Here's something you definitely don't see every day. It's a professional rider in the Tour de France stopping to remonstrate with fans booing him from the side of the road.
The rider in question is French star Tommy Voeckler who rides for the Europcar team.
He was half way up the final climb of the day, an hors category ascent, on stage 13 last Friday when he decided to stop on the road between Saint Etienne and Chamrousse.
The fan who posted the video said those Voeckler stopped to argue with were Dutch.
The Frenchman, who can be temperamental, has a history with the Dutch.
In the 2011 Tour de France he was clear with Dutch rider Johnny Hoogerland and others, when an official car accidentally shunted Hoogerland off the road, through a barbed wire fence and into a field.
The photos of Hoogerland climbing back onto his bike, with his shorts complete torn and exposing bloodied buttocks with lacerations from the barbed wire, have become iconic.
Some felt Voeckler should have waited for him. But the Frenchman pressed on, encouraging the other riders he was with to press on too. And he took the yellow jersey that day, holding it for 10 days.
He relinquished it on the Alpe d'Huez stage, won by his team mate Pierre Rolland. And when he passed through Dutch corner on the climb he was booed heavily by the fans. He didn't stop that time though...
It's interesting to see that these guys are human too and that the reaction from the roadside can affect them.
The crash that took Hoogerland out
The damage

Hoogerland's backside; he battled on to the finish....
