Edwin Setiadi

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While great riders are often distinguished by the extremes of their physiology or their grace in the saddle, Voigt’s singular characteristic during an eighteen-year professional career was his appetite for suffering. His “open acknowledgment of pain as a state of mind to be combated, repressed and ultimately overcome,” Cycling Weekly opined, “is perhaps part of the reason he is revered by cycling fans as the hardman of the peloton.”
Endure: Mind, Body, and the Curiously Elastic Limits of Human Performance
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