It’s Official: Discovery Will Disband
By Ashton | Permalink |What a sad day for U.S. cycling. I suppose we should not be surprised. Other than those of us who love the sport and go to the trouble to find the information necessary to follow it, all the news here in the US has been bad. Cycling gets very little coverage here, but what it did get all started and ended with comments about the continuing doping scandals.
I’ve worked hard to avoid using many words since beginning to contribute to this site. Two of them are “Barry Bonds.” As a native and life-long resident of Hank Aaron’s home town I cannot be considered an objective observer in the Major League Home Run race. But everything I’ve read about Bonds suggests he has used steroids to enhance his performance.
All of professional U.S. sports is plagued with drugs, of both the performance and recreational varieties. The official organizations take official stands against both varieties, but few people are confident that they really are enforcing their stated policies.
Every participating level of Professional cycling is trying to clean up its sport. From the riders to the regulatory authorities to the sponsors. Cycling is suffering through what looks like a dark era, but I believe this will prove to be it’s brightest day. I don’t know what kind of roaches they have in Europe, but here in America the rats and roaches run for cover whenever the lights are turned on.
Cycling is shining the light of truth on its pests. The rats and roaches are being exposed. Collateral damage is an unintended impact of any major effort of this sort and we can be almost certain that some clean riders will be marred in the process. That is unfair, but it is a fact of life.
Present day USA is a personality driven institution. If a personality as large and influential as Lance Armstrong’s cannot land a sponsor then the momentum against cycling in corporate America really must be strong. This is a darn sad day for one of the most successful professional sports franchises to have existed in my half-century lifetime.
The real cheaters know who they are. I hope they are fully aware of what they have done to their colleagues as well as their fans!
Comments
Part of the potential problem being discussed on the blogs is Contador’s link to the Puerto scandal. Another less arguable problem is the fact that Discovery hired Ivan Basso after T-Mobile let him go.
I have not been shadowing the blogs long enough to develop an appreciation of the predispositions of their major posters so it is difficult for me at this point to express an opinion on just how legitimate those concerns might be. What really matters at this point is that Discovery is kaput!
Oh, did I mention that part of blog population that is convinced that Johan Bruyneel is crooked and is glad that his chickens have come home to roost? What about the group that is glad Contador no longer will have a team because he is unemployable because of the problems mentioned above?
Post your comment
If you have not commented here before, please take a moment to peruse ourCommenting Guidelines.
Cycling Travel
- RTW Trip Planner
- Search Youth Hostels
- Cheap Air Tickets
- Travel Insurance Guide
- Travel Message Boards
- World Adventures
Travel Guide
- Write for Cycling Logue Plan a Cycling Trip
- Where to Stay
- Races
- Riders
- Subscribe to Cycling RSS Feed
Monthly Archives
BootsnAll Logues
TRAVEL THEMES
DESTINATIONS
SPORTS





I was thinking the same thing today - if a team co-owned by the only guy to win seven Tours de France, an American guy at that, can’t find a friggin’ sponsor, then that’s a really sad commentary on the state of cycling today. Just think - the team which put two men on the podium, won the team competition and two jersey competitions in this year’s Tour will not be back next year. That, my friends, is nuts.