News and Views | ||
Hello Cycling Lovers, hope your having a great day, Bonjour Belgium! 15 years ago, I battled my way to my first & only Tour of Flanders Podium. What an incredible day it was. Fighting it out over the famous flemish roads against all my "heroes". That day changed the way I approached the Classics forever. From that day on, I knew, given the right circumstances and a bit of luck that anything was possible. I started dreaming of bigger things. I focused every training ride and race on the Classics. Now, I am sitting in my Hotel room in Ghent, about to witness it all again, but from the sidelines. Rubbing shoulders with the locals. Enjoying a Belgian beer as the guys race up the cobbled climbs in agony. I'll have a wry smile on my face thanking God I've retired! This year its cold, wet and just how the Classics should be. Its going to be the real hard riders of our sport that Win. This year on our max'd out www.mummucycling.com Classics trip, the guests have a jam packed 10 days. Riding both Flanders & Roubaix Gran-fondos, a Meet & Greet with Mitchelton-Scott before Paris Roubaix, catching up with Tom Boonen for a Beer, riding Flèche & Amstel with Frank Schleck as our ride guide then VIP hospitality inside the Roubaix velodrome after watching a few sections of cobbles on the roadside. And if you thought it couldn't get any better we will then have lunch with the Greatest of them all, the "King", Eddy Merckx. I love the Classics and being in Belgium for their National Cycling day then France for Roubaix, its got to be one of the best weeks of cycling of the year! And this year Mummu Cycling squad are right into it. We always aim to give every guest the Real Pro experience... Sometimes that means landing in the ditch .... Unreal effort to complete the 170k after this! Well done to everyone for completing a huge challenge #mummuontour | ||
www.stuartogradycycling.com.au | contact | Facebook | Twitter | ||
Stuart O'Grady's Pro Tour Blog
3 April 2018
Belgium 2018
Labels:
Belgium,
Eddy Merckx,
Frank Schleck,
Mummu Cycling,
Paris Roubaix,
Stuart O'Grady,
Tom Boonen,
Tour De Flanders
Location:
Belgium
3 January 2018
Shut Up Legs 4 - 17th January 2018
News and Views | ||
Hello Cycling fans, hope your having a great start to 2018.
I would like to inform you on an entertaining event coming up on the 17th January 2018. Starting at 7pm we present the 4th edition of the “Shut Up Legs” with Jens Voigt, hosted by myself, Stuart O’Grady at the Arkaba Hotel. Jens is world renowned for being a super tough cyclist & his motto, “Shut Up Legs” has been a global hit. Jens and I were team mates for 14 years, and share the World Record for Tour De France starts, racing 17 each. That's 34 laps of France (136,000kms) between us and approximately 1.5 million km's in their careers all up around the world. Between us we have won stages & worn the yellow jersey in the Tour De France, been a part of TDF winning teams and been involved in some major accidents... basically seen and experienced everything there is to see on a bike. We chat about our times together living in Europe and the ups & downs of those journeys, and will also be talking to special guests Mark Reid, the Invictus Games cycling coach along with a couple of the athletes that are going to Sydney in 2018 to compete in the games. The Invictus Games is an international adaptive multi-sport event, created by Prince Harry, in which wounded, injured or sick armed services personnel and their associated veterans take part in sports This is a fun and informal night that will give you a real insight into the Cycling World with plenty of laughs. Jens is hilarious and we bounce of each other like brothers. Q & A will follow plus we will auction off a couple of items signed by Jens and Stuart.. ★ TICKET PRICE INCLUDES - Cocktail food and 3 hour beverage package including Penny’s Hill wines, Pure Blonde, Carlton Draught, Bulmers, Pure Blonde Cider and soft drinks.17th January 2018, 7pm to 10pm Click Here for Tickets
Ticket price $99+ $3.50 booking fee.
Meet & Greet VIP - $150 + $4.50 booking fee (only 30 available) Part proceeds to The Mary Potter Foundation Inc | ||
www.stuartogradycycling.com.au | contact | Facebook | Twitter | ||
26 July 2017
Le Tour, then Home Sweet Home....
There's no place like home.
What an epic month that was back in Europe. I had intended on trying to write a few blogs to keep people up to date with what we getting up to with Mummu Cycling. I don't think I even opened my computer again after Luxembourg. I had an absolute ball. As a few of you may have seen in the social media photos.
