Fatclimber, thank god for google, otherwise I'd never had found this.
I trust LeMond. I like the guy and I've never read anything he said and thought he sounded ignorant. Had he never been shot, who knows what would have been.
http://www.bikeraceinfo.com/oralhistory/lemond.html
Specifically from this link above, "...Wattage is the ultimate truth. You know I'm very controversial because I think that you have to look at numbers.
My wattage, relative to VO2 Max...a VO2 Max of 92 or 93 in a fully recovered way...I think I was capable of producing 450 to 460 watts. The truth is, even at the Tour de France, my Tour de France climb times up l'Alpe d'Huez yielded a wattage of around 380 and 390. That was the historic norm for Hinault and myself. You've got times going back many, many years. But what was learned recently, in the last 5 years, was that when you start the Tour de France, you start with a normal hematocrit of, say, 45 percent. By the time you finish, it's probably down 10 or 15 percent. Which means my VO2 Max dropped 10 or 15 percent. So that's why I was never producing the same wattage. And then there a lot of other factors that help performance if you've recovered. My last time trial in '89, I averaged about 420, 430 watts, which would match or be slightly down from what my real VO2 Max was."
So the question to me is, if you have another natural mutant like LeMond, and they are at their physical peak and maybe can recover even better than LeMond, either due to being even more of a mutant than LeMond or simply employing better (and legal) recovery strategies due to further scientific physiological understanding, maybe, just maybe it is in fact possible for a guy to put out 6.7-6.8 w/kg who weighs 67kgs or less.
Much above that weight, like an Indurain, and its getting further and further farfetched, but as bodies get smaller their VO2max trend towards getting higher and higher, i.e., deer mice vs. thoroughbreds.
It's easy to be skeptical if there is one year that is an exceptional outlier among an athletes career, but then again, every top athlete tends to be able to look back and point to one season where everything just clicked, physically, mentally, emotionally, etc.
We have to give them the benefit of the doubt until proven otherwise. Remember, even in the last 100 or so years there was a man who was 8'11" tall! And we have people like Nikola Tesla who are so intelligent that there are people who literally think he may have been an alien. Outliers exist in everything. Say Greg LeMond is at the 7th standard deviation in terms of aerobic capacity, but what if someone comes along and is at the 8th?
I trust LeMond. I like the guy and I've never read anything he said and thought he sounded ignorant. Had he never been shot, who knows what would have been.
http://www.bikeraceinfo.com/oralhistory/lemond.html
Specifically from this link above, "...Wattage is the ultimate truth. You know I'm very controversial because I think that you have to look at numbers.
My wattage, relative to VO2 Max...a VO2 Max of 92 or 93 in a fully recovered way...I think I was capable of producing 450 to 460 watts. The truth is, even at the Tour de France, my Tour de France climb times up l'Alpe d'Huez yielded a wattage of around 380 and 390. That was the historic norm for Hinault and myself. You've got times going back many, many years. But what was learned recently, in the last 5 years, was that when you start the Tour de France, you start with a normal hematocrit of, say, 45 percent. By the time you finish, it's probably down 10 or 15 percent. Which means my VO2 Max dropped 10 or 15 percent. So that's why I was never producing the same wattage. And then there a lot of other factors that help performance if you've recovered. My last time trial in '89, I averaged about 420, 430 watts, which would match or be slightly down from what my real VO2 Max was."
So the question to me is, if you have another natural mutant like LeMond, and they are at their physical peak and maybe can recover even better than LeMond, either due to being even more of a mutant than LeMond or simply employing better (and legal) recovery strategies due to further scientific physiological understanding, maybe, just maybe it is in fact possible for a guy to put out 6.7-6.8 w/kg who weighs 67kgs or less.
Much above that weight, like an Indurain, and its getting further and further farfetched, but as bodies get smaller their VO2max trend towards getting higher and higher, i.e., deer mice vs. thoroughbreds.
It's easy to be skeptical if there is one year that is an exceptional outlier among an athletes career, but then again, every top athlete tends to be able to look back and point to one season where everything just clicked, physically, mentally, emotionally, etc.
We have to give them the benefit of the doubt until proven otherwise. Remember, even in the last 100 or so years there was a man who was 8'11" tall! And we have people like Nikola Tesla who are so intelligent that there are people who literally think he may have been an alien. Outliers exist in everything. Say Greg LeMond is at the 7th standard deviation in terms of aerobic capacity, but what if someone comes along and is at the 8th?