As someone who spent far more time daydreaming than playing sports, I never imagined I鈥檇 become the sort of father who harbored any sort of athletic expectations of his children. However, I鈥檓 also a cyclist. Therefore, I鈥檇 be lying if I told you that when I ride with my son, I don鈥檛 imagine him one day crossing the finish line on a bike with his arms aloft and claiming the victory that always managed to elude me.
In fact, occasionally I鈥檒l take fantasy even further: What if he was really good? Like get-paid-to-ride-your-bike good? Would I give him my fatherly blessing to embark upon the life of a professional cyclist?
When considering a pie-in-the-sky career for your child, you naturally assume their success is all but assured. Your mind goes right to whoever embodies the pinnacle of achievement in that particular field, and you picture your kid as the next Warren Buffett, or Beyonc茅, or Michael Jordan, as the case may be. When it comes to American cyclists, however, there are fewer household names to choose from, and so your mind goes right to Lance Armstrong, who won the Tour de France an unprecedented seven聽times鈥nly to be stripped of all his titles in ignominy. Obviously there are much easier ways for your child to break into a career in podcasting, so you may already have cooled considerably to the idea.
When considering a pie-in-the-sky career for your child, you naturally assume their success is all but assured.
Then there鈥檚 the profoundly arduous nature of professional cycling itself. Should your child choose this life, they will find themselves聽grinding out the training miles day after day along the shoulder of some lonely highway, risking life and limb, foregoing relationships with normal humans, and living out of their car so they can travel across three states to races with $75 prize lists in the hopes of maybe getting picked up by a domestic pro team that can . Or聽perhaps they鈥檒l even hit the big time and go to Europe, where the life of a professional stage racer is far more glamorous. For example, they could find themselves in the Ruta del Sol, where riders recently faced () dangerous 鈥済ravel descents鈥 and 鈥渓arge potholes鈥 that 鈥減ut their safety and well-being in serious danger,鈥 according to a statement from the athletes. They might even get to take part in one of cycling鈥檚 most prestigious and celebrated events, the Giro d鈥橧talia, where this year the numerous 聽were merely a prelude to the .
The brutality and attrition of cycling is, of course, what makes it so thrilling to follow, but it can also evoke the deadly days of Formula 1 in the 1960s and 1970s, which prompted drivers like Jackie Stewart to . Deaths in Formula 1 have declined significantly since the sport implemented such measures as . Traditionally, . While fatal crashes in cycling are mercifully rare, injuries aren鈥檛, and yet a concussion protocol only in December 2020, along with other important measures, such as updated race vehicle rules and a crash database鈥攖hough ironically riders and fans alike seemed to react mostly by . Go figure. (, when the UCI notified more than 800 riders of the planned changes via email, fewer than 20 actually opened it.)
Of course, crashing isn鈥檛 the only danger in professional cycling; there鈥檚 also the dark path of doping. Certainly in every sport there are competitors who succumb to the temptation of performance-enhancing drugs. However, pro cyclists as athletes in leagues like the NBA, NFL, or MLB, which . Consequently, drug testing for cyclists is much more frequent, and the penalties for failing are much more severe, which means if your kid screws up, then it鈥檚 time to .
Most importantly, cycling isn鈥檛 just Lance Armstrong and Grand Tour pileups.
And that鈥檚 before you even consider .聽The intimacy of sport, the trust young athletes must place in their trainers, and the modus operandi of sexual predators mean that聽this is a danger regardless of the athletic pursuit. It鈥檚 in no way unique to cycling: , and was convicted on 45 charges of sexual abuse.聽Nevertheless, while cycling has made a big show of punishing cheaters, it has also been criticized for , allowing coaches accused of abuse to return to work after suspensions.
All this should be enough to convince any parent that they should keep their kids as far away from pro cycling as possible. But at the same time, it鈥檚 not a parent鈥檚 job to scare a child; it鈥檚 a parent鈥檚 job to give them the confidence to discover who they are. To forsake curiosity and passion for fear of facing risk and adversity is to give up on life itself. Obviously, I鈥檇 be proud of my son no matter which career path he chose鈥攅xcluding truly morally reprehensible vocations like drug kingpin, contract killer, or advertising executive鈥攁nd to seek one鈥檚 fortune upon a bicycle requires a tremendous amount of courage and dedication. What鈥檚 more, if undertaken with purity of spirit, it can only result in success鈥攅ven if that success comes because pro cycling turned out to be so horrible that it motivated him to find another line of work. You never know how you鈥檒l wind up finding your true path.
Most importantly, cycling isn鈥檛 just Lance Armstrong and Grand Tour pileups. It鈥檚 also Andy Hampsten ,聽Katie Compton鈥檚 lengthy p补濒尘补谤猫蝉, and even this whole gravel thing, which is shaping up to be pretty interesting. It鈥檚 entirely possible the next great competitive cycling discipline hasn鈥檛 even been invented yet. Cycling is a beautiful sport, and its future continues to evolve, so why discourage your child from becoming a part of it and maybe even helping to shape it if they鈥檙e so inclined?
Even so, I鈥檒l probably start dropping hints about law school soon. Couldn鈥檛 hurt.