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Priporočeni prispevki

Shadow reče pred 18 urami:

to sm vidu, ap tud komentatorja sta bla zacudena nad potezo in se sprasevala ce bo diskvalifacija. Sam pole prot koncu, je blo omenjeno, da je kao dovoljeno v nvem kaki situaciji. Aja ce menjas sam kolesa, ne celo kolo :D 

 

Ja, feltno lahko, bajka pa ne smeš, I guess. Sej vidm, da je official diskvalificiran zdej.

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VICKY DÁVILA: For the super champion Egan Bernal we have sighed, laughed, cried, we have clung to God and in recent days we have been in the midst of bitter drinks and happiness. Let me start by telling you that I am happy that he is alive.

 

EGAN BERNAL: Thank you very much, me too, really. It's what I think about the most lately. I'm alive, it's like a second chance. It's like being born again and I already enjoy every little thing that happens to me.

 

V.D.: On the part of the journalists, when they told us that you had an accident, it seemed somewhat minor. But when more information began to be known, it became clear that it was something very serious. What they told us was that you were practically dead...

 

EB: On our part, I think it was something similar. I fall and I was conscious the whole time until I got to the hospital. They put me to sleep there because I was in a lot of pain. I never thought it was so serious. Obviously I was in excruciating pain, it has been the greatest pain of my life. I lasted like 30 or 40 minutes from when I fell until I got to the hospital. When I woke up from surgery they told me, "You could have died."

 

V.D.: What reaction did you have when the doctor told you that?

 

EB: They had already removed the tube from my mouth so I could breathe and they were calling me. I woke up, and they said, "Move your legs." At that moment I said: it was serious. It was an instinct. They told me that and it was because maybe I could lose the mobility of my legs. I moved them and they began to ask me: “Do you feel here?”, “Do you feel there?”. Luckily everything felt bad. That was when they began to tell me, because they didn't tell me at once. At that time I did not understand the seriousness of the matter, until the neurosurgeon went and explained it to me with percentages and everything.

 

V.D.: What percentage did they give you?

 

EB: That 95 percent could have died or become paraplegic. That it was a very serious surgery and that in his career he had operated on hundreds of columns and that, of this magnitude, only two had turned out well. I was the second. imagine. He's a very good neurosurgeon and when he told me that I said: wow, it was something very serious. Among hundreds, I came out well.

 

V.D.: Let me go back to those moments. You were in your training. What was he doing? Let's go back to that scene, what happened that day?

 

E.B.: We went out to train with the team. Some were on a normal road bike, I was on a time trial bike. We were two partners on a time trial bike. We left Tocancipá, we went to the El Roble toll, which is going to Sesquilé. We returned at the toll, via Gachancipá, Tocancipá and Briceño. Some colleagues stopped and I said: no, I don't want to stop because of the pain in my legs to start, how lazy. I start my series at once. I had to do a very hard series, so I started. The time trial position is very aggressive, you have to go as aerodynamically as possible.

 

V.D.: What does aerodynamic mean in this case? So that we can understand it better…

 

EB: It's hard to explain. Basically, you have to cut the wind. Curved. In a position where you break the wind you have to go with your head down and your arms close together, it's a pretty aggressive position. I did my series. Arriving at Gachancipá, before some reducers, I look ahead and there was nothing. There was a car behind that was escorting me. I keep doing my series and I remember that I was going at 58 kilometers per hour. That is like throwing down and there is wind in favor. I was going 58. I started looking and it was 59, 60, 61, 62 and when I saw that speed it was that I crashed into the bus.

 

V.D.: Had you seen the bus?

 

EB: No. I crashed into the bus at 62 kilometers per hour. The bus was still. At that moment imagine the pain. I fell and said: I hit myself very hard. It was a dry hit. I thought it had not been a person, because it would have slipped. That it had not been a motorcycle or a car, because it would have gone flying. I thought it was a mule or a bus. He was in so much pain that all he did was look down, he was lying on the track. At that moment the person who was accompanying me got out.

 

V.D.: And what did he tell you?

 

EB: It started to calm me down, but I couldn't breathe. It is a moment in which one loses the air. I couldn't breathe and I said: well, at a certain point you will have to breathe again. It always happens to one, when one sticks the air goes out and after a while it comes back, but nothing that came back. I began to despair, but inside I said that I had to calm down, because if it wasn't going to be worse. When I felt that I was passing out, the air returned and that's when I looked up and saw the bus. I said: I gave myself very hard.