I did feel at home around the TDF. After all it has been a part of my life for pretty much the last 20 years. I've had some massive "Up's" and a couple of massive "Downs", which makes the TDF what it is. Its what gives you so much satisfaction when you finally ride onto the Champs Elysees some 3 weeks later. It's pure mind over matter to make it all the way.
I couldn't believe how tired & gaunt the guys looked when we caught up with them in the final week.
Is that what I looked like every year? When riding this race, you're so caught up in the TDF bubble, surrounded by your team and fellow competitors you don't realise how skinny you are all getting & how knackered you all are.
The conversation deteriorates fairly quickly during the 3 weeks at the dinner table and even out on the roads. The fun goes out of the Tour very quickly. You've spent months & months training, racing & thinking of the TDF, after 2 stages you're wondering 'what the hell am I doing here'. But its all worth it when you finally complete the mission... Get your ass to Paris at all costs. It doesn't matter if you crash and have half your skin missing, or have had stomach issues or maybe an injury that you cant tell the media about, because you, as part of a team are trying to remain focused and look strong.
Every team is chasing "that" stage win. Not every year things go according to plan.
Just ask Richie. He will be back, but unfortunately for him that will make it even harder for next year.
Each Grand Tour you ride is like adding another brick on top of a fence, you get stronger & stronger.
And the Frenchies this year were amazing! It was great to see the French finally winning on their home soil, and winning a lot! This Bardet guy has what it takes to Win Le Tour, no doubt. His downfall will always be the TT & even worse the Teams Time Trial. The French teams have never been historically great at the TTT, besides the one we won in 2001 with Credit Agricole of course ;)
So should a change of teams be on the cards for Romain to possibly a stronger team where he has more of an opportunity to win. That would mean leaving his comfort zone and obviously his French team. That will be something interesting to follow in the years to come.
I will do a bit of a summary of our Mummu Cycling tour trip another day, I have to pack the bags and fly to Sydney today, so I will leave it there. It really is something special the Tour De France and to see how cycling touches so many people all around the globe just continues to blow me away.
Stay safe on the roads...
Viva Le Tour
Here's just a few snapshots out of the hundreds....
Aurevoir
Stuey
What an epic month that was back in Europe. I had intended on trying to write a few blogs to keep people up to date with what we getting up to with Mummu Cycling. I don't think I even opened my computer again after Luxembourg. I had an absolute ball. As a few of you may have seen in the social media photos.
I did feel at home around the TDF. After all it has been a part of my life for pretty much the last 20 years. I've had some massive "Up's" and a couple of massive "Downs", which makes the TDF what it is. Its what gives you so much satisfaction when you finally ride onto the Champs Elysees some 3 weeks later. It's pure mind over matter to make it all the way.
I couldn't believe how tired & gaunt the guys looked when we caught up with them in the final week.
Is that what I looked like every year? When riding this race, you're so caught up in the TDF bubble, surrounded by your team and fellow competitors you don't realise how skinny you are all getting & how knackered you all are.
The conversation deteriorates fairly quickly during the 3 weeks at the dinner table and even out on the roads. The fun goes out of the Tour very quickly. You've spent months & months training, racing & thinking of the TDF, after 2 stages you're wondering 'what the hell am I doing here'. But its all worth it when you finally complete the mission... Get your ass to Paris at all costs. It doesn't matter if you crash and have half your skin missing, or have had stomach issues or maybe an injury that you cant tell the media about, because you, as part of a team are trying to remain focused and look strong.
Every team is chasing "that" stage win. Not every year things go according to plan.
Just ask Richie. He will be back, but unfortunately for him that will make it even harder for next year.
Each Grand Tour you ride is like adding another brick on top of a fence, you get stronger & stronger.
And the Frenchies this year were amazing! It was great to see the French finally winning on their home soil, and winning a lot! This Bardet guy has what it takes to Win Le Tour, no doubt. His downfall will always be the TT & even worse the Teams Time Trial. The French teams have never been historically great at the TTT, besides the one we won in 2001 with Credit Agricole of course ;)
So should a change of teams be on the cards for Romain to possibly a stronger team where he has more of an opportunity to win. That would mean leaving his comfort zone and obviously his French team. That will be something interesting to follow in the years to come.
I will do a bit of a summary of our Mummu Cycling tour trip another day, I have to pack the bags and fly to Sydney today, so I will leave it there. It really is something special the Tour De France and to see how cycling touches so many people all around the globe just continues to blow me away.
