come here i whispered in your ear in your dream as you passed out baby was it over then [inhales] 🗣️ and is it over now???!!! 🗣️
Seeing a pro be so in disbelief over having won such a big race really reminds you that they too used to be kids dreaming of making it one day, and mattias fucking did! he beat THE world champion and olympic champion !
I cannot wait to see how his season turns out the rest of the year.
Mattias Skjelmose, Amstel Gold Race 2025
some people will try to lie to you and gaslight you, they’ll say “it’s okay that you don’t ship wolfstar”
don’t believe them, it is not okay and i’ve already called the police
I can't get this song out of my head (en sommerdag for alt for længe siden - TV-2)
bonus under cut
english version
okay right let’s get something straight about kevin magnussen in the context of sports nepo babies: kevin does not fit the traditional understanding of it at all. the best you can say is that he is the son of another motor racer - but he has very much /not/ had the advantages that other drivers including: lance stroll, mick schumacher, carlos sainz jr and max verstappen have had. here’s why:
- jan magnussen fathered kevin when he was nineteen. kevin was raised by a single mother and self-admittedly did not have a conventional relationship with his father and describes it as “more of a friendship”.
- jan magnussen didn’t have any money to support kevin’s career. in fact in 2008, kevin had to give up racing and take work as a welder. that’s basically the closest thing the grid has to being working class.
so yeah, kevin’s surname opened some doors for him at mclaren, but that is literally it. in fact jan magnussen’s success (like his le mans win) actually came after kevin’s career in f1 had begun. kevin does not have any family wealth backing him, didn’t have anyone giving him helping him to secure seats or sponsors, and his dad’s name carried very limited weight until after he’d already been dropped by mclaren. he was not groomed from birth to be a racer like some and has never had a safety net.
this really puts into context why he’s such a scrappy little bastard as a racer and why he loves his scrappy little bastard team so much. they may have passed over him in favour of money in the form of nikita mazepin but they were very upset about having to do so to stay afloat and got him back as soon as the opportunity was there. that’s loyalty!
Texts from: Ada Limón, “Some place like montana” // "directly at the sun" by Heather Christle // assorted quotes & headlines from Cyclingnews.com // thursday by James Longenbach// Michael Dumanis, untitled poem // Kavejh Akbar, from PERSONAL INVENTORY: FEARLESS (TEMPORIS FILA) // Vona Groarke, [september]
how it feels to love sport even when it hurts me because the act of participating in and watching sports is one of the most purely human acts of collective emotion you can experience, wether you win or lose, in that moment you, the athlete, the team, every fan, in the room, in the stands, across the world, is cheering together, crying together, winning together, losing together, and its more beautiful and perfect and frustrating and heartbreaking than a tv show or movie could ever be because its real its real and next season can always be different so you'll always come back and we keep always coming back for the rest of human existence
Saitama Criterium 2024 - Culture exchange program (aikido)
Jonas Vingegaard talks about Tadej PogaÄŤar getting dropped on Col de la Loze while rewatching his Tour de France 2023 victory.