Lanark said:The question isn't if he is exceptionally gifted. All the top guys are. And if those guys aren't clean....well.
Lanark said:The question isn't if he is exceptionally gifted. All the top guys are. And if those guys aren't clean....well.
delbified said:my point is that there's more to a rider's performance than just:
1. his physical makeup, and
2. whether he's doped up or not.
but you wouldn't gain that impression from reading many of the posts in this forum.
delbified said:you may recall he broke his elbow in 2010, had a virus in 2012. lotto was his lost years, where he suffered under team mgt.
La Toussuire 2006:Benotti69 said:If you lok at Evan's results history he was up there with the big time epo users. If he could ride that well clean, well how come he only has 1 GT win when power numbers are not as high now compared to those years?
Fearless Greg Lemond said:La Toussuire 2006:
On Cadel: he is just getting old.
Fearless Greg Lemond said:<snip>
Human evolution is going fast, 14 years ago men needed EPO fuel, nowadays they go faster clean.
Benotti69 said:This will be JV's/Sky's next PR coup.
I believe Portelau did write something last year on this subject. Will search for it.Benotti69 said:This will be JV's/Sky's next PR coup.
Maxiton said:So says Tyler Hamilton, here. Probably few in the peloton know more about who's dirty, who's clean, and what's what in pro cycling, than Tyler Hamilton. TH is naming names and kicking behinds, and he says Cadel is clean.
What do you say? Is there a clean champion, and is it Cadel Evans?
Fearless Greg Lemond said:La Toussuire 2006:
Carlos Sastre 44.47
Cadel Evans 45.02
La Toussiere 2012:
Thibot Pinot 44.51
Froome same time
Nibali 44.53
Wiggins same time
Cadel Evans 46.19
Must have been a lot of backwind last year.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=2PgmHIBxfV4#t=1583s
http://www.cyclingnews.com/races/tour-de-france-2012/stage-16/results
Tour 1998:
Stage 10
Col de Peyresourde (9.5 km, 6.9 %, 657 m)
Jan Ullrich: 23 min 39 sec
http://autobus.cyclingnews.com/results/1998/tour98/stage10.html
''Today the Tour goes up: at 54 kms the "Hors Categorie" Col d'Aubisque (16.5 km climb at 7%), then at 120 kms the "Hors Categorie" Col du Tourmalet (18.4 km climb at 7.7%), then at the 150 kms mark, the Cat 1 Col d'Aspin (a 12.4 km climb at 5.1%) and finally just before the end the Cat 1 Col de Peyresourde (9.7 km climb at 6.7%) comes at 181 kms.''
1. Rodolfo Massi (Ita) Casino 5.49.40 (33.717)
2. Marco Pantani (Ita) Mercatone Uno 0.36
3. Michael Boogerd (Ned) Rabobank 0.59
Tour 2012:
Froome 24.27
Wiggins/Nibali the same
![]()
Kinda looks the same route, lets look at the results:
1 Thomas Voeckler (Fra) Team Europcar 5:35:02
2 Chris Anker Sörensen (Den) Team Saxo Bank-Tinkoff Bank 0:01:40
3 Gorka Izaguirre Insausti (Spa) Euskaltel - Euskadi 0:03:22
4 Alexandr Vinokourov (Kaz) Astana Pro Team
5 Brice Feillu (Fra) Saur - Sojasun 0:03:58
6 Jens Voigt (Ger) RadioShack-Nissan 0:04:18
7 Daniel Martin (Irl) Garmin - Sharp 0:06:08
8 Simone Stortoni (Ita) Lampre - ISD
9 Giampaolo Caruso (Ita) Katusha Team
10 Laurens Ten Dam (Ned) Rabobank Cycling Team 0:06:11
11 Vincenzo Nibali (Ita) Liquigas-Cannondale 0:07:09
12 Bradley Wiggins (GBr) Sky Procycling
13 Christopher Froome (GBr) Sky Procycling
14 Nicolas Roche (Irl) AG2R La Mondiale 0:08:07
44 Ivan Basso (Ita) Liquigas-Cannondale 0:14:07
http://www.cyclingnews.com/races/tour-de-france-2012/stage-16/results
Last years Tour had a lot of backwind, even the number 44 had a faster time then Pantani in 1998...
Human evolution is going fast, 14 years ago men needed EPO fuel, nowadays they go faster clean.
On Cadel: he is just getting old.
Fearless Greg Lemond said:I believe Portelau did write something last year on this subject. Will search for it.
But I bet JV will say that is bs, because climbing speeds are so far down, he - and others - just keeps on forgetting who are riding at what speed.
