Has Chris Froome gone vegan? One website devoted to meat and dairy free diets has enthusiastically embraced the suggestion that he has. Team Ineos said that the four-time Tour de France winner has made a shift towards a more plant-based diet, but still currently eats meat.
Referring to an Instagram Stories post from the Team Ineos rider, Vegan Food & Living maintained that the four-time Tour de France winner “has switched to a plant-based diet after being inspired by vegan athlete documentary The Game Changers.”
Released last year, the film’s producers include Arnold Schwarzenegger, Lewis Hamilton, James Cameron, Jackie Chan, Pamela Anderson and Novak Djokovic.
Instagram Stories, as you may know, disappear 24 hours after posting, so we can’t check any follow-up comments at this point, but here is a screengrab of Froome’s post.
It’s perhaps not as unequivocal an endorsement of veganism as Vegan Food & Living might have its readers believe, given the platform it was posted to and that laughing emoji.
A Team Ineos spokesperson told road.cc that Froome has made a shift towards a more plant based diet – "essentially, he still eats meat but is transitioning across."
Veganism is a growing trend, and one that is being increasingly embraced by athletes – as outlined just last week by Richard Owen in this post for our sister site, off-road.cc.
> Going to a vegan diet for cycling: Everything you need to know about a plant based diet for riding
Formula 1 champ Hamilton and world number two ranked male tennis player Djokovic, it should be noted both live in Monaco, as does Froome – so it’s certainly not inconceivable that their paths might cross, and ideas exchanged.
The highest profile current professional cyclist who has enjoyed success while following vegan diets is Lotto-Soudal’s Adam Hansen, the only rider in history to have completed 20 Grand Tours in succession, winning stages at the Vuelta and Giro d’Italia on the way.
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"Has Chris Froome gone vegan? One website devoted to meat and dairy free diets has enthusiastically embraced the suggestion that he has. Team Ineos said that the four-time Tour de France winner has made a shift towards a more plant-based diet, but still currently eats meat."
If he's still eating meat then the answer to the first question is obviously "no".
Plus, there's more to veganism then just avoiding the meat & animal by-products.
I am happy to consume any Entropy Pump, it all just brings on the inevitable Heat Death of the Universe.
Is an Entropy Pump a bit like using the Pharos Project to shunt it all into E-Space?
ROOTminus1
Couldn't have said it better myself.
Eat meat or don't, it's a personal choice. Either way, don't be a dick about it
I used to be irked at "those bloody hipsters" for buying up all the green lidded B&J, but at least the increase in demand has now allowed them to up production and reduce the price for me and my fellow dairy intolerant peoples. £7+ a tub was almost as painful as the stomach cramps from getting regular ice-cream instead
Who cares
The animals?
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I'm not interested in the private lives of sportspeople or celebrities but since this and most magazines and sites like this devote a lot of interest in performance foods and weight loss etc, it's interesting. The most significant effort we can all make towards averting climate change is eating less meat and riding our bicycles. If you can win the TDF for a fifth time on a vegan diet I'm going to bet a lot of people care.
They're probably not the most significant things people could be doing, lobbying governments to put far sticter regulation of the oil and gas industry and various other aspects of big business would have a greater effect, and take away the focus that certain parts of the economy are placing on it all being up to individuals to fix their mess. I get your point that they are both very worthwhile things to do, and globally a shift towards that position would not be insignificant, but it isn't going to be enough to reverse the effects caused by many industries.