wattage said:Yes, I am sure FC only received some interval training tips from Cecchini. Like Lance used Ferrari just for his training program..
No, no. LA only asked Ferrari to squeeze oranges; he's supposed to be really good at that...
wattage said:Yes, I am sure FC only received some interval training tips from Cecchini. Like Lance used Ferrari just for his training program..
However, Italian coach Aldo Sassi believes Cancellara could aim even higher, suggesting that Cancellara could be a Tour de France contender if he loses some muscle mass and further body fat.
As the coach of World Champion Cadel Evans and Ivan Basso, Sassi knows what it takes to identify and hone Grand Tour contenders. He was also the coach of the Mapei team that signed Cancellara to the Mapei development team in 2001, along with Filippo Pozzato, Michael Rogers, Dario Cioni, Charlie Wegelius and Bernhard Eisel.
"When we signed Fabian, we knew how talented he was because he'd already won two junior world time trial titles, but when we analysed his laboratory results, they convinced us of his huge potential," Sassi told Gazzetta dello Sport on Tuesday.
"For a rider like Fabian, raising the bar is not about going for the hour record, I'm convinced he can go for the major Tours. Perhaps not the Giro d'Italia, but the Tour de France for sure. We signed him to the Mapei development team with that goal in mind. We saw what he could do in time trials and we thought he'd could win short stage races and eventually become a rider for the major Tours."
JPM London said:Have not heard that one before. What is the name link supposed to be?
Oldman said:That was in 2001. The changes he'd have to make to be a Tour de F contender would take years. He's at an age where he can make as much cash without jeopardizing his current standard of performance. It would be a questionable professional decision to do it IMO.
JPM London said:Yeah I kinda figured the "classic hands" bit myself... More curious about the Luigi bit. A dog as all the other ones?
TeamSkyFans said:literally translated - classic hands
long since accepted that it was a csc rider
rghysens said:it rather means "crazy about classics" (-mano is derived from ancient Greek manos, I think)
Race Radio said:As for Fuentes the blood bag with the name Clasicomano (Luigi) has always been rumored to be Cancellera.
Escarabajo said:Some people always knew he was very talented. So it opens the door for "huge natural talent" theory. But then if the others were doped, then it is impossible for FC to ....
Here is the comment by Aldo Sassi:
In that picture? Nowhere.basque1 said:Yeah, Sassi was putting it in terms of weight: "For the Tour, he'd have to lose six kilograms, of which only two or three would be muscle, so that he doesn’t lose his power," Sassi said. "If he weighs about 70kg, like Wiggins does, I'm sure he'd be competitive. He'd be an Indurain type of rider."
http://img02.beijing2008.cn/20080813/Img214537706.jpg
(I haven't figured out how to get a pic to show up in this window yet.)
Anyone else scratching their heads and wondering where Cancellara has NINE POUNDS of fat & unused muscle to lose?????
JPM London said:Or, considering Fuentes is Spanish, mano is derived from the Spanish word for hand...
Escarabajo said:In that picture? Nowhere.
Katzenbacker73 said:What Fabian did should have everyone with a conscience nervous. He appears to be a nice guy, but what happened on Sunday does not add up. He dropped the 10 strongest men in the race who were doing essentially a TTT for final 50km to try and catch him. He was gaining a minute every 10km! That is the reverse of the mathematical equation used on the flat stages of grand tours to determine if the break will be caught by the peleton!
Only in your dreams. So numbers don't mean anything, yet you trust engineering everyday of your life when you go over bridges, take elevators, etc, etc. Don't be silly. Numbers mean a lot. They are not the ultimate methods but it means something.Willy_Voet said:..
- He could release numbers, but they mean nothing: My hematocrit is 37 and I rode 50 mph for an hour.
See, I just made up numbers. They mean nothing.
...
Escarabajo said:Only in your dreams. So numbers don't mean anything, yet you trust engineering everyday of your life when you go over bridges, take elevators, etc, etc. Don't be silly. Numbers mean a lot. They are not the ultimate methods but it means something.
In fact I think you were doped when you did your 50 mph with your 37% crit level. Weren’t you?
Escarabajo said:Only in your dreams. So numbers don't mean anything, yet you trust engineering everyday of your life when you go over bridges, take elevators, etc, etc. Don't be silly. Numbers mean a lot. They are not the ultimate methods but it means something.
In fact I think you were doped when you did your 50 mph with your 37% crit level. Weren’t you?
Kender said:I'd be more worried about the fact that if everyone thinks FC is doped up to the gills, then how come Contador seems to be able to compete in ITT's with the worlds best time trialer. AC beat FC by 3 seconds in the tour last year over a pretty flat 40km course (1 cat 3 climb 3.7km long + 31km flat). sure it was nearing the end of the tour, but if FC was doped then he should be recovering well. Strange how you don't really see much AC is on dope talks
Willy_Voet said:You don't add up.
- If he was putting 1 min into them every 10 km over 50 km he would have won by 5 min.
That is more likely. For a moment I got worried with the >40 km/hr average on the last hour.BigChain said:I timed the last 20km based on the 10 metre countdown clock. FC's time for the last 20km was 32:22 or an average speed of 37.075kmh. I would say the average speed for the last 40km was close to 38kmh.
BroDeal said:Canc did not start doing well in the classics until after Fuentes used the classicoman name. It does not make sens that it would be Cancellara.
I always thought it was probably Bettini, who in the aftermath of OP said he would retire rather than be subjected to a DNA test.