Evans has been quite consistent over his carreer, must be said.
The guy earlier on this thread whining over the lack of support for Evans on Lotto should look back at the Tour 2011, no support at all from his BMC teammates, autobus fillers.
Fearless Greg Lemond said:The guy earlier on this thread whining over the lack of support for Evans on Lotto should look back at the Tour 2011, no support at all from his BMC teammates, autobus fillers.
i'm a bit of a cadel fanboy and like to believe he won a lot of the races in which others finished ahead of him and avoided doping controls. so in that respect, i'd tend to agree. but there seems to have been something going on at Lotto that was distracting Cadel. when JVdB showed promise, team mgt seemed to switch allegiances very quickly, which history shows was not very astute.Ferminal said:Performance wise he has never been better than he was at Pharma/Lotto.
86TDFWinner said:Not to stir up a hornets nest, but I've asked here SEVERAL times, for someone to post either way whether Cadel is clean or dirty & no one has either way. Admittedly, I like Cadel and think what he did in 2011, was great. However, if he's found to have been dirty, then I will have lost all respect for him & he needs to have all results stripped from him, like other riders have. I don't know either way whether he did or didn't, I'd hope we found out either way.
Just my .002¢
JimmyFingers said:Silly it may be, borderline troll even, but worthwhile certainly. I've asked before about this lengthy, no-name virus that has blighted Cadel for a decent chunk of last season and much of this, now its gone and he's mixing it again? I just expected it to be oneof the main topics post-race but instead yet again it's a dreary deconstruction of Sky. Just demonstrable of the selective nature of the conversation in this place.
At least they gave Froome's a name.
The Hitch said:To say one has to be optimistic to believe Evans was in amongst all those heavy chargers purely on talent, is an understatement. Its highly highly unlikely.
delbified said:to me, the best way of identifying dopers has long been circumstantial evidence - who they use as doctors, who coached them, and what others in the know are saying about them.
riders were scathing of contador and sure enough - he got pinged.
lance's guilt was an open secret for years, to anyone who was willing to read beyond the headlines.
yet Evans has escaped almost all innuendo and is highly praised by his rivals in the peloton for his victories. it's reasonable to interpret such praise for winning pro races as code for "i think he won it clean".
delbified said:@ the hitch - i'm not claiming to know whether Evans is clean or not. i'm saying that there is a conspicuous absence of circumstantial evidence in support of any theory that he has doped, other than strong performances.
i believe - and this just a personal belief - that while people can be pathological liars, including on their own doping history - there are limits to how far even a pathological liar can go with denials. case in point - Lance favoured the "i've never tested positive" line. correct me here, but he never had the audacity to come out and pro-actively rubbish dopers.
Evans is much more relaxed than Lance was in this regard. while he doesn't make it a theme - which i believe is understandable - he has spoken fairly openly about his disdain for doping. he does not strike me as the sort of personality who is comfortable with that type of deceit. quite the opposite - he has a lot of trouble discussing issues he is uncomfortable with, such as interpersonal matters with his (former) team.
i think it was Michael Barry who said he didn't get any advantage out of doping, due to the additional stress offsetting any physiological benefits. there is good evidence Lance had a particular character and personality that allowed him to shut that out - he didn't seem to lose sleep over his doping and lies.
Evans strikes me as about as far removed from that type of personality as you can get. yet of all the matters which seem to stress him out and irk him, he is very straightforward and relaxed when addressing doping. i think there's only one clear and obvious explanation for that.
obvious this is all conjecture - but so is arguing that his performances were too strong to be clean.
JimmyFingers said:Silly it may be, borderline troll even, but worthwhile certainly. I've asked before about this lengthy, no-name virus that has blighted Cadel for a decent chunk of last season and much of this, now its gone and he's mixing it again? I just expected it to be oneof the main topics post-race but instead yet again it's a dreary deconstruction of Sky. Just demonstrable of the selective nature of the conversation in this place.
At least they gave Froome's a name.
I noticed that Cadel Evans came second on stage 3 of the Giro. Good on him — it’s always good to see him doing well. As I wrote this I thought Cadel’s best days were behind him, but now I see he’s absolutely flying. He’s seemed quite bitter in the bunch lately and has been going around grumbling in Italian and moaning about other teams. He’s always had a chip on his shoulder, but this time it’s much more than a chip, it’s a whole bag of Doritos!
The Hitch said:He obviously had the will to win and train himself past the pain barrier day after day. So any anti doping stance would have to be significantly greater for Evans to stop him from doping than it is for anyone else who isnt fighting for the tour de france.