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British Cycler Admits to Deliberately Crashing to Win Gold Medal (2012 Olympics)

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Mr Cola

Brothas With Attitude / The Wrong Brotha to Fuck Wit / Die Brotha Die / Brothas in Paris
English here, id take his medal away personally, completely against the values of the Olympics, and the Olympic oath taken on behalf of the atheletes.
 

Overdoziz

Banned
3) People's willingness to rationalize unsportsmanlike behavior for their team. What happened here was completely un-American. If this guy were American we'd be the first to apologize for and be angry about his behavior representing his country. It's also why Americans look down on flopping/diving in things like international soccer matches. Not all English people have defended what happened here, but it's interesting what happens when the shoe is on the other foot
This is hilarious.
 
My ass, what German adult starts learning English that late in life. Their education system is too good to allow that. Unless of course he didn't go to any school at all.
 

AstroLad

Hail to the KING baby
people today really can't keep their mouths shut. only surprise is that he didn't do it on twitter
 

Mr Cola

Brothas With Attitude / The Wrong Brotha to Fuck Wit / Die Brotha Die / Brothas in Paris
Any clips of his crash?

When it happened it looked pretty iffy, i wrote it off that i didnt understand cycling so perhaps something small happened, but in the light of this it imagine it will come across very obvious.
 
We've already discussed this to death on the Olympic thread. Korey has some love-hate relationship with the UK and will troll us at every available opportunity.

I'll make these following points:

1) There is no rule against it
2) The French team did not complain (in fact why don't you go and read what they had to say on the matter)
3) There was a fair race immediately afterwards
4) The strict officials that disqualified the female British team earlier that day (and stripped China of it's Gold medal) had no problem with it.

Also: Korey is an absolute prick and should have his thread creating privileges taken away.
 

Mr Cola

Brothas With Attitude / The Wrong Brotha to Fuck Wit / Die Brotha Die / Brothas in Paris
We've already discussed this to death on the Olympic thread. Korey has some love-hate relationship with the UK and will troll us at every available opportunity.

I'll make these following points:

1) There is no rule against it
2) The French team did not complain
3) There was a fair race immediately afterwards

If there is no rule against it then i redact my taking their medals since it cant happen. That being said it makes me think extremely poorly of the team who allowed it to happen, i know things like this must always happen but its very hard to celebrate victory when someone bent the rules to get it.
 
If there is no rule against it then i redact my taking their medals since it cant happen. That being said it makes me think extremely poorly of the team who allowed it to happen, i know things like this must always happen but its very hard to celebrate victory when someone bent the rules to get it.
The team can't do shit if one of them takes it upon himself to do it. If Korey wants to paint the UK as un-American (lol?) then take a look at the German national (hindes) that did it.

How does an Olympic athlete from Great Britian have trouble speaking the English language?
He's a German national, but his dad was British so he joined the team.
 

Mr Cola

Brothas With Attitude / The Wrong Brotha to Fuck Wit / Die Brotha Die / Brothas in Paris
The team can't do shit if one of them takes it upon himself to do it. If Korey wants to paint the UK as un-American (lol?) then take a look at the German national (hindes) that did it.

Eh, i try to stay away from politics in the Olympic thread and in this one, from the OP it was a team decision to do it if they were behind, im only going on what the Reuters article says. I consider this un-olympic, has nothing to do GB overall or America, im sure if we care to look hard enough we can find hand fuls of American cheating/doping whathaveyou.
 

ghst

thanks for the laugh
The team can't do shit if one of them takes it upon himself to do it. If Korey wants to paint the UK as un-American (lol?) then take a look at the German national (hindes) that did it.
to be considered un-american in the uk is an honour just short of a knighthood.
 

Wrekt

Member
BYsCl.gif



But it is severely frowned upon in U.S. football. Only Class A pussies would do it in the NFL.

The most embarrassing part about this is they had to do this in order to beat the Rams.
 

vidcons

Banned
He deliberately crashed, probably because of a technical issue. My understanding is that it's common. They offered him a restart and he took it.

But if networks in the US offered some cycling coverage then maybe more people would be exposed to the UCI's dumb rules. It's not like we don't have 2 up-and-coming GC contenders on the same team living in the same state and in the same town who are both at the olympics right now.

That'd be absurd to offer coverage and expose the country to some of the athletes representing it in global competition.
 

