Last week on the live blog, we reported on the live blog that perennial French housewives’ favourite Tommy Voeckler joined the ever-growing ranks of cyclists who can run pretty fast by completing the Paris Half Marathon in a very impressive time of 1:13.21.
That was enough to secure the former Europcar star, now manager of the French national team, fourth in his age category (which included former three-time European triathlon champion Frédéric Belaubre) and 179th overall out of 48,000 entrants.
And Tommy even topped it all off by finishing his run and rushing across to the France Télévisions studio to commentate on the opening stage of Paris-Nice.
> Retired pro cyclist Tommy Voeckler clocks super-fast 1:13.21 at Paris half-marathon while gurning for the TV cameras – before heading off to commentate on Paris-Nice
But it turns out that gurner-in-chief Voeckler wasn’t the only retired pro cyclist running the streets of Paris last week.
Yesterday, 35-time Tour de France stage winner Sir Mark Cavendish posted a collection of snaps on Instagram from his recent stay in the French capital – the scene of four consecutive Tour victories for the Manx Missile between 2009 and 2012 – featuring a more relaxing than usual amble along the Champs-Élysées, a trip to the Louvre, a PSG match, breakfast pastries, coffee… and a stab at the Paris Half Marathon.
Cavendish’s decision to interrupt his well-deserved retirement with some running – he said last winter he plans to spend the first spring of his retirement taking on the Paris Marathon with his brother – saw him cover the half distance in a highly respectable time of 1:57.08.
Sure, he’s a fair bit off grand tour winner-turned-amateur running king Tom Dumoulin, who clocked a blistering half marathon time of 1:08.42 in January, but for a first go, Cav’s time was not too shabby at all.
Or so we thought. Because, along with the usual jokes about sprinting past everyone in the last 200m or needing a decent lead-out train, the grumpy running corner of the internet (who weren’t even that impressed with Dumoulin’s time, it must be said) has reacted to Cavendish’s Paris Half Marathon attempt with the social media equivalent of an eye roll and a barely contained tut.
> Former pro cyclist Tom Dumoulin clocks a blistering 1:08:42 half marathon... but grumpy runners aren't impressed
“I wouldn't want that time posted all over social media!” wrote Neil Bardsley, while Rob Burns asked: “Was he in a Dalek costume?”
“Dead slow for a world class athlete,” concluded Ken Nuttley, while Kurt Oehlberg said: “I would have expected a bit faster time given his years of cardio fitness.”
“How on earth can he run that slow after 20 years of cardio training? Sounds strange,” agreed Christian Ebert.
“He must have walked,” suggested Narasimhan. I’m sure he could do a sub-90 with the power and endurance he has.”
“Honestly I would have expected much better from a professional cyclist,” said Chris Gilligan. “Maybe he was running with his wife, or a group or something.”
“He must have been taking it very easy,” added Paul Wright, while Peter Williams joked that Cav’s attempt was “not a bad time running in cleats”.
(A.S.O./Thomas_Maheux)
Others weren’t as charitable, however.
“Not as easy as cycling, is it?” jabbed Andrew Cooke, as Kaleb Torgerson wondered whether the 2011 world champion was trying to “outdo Phil Gaimon with the worst retirement ever?”
And a very chuffed Rob Green said: “Well, I couldn’t ride a bike as fast as he did, but I now know I can run a half marathon quicker than he can.”
> Mark Cavendish wins “special” BBC Lifetime Achievement award after record-breaking final season
Thankfully, not everyone joined in on the Cav trolling.
“Why is everyone being so mean?” asked Gil MacLeod.
“Not very welcoming to a new runner, we all have to start somewhere,” wrote Gordon Graham. “Slagging him off for his time is disgraceful. He doesn’t call you when he sees your times on the bike on Strava. Well done, Mark Cavendish.”
“Very well done, Mark Cavendish. You absolute legend,” added Paul Starr. “Running and cycling two completely different disciplines. Great achievement.”
And Eric Tofflemire noted: “He was a sprinter with roots in track cycling. Reprogramming everything from explosive strength cycling, to endurance running is more difficult than many are recognising. Well done, Sir!”
(Zac Williams/SWpix.com)
“Might be nice to see some of you ‘experts’ going on about PBs get on a bike for four hours at 40kph+, and then sprint for 400m at 70kph! Any of you up for it?” asked David Robinson. I can hear crickets chirping…
“Well done Mark, you’re a proper hero and champion. Any armchair warrior throwing shade here is not worthy to pump your tyres,” said Chinedu, while Jonathan said: “Guys give it to the GOAT. He just wants to run, okay?”
And Chris Madge concluded: “His time is irrelevant really, fair play to you Mark Cavendish.”
Now that’s the kind of attitude we should all take – let the man enjoy his retirement for goodness’ sake. Even if it means… shudder… running for enjoyment.
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33 comments
Dedicated to one type of vehicle? Some people would like a word!
https://bicycledutch.wordpress.com/2012/12/06/who-else-benefits-from-the...
... and in fact I do now see some folks in types of wheelchairs or even - on one occasion - on a sociable (side by side) in Edinburgh. No pictures handy - they're normally pretty fast!
There is something we could do better here. Currently some classes of mobility vehicles are not permitted to use cycle infra. I think that's largely due to our "either motorist or pedestrian" classification. It's also a fact that most of the cycle infra is narrow cycle lanes (well - "narrow" full stop) and they'd block them, and because "like pedestrians" their speed limits can be rather low.
Granted, given the width they didn't manage to quite block all the cycling access, but they tried...(from here - skip to the other side to see the "let's put in some of all the infra we know about" DIY street design effort...)
See just down the street for how hard you have to work to persuade plucky drivers not to cut through - I make that about 20 bollards plus some other hard "street furniture". Of course, they left a gap so it won't work (is that for "emergencies" or did they just run out of bollards?)
Plenty of room between there and the tree - as my Dad used to say "you could fit a bus through there sideways" 😆
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