 

V.D.: As soon as the accident happened, what did your teammates, your coach and the people who accompanied you do?

 

EB: At that time, the only one accompanying me was a mechanic who was driving in the car behind, escorting me. The first thing he did was call the team doctor, who was at the hotel. My masseuse brought the doctor. They arrived very quickly, luckily. Thanks to him I am alive.

 

V.D.: What did the team doctor do?

 

E.B.: If you have a fall that hard, you don't have to take off your helmet. It would be silly, but I was in so much pain that I didn't care. I said: my back hurts a lot, I want to take off my helmet. The doctor wouldn't let me and I was super attached to him. At a certain point I was grabbed by the bicycle, he wouldn't let me move either and told him: he started to hurt my right leg.

 

V.D.: Did you want to move from there?

 

EB: The doctor told me it couldn't be done and I asked him why. He looked at my leg and that sheath looked inflamed, swollen. The bone almost wanted to come out of the skin and I said: I left the femur. It was obviously broken. They helped me get my foot off the bike and the doctor stabilized the fracture. He took me by the waist and two other people, I don't know if they were doctors or knew about medicine, they helped him a lot. They took hold of my foot and stretched me out. They accommodated the bone and it hurt a lot. I was telling them: no, no, I beg you, please no. That helped me not lose so much blood, I think I lost two and a half liters in total. Those little things they did helped so that when I got to the hospital it wasn't so bad.

 

V.D.: How did you stay calm at that time?

 

EB: I don't know. At a certain point, when I was desperate, I yelled at the doctor: doc, give me something for the pain, I need something for the pain, and the doctor said: no, I can't, and I told him: I understand that you can't, but give me something It doesn't matter, the only thing he was desperate for was the pain. But for the rest, for whatever he told me to stay put, he did it, because finally he is the one who knows.

 

V.D.: And the pain was generalized?

 

EB: Yes, absolutely everything hurt. Then they told me: the ambulance is coming and they give you something, and I: ah, well, super, well, I can take it.

 

V.D.: How long did it take to lie on the pavement?

 

EB: It was more than 15 minutes, for sure.

 

V.D.: Do you know if the bus driver got off?

 

E.B.: No ma'am, I remember that people started to come to watch and maybe try to record and I remember that my teammates said: no, please don't record.

 

V.D.: They were protecting him in that hard and intimate moment of his.

 

EB: Exactly, that was the only thing I remember because I was experiencing my situation of pain and all this, but I remember that they shouted: don't record!, don't record!

 

V.D.: Did you think you could die?

 

E.B.: No, there I thought I had hit it very hard, I didn't know how hard, but it had been a hard fall, I thought I had probably fractured my femur and some ribs. I didn't think it was for more.

 

V.D.: They put him in the ambulance on the way to the clinic. How was the?

 

EB: Very frustrating because they didn't give me anything for the pain. And before that something very funny happened. I heard a siren like an ambulance and the doctor and everyone told me: Egan, the ambulance is coming, listen to it, and I, well, ready, it's going to arrive. But that ambulance went straight on, it wasn't coming our way. Later ours arrived and when the lady got out the first thing I said to her was: please, give me something for the pain. The lady just said: let's immobilize him and get him into the ambulance.

 

V.D.: But already in the ambulance they applied something for the pain?

 

E.B.: No. When I was already inside the ambulance, I said: ma'am, can you please give me something for the pain? And the lady told me: no, this is a basic ambulance, we don't have medicine here. I said: it can't be! That's when I got desperate and took it out on the team doctor and the doctor, because I couldn't do anything and I understood that I couldn't do anything, but I had to take it out on someone (laughs).

 

V.D.: After the accident, were you able to hold back your tears?

 

E.B.: No, the truth is, I did cry. Do you know at what time? When they did the femur thing, when they put it in position, it was like a helpless moment where I didn't want them to do it. And, of course, the doctor caught me. One cannot move, I felt so fragile, I told him: please, I beg you, no, and when he made the movement, imagine the pain. Not only because of the femur, but the pain because he was fucking me up here. My neck hurt, my spine, everything, when he made that movement was when I cried a little.

 

V.D.: I imagine that he is very grateful to the doctors of the clinic at the University of La Sabana for his whole life...

 

EB: Yes, with each one of them, with those who operated on my knee, my femur, my hands, my tooth. With Dr. Uriza, who was the neurosurgeon. Thanks to them I am alive, thanks to them I can walk, I can move, I can even move my hands, so nothing, I feel that thanks to them I have this second chance.