Stay safe on the roads...
Viva Le Tour
Here's just a few snapshots out of the hundreds....
Aurevoir
Stuey
5 July 2017
This is my first ever Blog...
Here I am sitting in Mondorf Les Bains after an incredible start to my TDF European adventure with Mummy Cycling.
I landed in Dusseldorf last Wednesday into torrential rains which lashed the start of the TDF. We had a small group of great people who I introduced into "my" cycling world. We met teams, riders, mechanics and had photos with a lot of their favourites along the way.
Stage 2 we rode the final 50kms of the course then had the once in a lifetime (for the guests of Mummu Cycling anyway) to ride across the finish line and then get invited up onto the Podium where they were given the Yellow & Green jerseys to really top off a very special occasion.
After the Stage I headed down to Luxembourg with Christian Van de Velde & Jens Voigt to be a part of a special ceremony in Mondorf les Bains with the Schleck brothers and their families.
It was great to see them all again and that because of those two brothers the whole TDF circus was coming to their hometown. Its a pretty special moment.
Yesterday the Stage kicked off under perfectly sunny skies and the peloton rode their way through the stunning scenery of Luxembourg. I hung around in Mondorf for lunch with the Schlecks and really took as much of it in as I could. I spent 3 great years living in Luxembourg and have so many memories with my own family. Seth learnt to ride his bike here, the kids went to school here, we had a great life in Lux and the memories were flooding back.
In the afternoon though I had a very special treat coming up. One of my lifetime goals was to drive the Nurnburgring. The famous "Green Hell" though the insane roads of the very famous racing track.
An old friend of mine just happened to have bought a brand new Ferrari 488GTB which he hadn't had the occasion to take around the circuit yet either. So after an extremely quick & easy decision, he scooped me up and we were on our way to have a crack at the famous circuit. Now words cannot describe it & the video clips don't do it justice, but the complete craziness of what we did really didn't sink in til later.
Its open slather out there. Anyone can rock up in any car, motorbike pay their 25 euro and just go full gas! Its insane. No car controls. No breathalyser before the start, they just get on and go nuts.
Its the first time I've had sweaty palms for as long as I can remember. We did two laps at around 8mins 27sec, which is going pretty quick, but not dangerously...Well...
We saw two cars wipe out in front of us and become instant wrecks & seeing there is no insurance its pretty mad to see how people push it to the limit. Way above their abilities. It was an awesome experience.
Then we went on to the F1 track for 10 minutes of absolutely insane flat out driving. Steve my driver & friend was an ex professional racing driver, so I was very happy to have him guiding me around at speeds I wouldn't have dreamed of. I had an absolute ball!
All this while the TDF was going on and all hell was breaking loose in the finish.
Sagan DQ'd. Cavendish smashed into the barriers. The social media world was on fire blaming whoever they thought was responsible.
Sport is dangerous. People make mistakes. In the heat of battle athletes do crazy things.
I've also seen Cav take out a few riders during his career. Yes he apologised, but it happens.
We all make mistakes but it's what you do next that counts, how you react & respond.
I've locked horns and elbows with Robbie in a pretty well photographed sprint. Luckily neither of us crashed, but at some stage we've all been taken out. Crashes happen, that why I stopped doing sprints and targeted the Classics.
The pressure of winning is enormous from the Team bosses but most of the pressure comes from the rider himself. He is his biggest enemy.
The ego's are at max inflation. The whole sporting World is watching. The stress levels are at absolute maximum & you've got a bunch of likeminded sprinters (who are all a little bit crazy in the head) going for the Win, at all costs. Thats the Tour De France. Sagan should've been disqualified, but kicked off the Tour De France? No, I don't agree with that.
The Tour has been getting worse and worse for years, theres no real Boss of the peloton anymore, the gloves have been off for years. Guys are attacking on wet descents now. Attacking when the leaders have mechanical issues, attacking when theres any advantage to be taken. Theres a lot more traffic furniture along the roads doing everything they can to slow cars down through towns and the cyclists are coming even faster and more reckless than before. There is basically no more "Respect" in the peloton, something we held highly when I raced. Riders need to start respecting each other again & take responsibility for their actions. Crashes are becoming common because there is no more respect.
