Fearful organisers and precious riders have wrecked the 2014 Giro d'Italia

By Lee Rodgers / Expert

If you’re not a fan of descending roads on a racing bike in the rain then you’d best quit cycling as a sport.

The palaver that we saw on Tuesday was not a direct result of the riders being soft.

But the complaints that the Giro organisers have heard over the years, and indeed in this edition, played a major role in their decision to call for the neutralisation of the descent on the Stelvio.

One truism of bike racers is that they will always find something to complain about, whether it be the heat, the cold, the dryness, the wetness, the proximity of race cars, the narrowness of finishes, or the angles of curves.

Certainly no one wants to see riders hurt, and yes, some races are so poorly planned that it seems that the organisers have never raced a bike in their lives. But generally racers accept that this is a crazy sport and ultimately, you just cop it.

Why put the Stelvio in the race if you’re going to panic when it rains? Wasn’t there a contingency plan just in case? Obviously not, because you’d have to be nuts to attempt to neutralise a descent, no matter how hairy it might be.

Bike racers accept that this is a dangerous sport. Some riders are very good at getting themselves through narrow spaces in the last kilometre and, if that skill is married to fast-twitch muscle fibres, these guys tend to be top sprinters.

A guy with too much sense and a fear of crashing at 65 kilometres an hour next to metal barriers would never dream of complaining to the commissaries that the finish was dodgy. He just accepts that he isn’t good at that particular strand of bike racing and lets it go.

Going downhill is another discipline at which some excel and some do not. Simple as that. Some even relish the rain when it comes, such are their descending skills, just as Ayrton Senna loved a wet race track.

So it’s the Stelvio. It’s raining. So what?

“Really, I don’t know if what they are saying is a joke,” Nairo Quintana said the following day, after reading the complaints of some riders and team managers.

“It makes me laugh, because in reality everyone present and everyone who watches on TV knows what really happened. It’s like I went down the Stelvio in a car or on a motorbike. I came down on a bike on the same roads everyone else came down and then I climbed well afterwards.

“If I’d come down in a car, or taken a short cut and they wanted to take two minutes off me, then I’d agree with that, but I did the same route as everyone else and I won. I don’t know why they would want to take time off me.”

The important point is: “I came down on a bike on the same roads everyone else came down.”

You can argue whether the message from the organisers was conveyed properly or thoroughly, but you cannot argue with the fact that the descent is a selection point in itself, and the fact it was wet only added to its potential decisiveness.

To even consider neutralising the descent was the organisers’ first mistake.

Their second was to make such a balls-up of communicating that decision. Indeed, so unusual a call was it that its legitimacy was called into question.

Trek Factory Racing manager Luca Guercilena noted that the message itself was open to interpretation and that it was not actually justifiable within the rules of the UCI.

“The communication was wrong and liable to be misunderstood. The safety bike is not in the UCI rules,” he said.

There is of course a case to be made that it did seem that certain GC riders, Cadel Evans and Quintana among them, seemed to hang back on the descent in the belief that the descent was indeed being neutralised.

Yet Ryder Hesjedal, who came second on the stage, made a salient point when asked about what had gone on.

“Tell me what a neutralised descent is? Does everyone just stop?” he said the day after.

“If you’re serious about the race and especially if you’re in the pink jersey, you should have been at the head of affairs. End of story. Everyone rode down the descent and that was it.”

I have to say I agree with Hesjedal. These guys have ridden in enough races to learn that the best policy when you hear something on the road is to ignore it until it’s enforced by officials.

Road racers are a cutthroat bunch and not to be trusted, and that often goes for guys on your own team too. Both Evans and Rigoberto Uran should have headed straight to the front of the race to insert themselves at the head of affairs.

Had they done that, none of this would have happened.

Ultimately though, this was a problem caused by the ineptitude of the organisers. They’ve now cast a huge shadow over the result of Tuesday’s stage and it’s one that will linger over the final result of the entire race.

The Crowd Says:

2014-05-30T21:07:19+00:00

Tim Renowden

Expert


Yeah, it was a crazy situation. Quintana's strong time trial in stage 19 has put his gap to Uran beyond the time gained on that stage 16 descent, so perhaps that might take some heat out of the argument.

2014-05-30T11:34:32+00:00

Hutchoman

Roar Pro


I've been following road cycling for a while now, admittedly not to aficionado level, but reckon I've built up some decent knowledge. For the life of me I don't understand the logic behind "neutralising a race" unless you are to have a "safety car" situation. You're either racing or you're not. Why aren't races just "red flagged" if conditions become too dangerous with the times called as they are at that point? I really don't understand the concept of riding on for miles on end without actually racing.

AUTHOR

2014-05-30T06:46:59+00:00

Lee Rodgers

Expert


I hear where you're coming from Tim but I've seen this first hand when I was racing UCI events, where the organisers screw up and the peloton ends up careening through jammed traffic, for example. The guys on the motos might be screaming and blowing on whistles but there'll be 20 or 30% or more of the pack that still try to get an advantage. In this situation you have two choices: stop riding and let them go, or chase. For sure it sucks and you want to cave in their craniums once you catch them, but these things do happen. It should never happen in a Grand Tour but, you know what - it just did! Everyone's to blame here at least a little, but the organisers the most though...

2014-05-30T06:04:20+00:00

Tim Renowden

Expert


I disagree with the "that's racing so suck it up" argument. Quintana and Hesjedal are arguing that they descended better and that's just part of competition. That would be fair enough under ordinary circumstances, descending is a weapon for the skilled rider, but this only happened because the other riders explicitly believed it was *not* a competition at the time. Yes, there's an argument to be had about the organisers' lack of clarity and whether the race *should* have been neutralised. We can argue that until the cows come home, but most teams and many riders have been vocal about their belief that the race was neutralised. Uran descended the Stelvio with all the urgency of a country postman. To me it looked very clear that he wasn't anywhere near his limits. If Quintana was taking time out of Uran because of superior nerves or skills, no problem. But he didn't, he took time out of Uran because Uran (and many others) didn't think he was in a race at the time. That is why Patrick Lefevre is threatening to sue, and why the other teams (represented by the AICGP) are demanding retrospective alterations to times from the stage (http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/aigcp-request-for-nullification-of-stelvio-time-differences-denied). The fact that Quintana, Rolland and Hesjedal took advantage (passing motos with red flags? Really?) is disappointing and to me it has tarnished this Giro.

2014-05-30T01:50:23+00:00

liquorbox_

Guest


This is why the Giro is better than the TDF, it is about the challenge and racing, not the constant tourist promotion of places to visit. I also think the Vuelta is a better race than the TDF. If you can win the Giro you have shown courage and briken the pain barrier, there is more to pain than muscle fatigue.

2014-05-29T23:24:15+00:00

ed - sydney

Guest


I'm all for epic mountain stages but taking the race above 2000 meters in May is pretty risky. Should the giro be bumped back to June to ensure better weather in the high mountains? Not many of the riders, at least the overall contenders, will back up for the tour in july I agree that cycling is crap weather is part of the sport & that riders need to be good in all weather - but I'm glad I wasn't riding that day

2014-05-29T21:21:41+00:00

Sam Brown

Roar Guru


I agree completely with your third last paragraph Lee, Evans and Uran should have been at the front marking off any potential moves like hawks. Evans knows this better than anyone after snatching a minute on everyone early in the race thanks to being in a good position when craziness struck the peloton.

2014-05-29T20:04:48+00:00

kippa

Guest


Grow some kahuunas. If you are worried, have the team car wait at the top to swap tyres over to a better grip wet weather tyre. This is where races are won.

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