PDA

View Full Version : Pasted: NYT article about the politics of Kerry-Bush bikes and cycling...


bulliedawg
05-31-2004, 06:29 AM
WHITE HOUSE LETTER

Taking the High Road, the Low Road and Maybe a Boulder or Two
By ELISABETH BUMILLER

Published: May 31, 2004

WASHINGTON

When George W. Bush fell off his mountain bike and banged up his face the week before last, the world took modest note of the president's new hobby.

What it did not know was that over the past three months the 57-year-old chief executive, sidelined from the fast track with runner's knee, has become so consumed by mountain biking that he now rides at least an hour a day on most weekends, and monitors his heart rate with a wrist strap during workouts. (Mr. Bush reported through his press secretary, Scott McClellan, that he sometimes gets above a chest-thumping 160 beats per minute.)
Advertisement


As it happens, a certain 60-year-old Democratic presidential candidate is a serious biker, too, although Senator John Kerry more often road bikes. Mr. Kerry sometimes takes his bike on his campaign plane, and during days off takes two-hour jaunts along the Charles River in Boston.

At first glance, this is nothing more than the story of two middle-aged jocks cycling themselves away from the advances of time. At second glance, this is an election year, and the situation is more complex.

First, look at the candidates' choice of bikes.

Mr. Bush keeps a Trek Fuel 90 at his Texas ranch, the site of his tumble on May 22. The Fuel 90, one of the snazzier of Trek's mountain bikes, retails for more than $1,500. At Camp David, Mr. Bush also rides a Trek, but picks it out from the fleet of more ordinary $250 models available to guests.

Mr. Bush's choice of Trek is hardly surprising, given that the company is one of the world's biggest manufacturers of quality bikes and its president, John Burke, is a member of the President's Council on Physical Fitness. Trek's sponsored athlete is Lance Armstrong, the five-time Tour de France winner from Austin, Tex., who presented his friend the president with a Trek bike at the White House in 2001.

It was difficult to determine if Mr. Burke is a Republican, since he declined repeated requests for an interview. But it could be determined that Ben Serotta, the maker of John Kerry's road bikes, is politically compatible with one of his most famous customers.

"I come from a fairly long line of Democrats," Mr. Serotta said in a telephone interview from the headquarters of Serotta Competition Bicycles in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. If Mr. Kerry won the election, he said, "we certainly would not be disappointed."

Mr. Kerry owns two road bikes from Serotta, a niche manufacturer that serves a high-end market. The senator has an Ottrott, which retails with custom-added parts for an average of $8,000, and an older Colorado III. Mr. Kerry also has mountain bikes for the trails near his home in Ketchum, Idaho.

Moving on, let's take a look at Mr. Bush's and Mr. Kerry's bike sportsmanship.

When Mr. Bush had his spill, Mr. Kerry's reaction rapidly coursed through political cyberspace. According to The Drudge Report, Mr. Kerry said to reporters in what he believed was an off-the-record remark, "Did the training wheels fall off?"

The Chicago Sun-Times then reported that Chicago's Democratic mayor, Richard M. Daley - who ripped the skin off his kneecap in a bicycle accident a few years ago - had scolded Mr. Kerry for the wisecrack. "You should not wish ill upon anyone," Mr. Daley said.

The Republican National Committee then seized on Mr. Daley's remarks and sent them out as an attack e-mail under the headline "They said it!"

Mr. Kerry took his own fall from a bike on May 2 after he hit a patch of sand on a two-lane road in Concord, Mass. Mr. Kerry had no injuries and Mr. Bush had no reaction, at least none that we know of.

Finally, let's look at bike-riding performance.

Mr. McClellan said that Mr. Bush typically mountain-bikes 15 to 20 miles for an hour or an hour and a half at a time, either at his ranch or at Camp David. This past Saturday, Mr. Bush also rode the course at a Secret Service training facility near Beltsville, Md., where he could be seen at a distance in a group of up to 10 helmeted cyclists, trailed by a van and an ambulance.

So far that is the only public sighting of the president astride a bike, making it hard to gauge his proficiency. But the Secret Service agents who ran with Mr. Bush in his 6:45-mile days are now busily training on stationary bikes in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building gym, and complaining of sore muscles after their intense workouts with Mr. Bush.

Mr. Kerry, meanwhile, has covered up to 100 miles a day on his road bike in some charity rides. "John's a very fit rider for someone 60 years of age," said Clint Paige, the president of Wheelworks, a company of Boston-area bike shops where Mr. Kerry buys his Serottas.

Of course, comparing road biking to mountain biking is like comparing Democrats to Republicans. "It's a much different type of exercise," said Stephen Madden, the editor of Bicycling and Mountain Bike magazines. "Mountain biking involves a lot of up and down, and it also can involve a lot of technical expertise in jumping logs and rocks."

Still, maybe as a sideshow to the presidential debates Mr. Bush and Mr. Kerry should have a bike race, which would add new meaning to political spin.