 

V.D.: When you arrive at the clinic, what happened? They tell me that you only asked to be put to sleep...

 

EB: Yes, they took me out of the ambulance, but it really hurt so much that I said: why haven't I fainted? I wanted to pass out, I wanted them to put me to sleep, and I began to see familiar faces, there were some friends, my coach and my girlfriend, María Fernanda, who came from work. I see them, and well, it's normal for them to be here, apart from the fact that I didn't know it was so serious, if I had known that I was going into surgery and that I could die, well, at least I greet them or say goodbye, but at that moment I was just focused on pain, so when they entered me they began to ask me things; I was: please put me to sleep, I want to sleep, I'm serious, and then they put me to sleep. And before that something funny happened. My girlfriend is a veterinarian and she came with her uniform, which is very similar to that of the doctors. When we got out of the ambulance they gave her an oxygen shot, I think thinking she was a nurse.

 

V.D.: Before going to the operating room, you meet your mother in the corridor. What was said?

 

E.B.: She knew that everything was a little more serious, she didn't know how serious, but she knew that it wasn't just the femur. I was going to the operating room and I saw my mom, Mafe, I was already without pain, they were taking me and my mom was crying, obviously. I told her: no, mommy, don't worry, nothing is going to happen to her. I go into surgery and that's it. It's not something out of this world, I try to reassure her. I greeted Mafe, my girlfriend, I don't know if my little brother was there.

 

V.D.: It was 12 hours of surgery. The country awaited news about her health. The scene was horrible. That Egan could have died or that Egan, our champion, could never walk again...

 

EB: Yes, that was very serious. I go into surgery. Dr. Uriza, the neurosurgeon, comes out and he talks with my girlfriend, my dad, my mom and the team doctor. And he tells them: well, the surgery is going to be something serious. He explained to them what I had and what was broken. He warned them that the fact that I had made it to the clinic alive was a miracle. He told them: “He is alive by a miracle, it is a miracle. But the upcoming surgery is very complicated, he could become a paraplegic." He gave them the chances, I think it was 95 percent against 5 percent. His job was to be realistic and tell them what could happen.

 

V.D.: He showed them the worst scenario…

 

EB: Exactly. So imagine how my parents, my girlfriend and everyone felt when they were told that. They didn't hear anything until after 12 hours. Then they were informed that the surgery had gone well, but that they would have to wait for her to wake up and see if she could move her legs. They told them: we think it's okay, but we have to wait. So imagine that drama.

 

V.D.: How was the awakening?

 

E.B.: I remember that they were calling me: Egan, Egan… and I woke up, obviously one is still half asleep and I remember that the first thing they told me was: can you move your legs? When they ask me that, I said: I think the surgery was not just the femur, it was like a hunch. Then, of course, I began to move my legs and they began to touch me: do you feel this? Do you feel the other? And I said: wow, the surgery wasn't just on the femur... Because, as I told you, when I went into surgery I had no idea that they were going to do all this to me, that I had a broken cervical, T5, T6 and all those things behind that I don't understand much yet...

 

V.D.: When you think for a single second about that possibility, Egan, who could have stayed without walking, what goes through your mind?

 

EB: Honestly, it scares me a little.

 

VD: Yes?

 

E.B.: Yes, the fact of feeling that there was this possibility of not walking again scares me and I was scared knowing that I could have died. In other words, I could have entered the operating room and maybe not woke up again. Or when I crashed into the bus to have stayed there. I mean, in a second it would have gone...

 

VD: Life...

 

E.B.: Yes, life completely, honestly it scares me a little when I think about it.

 

V.D.: Are you a believer?

 

EB: Yes ma'am.

 

V.D.: And do you think that the hand of God was here?

 

E.B.: The truth is, and look, few people know this, but two days before the fall I had had a little argument, nothing to write home about, with a friend and he told me: “Parce, ah! Let's not fight anymore because, fagot, how about I die tomorrow”, and I told him: it seems that this is not going to happen; I mean, all good, we'll talk later. And the next day, my girlfriend also annoyed me: what if I died tomorrow? And I replied: that's not going to happen, but also annoying. It was two days in a row that they told me that and the next day was when I had the accident.

 

V.D.: And you almost died…

 

EB: Exactly. In the hospital, while I was in the ICU, I remembered that and it was: heck, maybe this could have a background. Believe me that every time a nurse, a doctor or many people came, they told me: God loves him very much, God loves him. And when they told me that, maybe it's my thing, but I felt a certain chill inside me and it was cool. I felt that maybe it was God who was telling me through these people. "God loves you, God loves you, God is going to give you a second chance." It's obviously something personal, but it's something very nice and special in those two weeks I was in the ICU.