You can't cover every scenario when you're racing on public roads, you can't control every spectator & you certainly can't control every athlete in the heat of the finish line. Be strict but be fair & consistent. DQ them, give them fines that will hurt their pockets, take away lots of points but don't take the actors out of the movie. Because the show has to go on...
Vivre Le Tour...
Stuey
Here I am sitting in Mondorf Les Bains after an incredible start to my TDF European adventure with Mummy Cycling.
I landed in Dusseldorf last Wednesday into torrential rains which lashed the start of the TDF. We had a small group of great people who I introduced into "my" cycling world. We met teams, riders, mechanics and had photos with a lot of their favourites along the way.
Stage 2 we rode the final 50kms of the course then had the once in a lifetime (for the guests of Mummu Cycling anyway) to ride across the finish line and then get invited up onto the Podium where they were given the Yellow & Green jerseys to really top off a very special occasion.
After the Stage I headed down to Luxembourg with Christian Van de Velde & Jens Voigt to be a part of a special ceremony in Mondorf les Bains with the Schleck brothers and their families.
It was great to see them all again and that because of those two brothers the whole TDF circus was coming to their hometown. Its a pretty special moment.
Yesterday the Stage kicked off under perfectly sunny skies and the peloton rode their way through the stunning scenery of Luxembourg. I hung around in Mondorf for lunch with the Schlecks and really took as much of it in as I could. I spent 3 great years living in Luxembourg and have so many memories with my own family. Seth learnt to ride his bike here, the kids went to school here, we had a great life in Lux and the memories were flooding back.
In the afternoon though I had a very special treat coming up. One of my lifetime goals was to drive the Nurnburgring. The famous "Green Hell" though the insane roads of the very famous racing track.
An old friend of mine just happened to have bought a brand new Ferrari 488GTB which he hadn't had the occasion to take around the circuit yet either. So after an extremely quick & easy decision, he scooped me up and we were on our way to have a crack at the famous circuit. Now words cannot describe it & the video clips don't do it justice, but the complete craziness of what we did really didn't sink in til later.
Its open slather out there. Anyone can rock up in any car, motorbike pay their 25 euro and just go full gas! Its insane. No car controls. No breathalyser before the start, they just get on and go nuts.
Its the first time I've had sweaty palms for as long as I can remember. We did two laps at around 8mins 27sec, which is going pretty quick, but not dangerously...Well...
We saw two cars wipe out in front of us and become instant wrecks & seeing there is no insurance its pretty mad to see how people push it to the limit. Way above their abilities. It was an awesome experience.
Then we went on to the F1 track for 10 minutes of absolutely insane flat out driving. Steve my driver & friend was an ex professional racing driver, so I was very happy to have him guiding me around at speeds I wouldn't have dreamed of. I had an absolute ball!
All this while the TDF was going on and all hell was breaking loose in the finish.
Sagan DQ'd. Cavendish smashed into the barriers. The social media world was on fire blaming whoever they thought was responsible.
Sport is dangerous. People make mistakes. In the heat of battle athletes do crazy things.
I've also seen Cav take out a few riders during his career. Yes he apologised, but it happens.
We all make mistakes but it's what you do next that counts, how you react & respond.
The pressure of winning is enormous from the Team bosses but most of the pressure comes from the rider himself. He is his biggest enemy.
The ego's are at max inflation. The whole sporting World is watching. The stress levels are at absolute maximum & you've got a bunch of likeminded sprinters (who are all a little bit crazy in the head) going for the Win, at all costs. Thats the Tour De France. Sagan should've been disqualified, but kicked off the Tour De France? No, I don't agree with that.
The Tour has been getting worse and worse for years, theres no real Boss of the peloton anymore, the gloves have been off for years. Guys are attacking on wet descents now. Attacking when the leaders have mechanical issues, attacking when theres any advantage to be taken. Theres a lot more traffic furniture along the roads doing everything they can to slow cars down through towns and the cyclists are coming even faster and more reckless than before. There is basically no more "Respect" in the peloton, something we held highly when I raced. Riders need to start respecting each other again & take responsibility for their actions. Crashes are becoming common because there is no more respect.
You can't cover every scenario when you're racing on public roads, you can't control every spectator & you certainly can't control every athlete in the heat of the finish line. Be strict but be fair & consistent. DQ them, give them fines that will hurt their pockets, take away lots of points but don't take the actors out of the movie. Because the show has to go on...
Vivre Le Tour...
Stuey
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)