The Recycled Cyclist

Weekly Essays on Cycling in Mid-Life and Its Many Dimensions

Name:
Location: Massachusetts, United States

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Why Cycle?

The new revelations of blood doping at the 2007 Tour de France might lead someone to question the root motivations around cycling. If professionals at the sport's highest level are bolstering performance in ways not related to training or natural ability, doesn't the inspiration derived by non-professionals wane, and the domino effect lead to a diminution of cycling motivation and meaning?

Hardly. In fact, it leads me to think about the bright line separating sport and entertainment. Sport, as an ideal, is about attaining fitness, enjoying health, and competing fairly. In this regard, despite its lack of corporate or "big time" success, soccer is a huge success in the United States already. Millions of children play it as a sport. Will it ever turn into huge corporate-infested entertainment, designed to separate people from their wallets? That is the goal of the LA Galaxy and MLS currently. If their ploy succeeds, will the sport of soccer in America be better or worse? I can conceptualize it actually deteriorating, as more pressure is placed on young athletes, as competition becomes infected with team partisanship trickling down from the professional ranks, and as money brings the corruption it inevitably delivers.

For cycling, the sport -- from cyclosportif events, amateur races, charity rides, and personal fitness training -- is in great shape in America currently. There are more people riding, and there is momentum for this to continue. The cycling community is robust and fun to be a part of. These trends seems independent of the travails of the professional ranks, and in fact the sport may improve as the entertainment convulses. Imagine local team and ride jerseys instead of Rabobank and T-Mobile jerseys on riders; local sponsorship and event management; and strong regional rides for amateurs. It is already happening.

Great stage races like the Tour and the Giro can be inspiring and awesome. They entertain and, when the competition burst beyond the limited boundaries imposed by the conceits of entertainment, they can still inspire. Levi Leipheimer in this year's Tour de France was a perfect example of a sportsman propelling himself beyond the boundaries of the event. But these grand entertainments, with their roadside clowns, corporate sponsors, and television coverage, are not equivalent to the sport of cycling amateurs enjoy. Doing our best, improving year after year, beating out a friend in a sprint, suffering stoically on climbs, and losing the townline sprint gracefully -- these will remain the heart of the sport of cycling. The challenge for professionals is to return to the wellspring of the sport and remember . . .

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home