ASSOS套装不错 但蓝色俗了点
我来勾引你一下。看你怎么办?
野蛮小子 发表于 2009-4-29 00:04 http://bbs.bikehome.net/diz/images/common/back.gif
据说订货要1年才能拿到……
SHIMANO 也来环法了好强
Dear Explainer,
Katusha? Isn’t that the rockets that have and are killing Americans? Am I wrong? What does Katusha have to do with cycling and why does Katusha have a ProTour license?!?!
Jim Manning
Dear Jim,
Well, for a short question we have a lot to cover. Where to start? Maybe, since we are a cycling publication, let’s first look at the team before we discuss the relevance of naming it after a mobile artillery unit.
As many readers probably already know, the new Katyusha cycling team is a successor to the existing Tinkoff Credit Systems squad. Tinkoff currently operates with a UCI Professional Continental team license. The original Tinkoff team was established in 2006, as the Tinkoff Restaurants team and has operated as Tinkoff Credit Systems since 2007.
The team has been largely financed by Russian millionaire and cycling fan Oleg Tinkov. The 40-year-old Tinkov initially made his fortune in the beer and restaurant business, establishing a small brewery – more like a brew pub – in St. Petersburg in 1998. Tinkov built a number of restaurants throughout Russia and eventually expanded the business to the point that it began exporting Tinkoff-labeled beer to western Europe and North America. By 2005, the business had grown to the point that it was Russia’s third largest independent brewery and he sold the business and brand name to InBev (the Belgian company that recently purchased Anheuser-Busch) for about $250 million.
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As you can tell from his team’s current moniker, Tinkov expanded his business into the financial markets and established Tinkoff Credit Systems.
The team generated some controversy in early 2007, when it hired, and then fired, American Tyler Hamilton and German rider Jörg Jaksche, both of whom had been implicated in the Operaćion Puerto doping scandal.
Since then, the team has enjoyed some success as a wild-card invitee to major events, including this year’s Giro d’Italia and Vuelta a España, usually putting riders into long breaks in a hunt for stage wins.
Like the U.S.’s Garmin squad, the Tinkoff program was ready to step up to ProTour status for 2009 and made the application earlier this year. That license was granted on Monday.
Unlike Garmin, the team underwent a substantial reorganization in order to achieve that. To do that, Tinkov went in search of additional sponsors and put together a consortium of Russian businesses to move the team up to the next level. He didn’t hold back, either, putting together a $24 million budget with the support of Russian giants Gazprom, Itera and Ros Technologie. Tinkov, however, says he will scale back his direct involvement in the team, saying that he will need to focus on maintaining his portfolio by guiding Tinkoff Credit Systems through the current global economic crisis.
With or without Oleg’s involvement, the team has recruited aggressively and was even working to sign Tour winner Carlos Sastre at one point. The team will keep several Tinkoff standouts, including Evgeni Petrov, Pavel Brutt and Nikoli Trussov and has signed big names from other teams, like Vladimir Karpets (formerly Caisse d’Epargne), Filippo Pozzato (Liquigas), Gert Steegmans (Quick Step) and none other than Robbie “the Rocket” McEwen (Silence-Lotto).
What’s in a name?
Okay, so Robbie gives us a nice segue into explaining the new name for the team.
Jim, you’re right, the name is the same as the mobile multiple rocket launcher originally developed by Soviet Union during World War II (or the “Great Patriotic War” as the Russians call it). You’re also right in that several generations of the weapon are still used around the world, and has been used by Al Qaeda and Taliban fighters in Afghanistan against U.S. troops. Some of those were originally captured from Soviets after the 1980 invasion.
For better or for worse, the name – and the weapon – have achieved iconic status in Russia and the Katyusha designation of the cycling team reflects that. There’s a little bit of history behind that, too.
One of the original Katyushas, mounted on an American Lend-Lease Studebaker.
Photo: File PhotoThe Soviets’ BM-8 truck-mounted mobile artillery unit and its heavier counterparts – the BM-13 and BM-31 – proved to be an effective weapon against advancing German troops. Interestingly, the early versions of the BM-8 and BM-13 were often mounted on American trucks, delivered to the Soviets through the Lend-Lease program, as is the case with the Studebaker pictured on the right.
Red Army troops gave the new weapon the affectionate nickname “Katyusha,” which was the title of a popular wartime song about a young Russian woman waiting for her true love to return from the battle front. The woman’s name was Yekaterina (Catherine), the affectionate diminutive of which is "Katyusha."
In the original Cyrillic alphabet Katyusha is “Катюша,” which explains why those of us who use the Latin alphabet can never quite figure out how to spell it. You can expect to see it as “Katusha,” “Katyusha,” “Katjuscha” or any other of a number of variations.
German troops on the receiving end of the “Катюша,” in World War II branded it with the less affectionate, Stalinorgel - “Stalin’s organ” – based on the ominous sound it produced when fired.
A newer version of an old idea.
Photo: File PhotoThe concept has evolved over the years and many countries produce a truck-mounted multiple rocket launcher which is generically referred to as a Катюша. Because the idea was originally developed in the Soviet Union, there is an element of national pride associated with it.
On top of that, the above-mentioned song is still widely popular in Russia, as you might see from this concert last May, held to honor veterans of the Great Patriotic War, or any number of interesting variations, including this rendition by the Red Army Choir and this Euro-pop version with Russian cheerleaders (we included that last link because you just can't make up stuff like that).
So no matter how it might be viewed in other parts of the world, the name chosen for the cycling team reflects the very Russian character of the program and its sponsors
LS的这么大段英文让我看的头晕,我看的懂部分,但是这些和我这些环法车队资料有洒关联啊?
只有顶起,。
本帖最后由 云龙 于 2009-5-4 22:17 编辑
看到了09年环法全明星车队的阵容,还有新车队的加盟更是为环法增加了新的看点和亮点, 届时鹿死谁手有一场鏖战可看了。 好贴,一顶再顶!
期待七月的环法