Swiss time trial monster Fabian Cancellara is currently racing the Paris-Roubix classic. If he wins he'll follow in the illustrious footsteps of Josef Fischer, the first winner.

Around six weeks into my time in Sierra Leone, I took on the persona of my too expensive shoe and wrote a long running narrative about my existence. I think I did this one after a blistering hot, humid day. Since it was July, I probably got rained on on the way home.

Kinsei: first-world shoe in a third-world country
July 17th, 2006

I’m a duality: two separate yet equal parts, working in tandem to do great things. Left Foot. Right Foot. Though they live in an independent and autonomous state, they’re inseparable. They are two, but they are one. They are me. This is my story.

I know little of my history. What I can tell you is that I was conceived far away in a mind’s eye by a great visionary. He had seen those like me before, and he was displeased. He sought to build a better, more efficient version of what he saw around him. He constructed me with care from the finest materials and gave me a body for sacrifice and a soul for speed, if it were to be my destiny. And he saw that I was good.

I was sold into slavery by a man named Bruce in the early spring while I was still young. Bruce worked in a paradoxical way- he spoke of my virtues. He was my champion. He loved me like a father might yet in singing my praises, delivered me into a life of hardship. I had experienced nothing short of birth and darkness when I learned of my relocation. I knew neither my destination nor how my life would unfold. But even if I did, it wouldn’t have mattered. I was born to experience my fate, wherever it would lead me.

My master broke me in slowly. In the beginning, life was easy. Days were short and were spent navigating the streets of Europe. We moved from the cobblestone roads of Paris to the fields of Switzerland to the rolling hills of Tuscany. The work was light, the sun bathed me in its warmth for the first time, and the women were sweet.

Yet I was lonely. But this was my burden.

Several weeks were spent in isolation. I remember little, save a few dark journeys nestled in with some foul-smelling textiles. The dark times ended. Then resumed.

Light came suddenly, though not unexpectedly. The air grew warmer and more humid. In my soul - intrinsically - I became aware that I had entered my raison d’etre. The sand was sweet, but the pavement was hard. I spent my days in the sun, but unlike my Master, my color remained constant. It was only my soles that became red from the loose arid dirt that lined the streets here.

Today was particularly tough. My master brought me into the wilderness to test me. To tempt me. To break me. The beginning was deceptively easy. He either went slow and even when his speed increased, he kept me on the sand, where the remnants of small blue waves would refreshingly tickle my sides as they died on the beachhead. I drank it in.

Then things changed. Master decided more speed was necessary. Companions that had joined us faded into the distance and for a brief moment, we were airborne. The pavement almost broke me. I lost all consciousness, only to fade back in, then out, ripe with agony and delirious from the thick air. Master kept going, but I noticed his stride began to change. Like me, he felt the pain.

Like me, he felt pain. But his weakness was that he succumbed to it. Where I owned my pain, he was owned by his. He mistook my submission for acquiescence and paid the price.

In the forty-third minute, the bad foot and the bad air had caught up to him. He favored Left Foot and wheezed when the black smoke of the afternoon traffic engulfed his senses. We passed several piles of trash and pools of filthy water. I could hear Master hold his breath as he alternated between running and resting, trying to save face in the midst of his peers. I sensed we were moving closer to his – our – home.

The pavement faded and I felt the rough texture of the dirt and stones of Signal Hill. I sensed conversations in the smoky air and laughter. The conversations were in a language I recognized but was unable to decipher.

We passed men, women, and children. They were laughing with increasing intensity as we moved closer. Perhaps they were laughing at him- at us. The hill grew steeper and Master had a second wind.

It was over quickly. We were home. I felt us hobbling up a set of stairs, indicating our presence on the ceramic times. I felt myself being loosened and simultaneously stretched. We were kicked off and left in solitude by the door. Our movement had ceased and we were left to rest. For the time being. Out of the corner of my eye, I sensed Master sinking his feet into a bucket of ice water. He was finished, at least for today.

A couple days ago I worked on a piece about the world cycling championships in Mendrisio, in canton Ticino.

Most of the piece was on Fabian Cancellara, a Swiss nicknamed "Spartacus" for his amazing power. He's excellent in the time trial and not too bad in regular road races.

One nagging little bit I wanted to touch on was doping . Both interview partners in the piece  - an Italian-speaking Swiss a colleague interviewed, as well as the head of the country's road cycling association - expressed zero confidence that professional road cyclists are clean, or that the sport's governing body is doing enough to prevent doping.

I posed the statement to the UCI, the governing body, asking for comment. That was  met with disdain, to be charitable, and apparently under the presupposition that the issue of doping in cycling had been dreamed up by yours truly and that concerns didn't actually exist.

Note to press officer: you catch more journalists with honey than with venomous rage and wild conspiracy accusations.

After a 30-minute conversation, the message was this (paraphrased): "Your questions are too stupid to comment on." Ironically, the doping issue would have taken up about three lines at the bottom of the piece.

The UCI does spend a significant amount of money on testing. But as I would learn, quantity doesn't necessarily translate into quality.

Added the spokesman: "The UCI and WADA [World anti-Doping Agency] have an excellent relationship." The UCI is suing WADA.

The piece is here.

Roger Federer played like a champ this afternoon and despite his loss, it's difficult not to love him. A great champion and a classy runner-up, it's difficult to imagine he will ever return to the top of the men's singles game.

But Nadal, who had come off a marathon semi-final match against countryman Fernando Verdasco, dominated the deciding set in a manner that seemed to solidify his status as king of the men's singles game.

Federer, resting on his bench after four hours and 23 minutes of play, appeared resigned.

"Thank you for your support," Switzerland's tennis hero told a roaring crowd after the match but managed only a few moments of silence more before his voice faltered and he came to tears.

Nadal looked on stoically as an adoring audience at Melbourne Park did it's best to console the former champion.

"I'll try again," Federer said a few minutes later. "I don't want to have the last word. This guy deserves it."

As Nadal began his remarks, Swiss television ran into a technical glitch cut to a cycling race.

"What just happened?" an off-air voice asked as viewers were left witnessing something that obviously shouldn't have happened. Federer might have been wondering the same thing.

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Saturday was a good day to be a Swiss downhiller. Didier Défago took first place at Kitzbühel and teammate and last year's FIS World Cup downhill champion Didier Cuch tied for fourth. Cuche at the two-thirds point of the race but blew it coming home. Dominique Gisin, also of Switzerland (surprise!!!) rocked Cortina. It was the second win in two weeks for both Défago and Gisin.

Downhillers victorious after taxing week | swissinfo

A battle between the two Didiers and a second straight victory from Dominique Gisin capped a stellar weekend for Switzerland on the World Cup downhill circuit.

Didier Défago finished in first place at the classic Streif course at Kitzbühel on Saturday afternoon with a time of 1:56.09 but his teammate, Daniel Albrecht, remains in a coma after crashing out in training two days earlier.

Didier Cuche, the reigning World Cup downhill champion, came fourth, a half second behind. Two Austrians – Michael Walchhofer and Klaus Kroell – finished second and third with times of 1:56.26 and 1:56.38.

Saturday's result was Défago's third World Cup victory. The 31 year old won last week at Lauberhorn in the Swiss resort of Wengen.

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And in case you're wondering what happens when there's a yard sale in the Alps, check out this video.

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