Elefantino
05-31-2004, 08:43 AM
Bush: Trek Fuel 90. Figures. The Lance connection and all.

But how about Ben, coming "from a long line of Democrats" .... !!! :banana:

BumbleBeeDave
05-31-2004, 09:28 AM
I just have to wonder why Bush doesn’t just come out and try something really radical concerning his mountain biking, like maybe . . . BEING FORTHRIGHT AND ACCESSIBLE.

I think the snickers I heard from many quarters (not just this forum) would have been much less if Bush had simply invited a few reporters to go riding with him and see how much work he has been doing (according to the article) and that he really DOES know what he is doing on a bike. I’m certainly willing to give him credit if he really does have some skills and his little spill was just part of the work.

But the dearth of info about his riding fits in with how his administration seems to handle public relations in general . . . in other words, they’re not very good at it. They seem to consistently shoot themselves in the foot with their PR and give the impression that he’s hiding something when that is probably not the case.

BBDave

Ken Lehner
06-01-2004, 07:45 AM
You know, I really wonder about the "information" that comes out of the Bush administration. Does he really ride between 15 and 20mph for 1.5 hours? I'm skeptical. Also, how do you scrape *both* knees when you crash your bike? I'm trying to picture it, but I can't, unless you do an endo. Maybe that's it.

When Bush crashed on 5/21, we got this (quoting a White House spokesman in an AP report): "The spokesman says there had been a lot of rain in the area lately and that the topsoil was wet."

Well, wouldn't you know it: someone checked up on that. Here's the accuweather.com rain report for Crawford, TX (station in Waco) (look at the x.xx number for the rain numbers; sorry about the formatting):

TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION
ACTUAL NORMAL
HI LO AVG HI LO AVG DEPT AMNT SNOW SNCVR HDD
1 65 51 58 81 59 70 -12 2.89 0.0 0 7
2 73 47 60 81 59 70 -10 0.00 0.0 0 5
3 82 49 66 82 59 71 -5 0.00 0.0 0 0
4 83 56 70 82 60 71 -1 0.00 0.0 0 0
5 80 60 70 82 60 71 -1 0.00 0.0 0 0
6 82 63 73 82 60 71 +2 0.00 0.0 0 0
7 82 64 73 83 61 72 +1 0.00 0.0 0 0
8 84 67 76 83 61 72 +4 trace 0.0 0 0
9 83 66 75 83 61 72 +3 trace 0.0 0 0
10 85 67 76 83 62 73 +3 0.00 0.0 0 0
11 82 69 76 84 62 73 +3 0.03 0.0 0 0
12 86 70 78 84 62 73 +5 0.00 0.0 0 0
13 77 63 70 84 63 73 -3 0.92 0.0 0 0
14 71 58 65 84 63 74 -9 0.02 0.0 0 0
15 73 59 66 85 63 74 -8 0.00 0.0 0 0
16 83 56 70 85 63 74 -4 0.00 0.0 0 0
17 86 67 77 85 64 74 +3 0.00 0.0 0 0
18 88 73 81 85 64 75 +6 0.00 0.0 0 0
19 90 75 83 86 64 75 +8 0.00 0.0 0 0
20 89 71 80 86 65 75 +5 0.00 0.0 0 0
21 88 71 80 86 65 75 +5 0.00 0.0 0 0
22 87 71 79 86 65 76 +3 0.00 0.0 0 0

Notice that it hadn't rained in a week, and less than an inch in
three weeks; not to mention pretty warm. Now, I always thought
that "a lot of rain" in Texas would be, maybe, 5 or six feet over a couple
of hours. Why the excuse?

Richard
06-01-2004, 08:33 AM
Well, Ken, I guess that truth is a rare commodity in some circles - even on the mundane, let alone larger issues of war and peace. Your cite is but one example. In the story, the White House indicates that GWB rides a mtb at somewhere between 13 and 20 mph. If this is really mountain biking, he is world class -- the latest world cup winner averaged 13.5 mph. I suspect the reality is that GWB's version of mountain biking is a groomed dirt road and his crash was when he t-boned something trying to decide between a left fork or a right fork.

dave thompson
06-01-2004, 08:50 AM
"President Bush's bike accident was a little different than John Kerry's accident. See Bush fell when he tried to turn too hard to the right, and Kerry fell 'cause he kept switching gears."

--David Letterman on the Late Show Monday night

J.M. White
06-01-2004, 12:32 PM
Richard wrote:

I suspect the reality is that GWB's version of mountain biking is a groomed dirt road and his crash was when he t-boned something trying to decide between a left fork or a right fork.

What decision? Wouldn't W always choose the right fork?????

Richard
06-01-2004, 12:41 PM
That's why I am not a comedy writer. To make it too complicated, he couldn't do even that with out Chaney along. And as we know, Chaney would drop dead trying to sling a leg over a bike.