A win is a win. A Grand Tour stage win is no small thing. Commentators have too much time to fill on air and talk bollox to fill the space. Used be in France or Italy if you won a single stage of TdF or Giro it was your ticket to open a bar or a restaurant when you retired, stick your bike on the wall, frame the jersey hang that beside it. It brought local fame, because it's a bloody big deal. - 180 or so riders start, how many ever get a stage win? And cycling - comparatively - is a poor sport, it's also been one where traditionally even as an amateur you always get hard cash prizes for winning. In my area of rural Munster (bottom part of Ireland) when there were the succession of summer crits - the v popular 'round-the-houses' races in the '80s, often a van with bikes would pull up having driven down from one of the big Dublin clubs with sharp fast riders here to swoop up all the prize money- £70-£120 for a win in old Irish punts - a lot back in the 80s. They'd even pop up at remote Wednesday evening crits if there was the sniff of money. My late father who had been a champion middle distance runner was sniffy about cash prizes in amateur sport - but I used point out the cabinets chock full of silver cutlery in the good room that he had won running! In short winning is winning and money is money in such a tough unforgiving sport and you grab it while you can.