Rentahamster

Rodent Whores
That badminton stuff is ridiculous. I blame the IOC for their stupid idea to implement a tournament that actually incentivizes losing in certain circumstances.
 

Korey

Member
Eh, i try to stay away from politics in the Olympic thread and in this one, from the OP it was a team decision to do it if they were behind, im only going on what the Reuters article says. I consider this un-olympic, has nothing to do GB overall or America, im sure if we care to look hard enough we can find hand fuls of American cheating/doping whathaveyou.

There have been instances of Americans doping/cheating. It's very frowned upon. So are things like diving/flopping. You'll never see a real American defending someone faking an injury for an advantage in competition.
 
There have been instances of Americans doping/cheating. It's very frowned upon. So are things like diving/flopping. You'll never see a real American defending someone faking an injury for an advantage in competition.

I have to agree with this, especially from my sporting days.
Now an opponent getting really roughed up on the other hand...
 

Dead Man

Member
Badminton situation was much worse than this. Just sayin'

re the pro us trolling stuff: publicly accusing someone of doping with zero evidence is pretty damn unsporting.

Nah. The badminton stuff was taking advantage of a poorly design tournament to enhance your situation in the final. This was faking so you can get a mulligan in the final. This is worse.
 

user_nat

THE WORDS! They'll drift away without the _!
That's pretty crappy sportsmanship. One day he will tell his grand children about the time he triumphantly crashed in order to get a better start.
 

Korey

Member
Badminton was far worse. In cycling he still had to start over AND win. Both situations are pretty low-class though.

In Badminton they were trying to lose to get a more favorable seed.

In this situation they faked an injury to get a do-over...at the Olympics. Whether they went on to win or not is irrelevant.
 
In Badminton they were trying to lose to get a more favorable seed.

In this situation they faked an injury to get a do-over...at the Olympics. Whether they went on to win or not is irrelevant.

No, it's actually not irrelevant. They still had to win. I don't know enough about the sport to know why they have the do-over rule, but they must have known it would get abused by people who didn't get a good start. They must have been fine with that.
 

SteveWD40

Member
KOREY THREAD HERP DERP TROLOLOLOLOL

iusND.gif


Anyone taking this thread or that sceptic douche nozzle seriously by now needs to leave Gaf for pastures dumber.
 

Korey

Member
He didn't "fake an injury". He crashed on purpose. There is a difference.

It was an analogy. Faking an injury, flopping, diving, etc. to get an advantage. In this case, getting a redo. Here's a new article about the crash:

Tactical cycling crash compared to doping

Australian Olympic track bronze medallist Kaarle McCulloch says deliberately crashing out of a cycling event to secure a re-start is on par with doping.

The 24-year old who won bronze in the women's team sprint on Thursday with teammate Anna Meares says the action of British cyclist Philip Hindes - who admitted deliberately crashing for tactical reasons during qualifying for the men's team sprint - was unethical.

"Of course it is," she said during an Australian team media conference on Friday.

"You don't want to see anybody gain an advantage over doing something like that. It's like doping. You assume everybody that you go up against is fair and they wouldn't go to those extremes."

Despite German-born Hindes' admission trackside post race that "I did it on purpose to get a restart", British cycling say the cyclist was misunderstood - because English is his second language.

With teammates Chris Hoy and Jason Kenny, the 19-year old went on to secure gold in the event ahead of France.

"I can't imagine that Phillip would have done that on purpose," McCulloch said of the crash which she witnessed at the Olympic velodrome.

...

Afterwards he told reporters: "We were saying if we had a bad start we need to crash to get a restart. I just crashed, I did it on purpose to get a restart, just to have the fastest ride. I did it. So it was all planned, really."

The International Cycling Union (ICU) confirmed the result was legitimate, and French coach Florian Rousseau accepted the result but said Hindes' ploy was a poor example of Olympic spirit.

"There was no cheating. The British team was much stronger than the French team and I congratulate them on their success," he said.

"However, I do think the rules need to be more precise so we don't find ourselves in an identical situation at another Olympic Games. The fact that he (Hindes) did it on purpose is not very good for the image of cycling. We must reflect on how we can adapt the rules so that does not happen again in future."
 

gerg

Member
It was an analogy. Faking an injury, flopping, diving, etc. to get an advantage. In this case, getting a redo.

I just don't see how the analogy holds up.

Surely you would fake an injury so that you don't have to compete, right?

Whether you think that what the British cyclist did was ethically justifiable or not, he made the decision so as to better increase his chances while competing.