 

V.D.: How did he send flowers to his mother while he was in the ICU?

 

EB: Yes ma'am.

 

V.D.: How did she do?

 

E.B.: There is a person who has helped me with several little things. I was with my dad and I told him: pa, call Japo, write to him, because I couldn't pick up the phone. I told him: tell Japo that if he can send some flowers to my mom and my girlfriend, Mafe, because they had just had a very hard turn in the ICU with me.

 

V.D.: What does your mother mean in all this?

 

EB: My drama started when I woke up in intensive care. I felt physical pain, but they, my mom, my dad, my girlfriend, my little brother, had a different pain.

 

VD: Sure...

 

EB: And I think it was very hard for them to see me in bed with the two tubes coming out of my lungs. Imagine every time I breathed, the blood ran, came, ran, came, and next to the bed there were two giant jars with all the blood that was draining and I couldn't move. They had to change my diaper and my mother changed my diaper again, she said: "It's my boy, it's my baby again...".

 

V.D.: You are going to make me cry, you bawdy…

 

E.B.: My dad is a very strong person and he is cool because he transmits that strength to me, but I know him and inside he was shattered. Having to feed me during that time and seeing me that way. He had some very ugly shifts, because my mom, my dad and my girlfriend took turns. So many times it was my dad's turn that gave me a lot of pain. So, of course, I saw him with that impotence. Me asking for something for the pain, but they couldn't give me more. Each of them experienced their own drama. Even my little brother, I can't imagine at that age of 16 having to see my brother, who basically is like another dad, in that situation. I felt a little bad for them, damn it.

Povezava do prispevka
Shadow reče pred 13 minutami:

pa jakobsena bi blo za diskvalificirat, spet je vijugal, tko ku uceri 

 

Zanimivo je tudi kako se zadnje čase lead out kolesarji postavijo na pot, ko končajo delo. Samo čaka še en fin padec zaradi tega. 

 

Ma lanterne rouge zanimiv video na to temo. 

 

Link za lenobe http://youtu.be/2GnUZRw2IKo

uredilo bitje Mutombo
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Mutombo reče pred 1 uro:

 

Zanimivo je tudi kako se zadnje čase lead out kolesarji postavijo na pot, ko končajo delo. Samo čaka še en fin padec zaradi tega. 

 

Ma lanterne rouge zanimiv video na to temo. 

 

Link za lenobe http://youtu.be/2GnUZRw2IKo

Prva resnejša stvar, ki se je dogodila po 175 km na 176 km etapi...

Hvala bogu, da je vsaj to blo

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Fak ker norc je ta Remco:

 

The screenshot grabbed by @AimeEliot shows Evenepoel produced a stunning 392-watt average power for the 38-minute effort. At a rumoured 61 kg, this equals a staggering 6.42w/kg ratio in a time trial position. Given many riders’ power output drops in the time trial position, a drop-off compensated by the improved aerodynamics of the time trial position, the output suggests Remco might not only have improved his time trialling, but potentially his climbing won’t have suffered at all. At just 2.6 kilometres, today’s uphill finish is unlikely to answer where Evenepoel’s climbing form currently sits definitively. Watch for the longer climbs in the upcoming Tirreno-Adriatico to give our first indication of Evenepoel’s climbing legs as he builds towards the Vuelta a España later this year. 

 

https://cyclingtips.com/2022/02/evenepoel-deletes-power-data-after-victory-in-new-tt-position/?fbclid=IwAR29dn9DuMOj5VSq35SdJ7OJLl0voOsGTkWE5NgoL2GAXSEqLh5o4q1XWX8

 

me prav zanima, kaj bo Pogačar dons pokazal na TT-ju :)

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Shadow reče pred 1 uro:

a ni danes nekih smesnih 9km? to Ganna pobere pred Bisseggerjem. Pog bo pa verjetno ze pridobil kako sekundo za GC, no razn Duomo bi dejansko znal bit skupi

 

Da, Bissegger trenutno vodi pred Ganno, Pogi tretji!

 

EDIT: drugače pa 3 UAE-jevci med top6 trenutno, Yates 7 sekund za Pogijem. Dumoulin še ni odvozu.

 

EDIT: so šli pa tud Ineosovci kot kaže na te gromozanske čelade.

 

EDIT: Dumo 4 sekunde pred Pogijem!

uredilo bitje dilar
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