- Mar 31, 2010
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Ryo Hazuki said:150 pounds is 68 kg and 174. that's like evans, who the almost entire clinic, thinks is doped
Big Doopie said:150 lbs and a 95 VO2max now makes you unable to climb mountains without doping?
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Ryo Hazuki said:what is funny? I symply ask who he is
He knows sh@t. Stating LeMond was a climber? Laughable. The whole package of LeMond made him the Grand Tour winner he was, good TT, good climber, and smart as hell in the course. He was no Herrera on the mountains, he was no Robert Millar, he was complete. Not a one trick pony like Indurain was before he got the extra oxygen from Padilla and Conconi.Big Doopie said:150 lbs and a 95 VO2max now makes you unable to climb mountains without doping?
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Where did he say LeMond was a climber? As a specialist?Fearless Greg Lemond said:He knows sh@t. Stating LeMond was a climber? Laughable. The whole package of LeMond made him the Grand Tour winner he was, good TT, good climber, and smart as hell in the course. He was no Herrera on the mountains, he was no Robert Millar, he was complete. Not a one trick pony like Indurain was before he got the extra oxygen from Padilla and Conconi.
D-Queued said:If he was doping, he didn't start doping until '95.
Here is what a clean Indurain did to a doping Armstrong in '94:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cGPGm38wt5g
See the action at the ~3:05 min mark.
Keep in mind that Lance, by his own admission, was doping at this time.
Clean Indurain >> dirty Lance.
Dave.
Fearless Greg Lemond said:He knows sh@t. Stating LeMond was a climber? Laughable. The whole package of LeMond made him the Grand Tour winner he was, good TT, good climber, and smart as hell in the course. He was no Herrera on the mountains, he was no Robert Millar, he was complete. Not a one trick pony like Indurain was before he got the extra oxygen from Padilla and Conconi.
Big Doopie said:but...but... but he lost 10 kgs. he did. he did. that's why he became a climber.
where have we heard that one before.
in 1991, indurain, chiappucci and bugno were on epo.
mottet, fignon, hampsten, lemond and leblanc were not.
hrotha said:Where did he say LeMond was a climber? As a specialist?
Also, to state that Indurain could never climb without EPO you need to assume he was one of the earliest adopters in the peloton, back in 1989 or even 1988. It's a possibility, but ultimately I don't think there's much evidence to suggest that.
131313 said:You're kidding, right? Take a look at Indurain's GT results prior to 89. Lots of DNF's and couple of Vuelta finishes just inside the top 100. Not too different that some other guy. His rise to prominence in GT's coincided with his relationship with Conconi, the Godfather of EPO use in the peloton. Much like the rise of Armstrong when he started working w/Conconi's #1 disciple.
That's not to say he wasn't a talented rider, but so was Armstrong. No one has any idea of his "real talent", and no one ever will, including Indurain himself. He was on the cutting edge of dope, and that's why he won 5 tours. Other dopers like Riis caught up with him and he lost the arms race.
How does that contradict anything I said?131313 said:You're kidding, right? Take a look at Indurain's GT results prior to 89. Lots of DNF's and couple of Vuelta finishes just inside the top 100. Not too different that some other guy. His rise to prominence in GT's coincided with his relationship with Conconi, the Godfather of EPO use in the peloton. Much like the rise of Armstrong when he started working w/Conconi's #1 disciple.
That's not to say he wasn't a talented rider, but so was Armstrong. No one has any idea of his "real talent", and no one ever will, including Indurain himself. He was on the cutting edge of dope, and that's why he won 5 tours. Other dopers like Riis caught up with him and he lost the arms race.
ultimobici said:This is from 1990, generally considered the last EPO-free Tour.
http://youtu.be/702mu0o3xXY
Indurain seemingly could climb before EPO and for a 1m80+ rider doesnt seem that big either.
He may have been on EPO et al in his Tour run, but to say he was cannon fodder as many seem to be is disingenuous to say the lease.
hrotha said:How does that contradict anything I said?
Indurain being on EPO already in 1989 would make him one of the first users in the peloton. Which is a perfectly reasonable conclusion, mind, but it has its problems: it doesn't explain how Indurain kept getting better as EPO became more widespread, for one. It also doesn't explain why Delgado or the rest of the team wasn't given the same treatment.
What does this have to do with anything I said?roundabout said:Who was better, Chiappucci or Berzin?
hrotha said:How does that contradict anything I said?
Indurain being on EPO already in 1989 would make him one of the first users in the peloton. Which is a perfectly reasonable conclusion, mind, but it has its problems: it doesn't explain how Indurain kept getting better as EPO became more widespread, for one. It also doesn't explain why Delgado or the rest of the team wasn't given the same treatment.
1990 is indeed a more reasonable date, but judging from his continued improvement over the mountains in subsequent Tours even when pitted against heavy EPO users, he would have had to have started with a conservative program. In 1990 and 1991 he was not obliterating everyone in the ITTs like in 1992-1994.Gregga said:I'm afraid we'll never know when Indurain started EPO, but for sure in 1990 he had an incredible improvement in the mountain compared to 1989 where he was struggling most of the time except maybe from the hilly ITT (stage 15)
As 1990 was clearly the first or second (maybe third ?) year of the EPO era, with at least Chiappucci and Bugno as pionneers, why not Indurain ?
Ryo Hazuki said:he finished every tour he started in the 80s except his first in 86, when he was only 21also the year he won avenir in
hrotha said:What does this have to do with anything I said?
I'd have no trouble accepting that Indurain was an EPO pioneer - in fact, I'm arguing right now for that possibility at another forum. But the theory does have problems that should be addressed.
hrotha said:What does this have to do with anything I said?
I'd have no trouble accepting that Indurain was an EPO pioneer - in fact, I'm arguing right now for that possibility at another forum. But the theory does have problems that should be addressed.
You are right, that was not nice of me. I am sorry those fanboys pi$$ me off. Thanks for the correction.hrotha said:Where did he say LeMond was a climber? As a specialist?
Also, to state that Indurain could never climb without EPO you need to assume he was one of the earliest adopters in the peloton, back in 1989 or even 1988. It's a possibility, but ultimately I don't think there's much evidence to suggest that.