The actions are almost contrary to each other.


Which, yet again, wouldn't be the same to faking an injury, no?
 

Korey

Member
I just don't see how the analogy holds up.

Surely you would fake an injury so that you don't have to compete, right?

Whether you think that what the British cyclist did was ethically justifiable or not, he made the decision so as to better increase his chances while competing.

The actions are almost contrary to each other.

Which, yet again, wouldn't be the same to faking an injury, no?

People are interpreting what happened in different extremes. Some consider it cheating, unethical, or on par with doping, but there's not really a need for that.

It's plainly unsportsmanlike conduct, and the easiest thing to compare it to are the players (from FOUR teams) that got disqualified from Badminton for throwing a match for more favorable seeds in the tournament. Not technically cheating, but against the spirit of the Olympics. The fact that four teams did it means that they all thought that it was technically within their rights and the rules to do so. They were all disqualified anyway.
 

Oxirane

Member
Doesn't really sit well with me, especially since the competing team which was on the other side of the track wasn't affected and had to restart as well.

Maybe if it was only one team on track at a time have some leniency (like the guy whose seat disintegrated) but for head-to-head events where competitors can't interfere with each other I'd assume the start seems like something you should have to get right, especially since it's not an event with a rolling type start.
 
He fell within 10 seconds of a 4 minute time trial, anyone who actually cares about the sport saw the man had serious issues coming out of the gate, and in the rules it states you can restart if there's an issue.

But of course the internet runs wild with semantics, because you have to say the correct thing and use the correct grammar every second of every day, even when you're live on tv after just winning olympic gold.
 

gerg

Member
It's plainly unsportsmanlike conduct, and the easiest thing to compare it to are the players (from FOUR teams) that got disqualified from Badminton for throwing a match for more favorable seeds in the tournament. Not technically cheating, but against the spirit of the Olympics [emphasis mine]. The fact that four teams did it means that they all thought that it was technically within their rights and the rules to do so. They were all disqualified anyway.

Well, actually, even then a spokesman for the IOC disagrees.

I think there is something of a distinction to be drawn between what happened with the badminton and what happened in the cycling. The badminton players were chided because there is an (implicit) assumption that in these games every athlete, whether playing individually or as part of a team, will work their sincere hardest to defeat the opposition, within the rules of the game in question. By losing on purpose, the badminton players worked against that ethos.

However, what the cyclist did was part of that spirit. He worked within the rules of the game to ensure that he could play at his very best.

And lol at me being quoted in the OP.
 
Doesn't really sit well with me, especially since the competing team which was on the other side of the track wasn't affected and had to restart as well.

Maybe if it was only one team on track at a time have some leniency (like the guy whose seat disintegrated) but for head-to-head events where competitors can't interfere with each other I'd assume the start seems like something you should have to get right, especially since it's not an event with a rolling type start.


You can have a restart for any mechanical issue within the first half lap, or for a false start. They asked for a restart within 8 seconds of the race starting.
 

Korey

Member
Well, actually, even then a spokesman for the IOC disagrees.

I think there is something of a distinction to be drawn between what happened with the badminton and what happened in the cycling. The badminton players were chided because there is an (implicit) assumption that every athlete, whether playing individually or as part of a team, will work their sincere hardest to defeat the opposition, within the rules of the game. By losing on purpose, the badminton players worked against that ethos.

However, what the cyclist did was part of that spirit. He worked within the rules of the game to ensure that he could play at his very best.

From the article:

An IOC spokesman said the incident was very different to the gamesmanship in the badminton earlier this week that led to eight disqualifications after competitors played to lose in order to ensure a kinder draw.

He said the cycling incident was different because paying fans "were not deprived of a competition".

"The race took place and I believe we could clearly say that best efforts were made in that competition by the British team," he said.

That's not explaining "why it's different" that one case of unsportsmanlike conduct is punishable but not another, that's just stating one arbitrary point and using that as an excuse to sweep this under the rug.

"Depriving paying fans of a competition" is the basis for which all sportsmanship cases will be handled now? So, as long as fans aren't "deprived" of money and "best efforts" to win are made, all unsportmanlike behavior is ok?

The second point doesn't even have anything to do with this situation, the whole point of deliberately crashing was to get a do-over so they could win. Also, I'm not sure how he can "clearly say" that best efforts were made by the British team when the actual team admitted they crashed on purpose.

That spokesperson needs to crash deliberately to get a do-over on his answers
 
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