone else’s.  Trying to beat Alberto and win the GC is what’s going to make this year’s Tour exciting, not a comeback, not a team leadership struggle, and certainly not a cat fight in the media.

Marko

Marko lives and rides in the upper midwest of the States, Minnesota specifically. "Cycling territory" and "the midwest" don't usually end up in the same sentence unless the conversation turns to the roots of LeMond, Hampsten, Heiden and Ochowitz. While the pavé and bergs of Flanders are his preferred places to ride, you can usually find him harvesting gravel along forest and farm roads. He owes a lot to Cycling and his greatest contribution to cycling may forever be coining the term Rainbow Turd.

View Comments

  • Wow! You pretty much nailed it. I'm indifferent, too. He's an amazing rider"”beautiful to watch"”but I don't feel strongly one way or the other. Maybe it's the whole AC-LA nonsense from last year combined with the doping speculation on the one hand and the fact that he is second-to-none the best GT rider in the world by quite some margin on the other. Maybe it's his patchy (but improving) English. His interviews don't really inspire the imagination (compare, unfairly, perhaps with Voigt or Spartacus or even the Schlecks). Will have to chew on this further...

  • nicely balanced article Marko - I too am/was in the Contador ambivalence camp, but more so because Puerto has poisoned my mind against Spanish GC men. Combine that with his absolute dominance and you end up going for the underdogs.
    Here's hoping for a bit of action from some others, but I can't see it right now. The Brothers Grimpeur seem to have lost their mojo (although they could be lying doggo for now and come good in July - here's hoping), COTHO is now FHF (fat happy and finished) and the rest of them aren't at AC's standard.

    I just want a one good last show from Robbie McEwen - which may or may not include decking Cavendouche.

  • Yeah, nice article, Marko.

    @Marcus "Decking" as in Bad Cadel's (attempted) fisticuffs? Or as in Robbie's (2003?) head-butting of SOG? Bound to be something going on with all those aggressive Australians in the peloton these days...

  • I too am in almost total agreement. AC just leaves me cold, when I should be delighted at his explosive climbing antics. Fleche Wallone? I was so close to switching the TV off when he surged (I guess this falls the other side of ambivalence) and was happy as Larry to see him beat. By Good Cadel, no less!

    Much as I hate to say it, I'm with @Marcus on the Spaniards thing. It's hard to have faith when their legal system makes it a veritable doping safe haven. I cracked open a bottle of bubbly when I heard the more recent Piti-ful news :¬)

    BUT... @Marko - aren't they phasing out race radios? Which can only be a good thing (there's a can opener for your worms), especially if it given us more racing like that seen recently in the Giro. Bad weather + poor comms = Peloton chaos. Always good for us guys in the armchair...

  • Great article, mate. Here's the thing for me: I'm always in the underdog camp. And, if the underdog looks cool; I'm in whole-hog.

    For me it's the excitement of seeing the unexpected. Don't get me wrong, if I was a pro trying to win the Tour, I'd do it the way Armstrong did it: control everything you can, leave nothing to chance, and dominate it as early as possible to reduce risk. And repeat.

    But fuck me, that's terrible entertainment. I want excitement, I want fireworks. I want less predictability. It even gets to the point where I don't want Spartacus to also win P-R, simply because it's what I expect.

    I find I love the enigmatic, unpredictable riders. Pantani, Ullrich. Those guys were all class, and you never knew if they were going to go all Rule 5 on that shit or crack and be a disaster.

    Or the Brothers Grimpeur, who are just this side of winning and with a good day, they take it. On a bad day, well, they're just on this side of winning.

    That's why I am not a fan of AC. Loved him in the Tour in '07, lighting up the roads and dangling Rass-juiced-en on the climbs. That was racing. Even the Giro in '08 was great. Then came the Vuelta and the Tour in '09. The second it becomes predictable, I'm out.

  • I love the fact that AC - is it an interesting fact that many people are now using his Puerto codename to identify Contador? Anyway, getting side-tracked, I love the fact that Bertie put one over the CoTHO last year. Very satisfying.

    Other than that I'm hugely indifferent about him. Invariably I'd rather someone else wins, as long as it isn't the CoTHO, but sometimes his old-school attacking is hard to resist. I just don't believe in him enough. There is still much talk of transfusions and micro-dosing and after all. Why were his initials in the Puerto documents. I can't go around arguing that The CoTHO couldn't be clean while all around are testing positive, if don't do the same with Contador. I guess under it all is the fear that we will end up with another Armstrong. And he's not done with us yet.

  • His breaking rank last year was a little bit cool. And unlike Armstrong, he evidently doesn't need a team to beat a strong GC field. But that predictability thing is almost as boring as Armstrong. He time trials exceptionally well and how do you drop him in the mountains?

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