Doping in XC skiing

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Sep 25, 2009
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@libertine, bullsfan and kingjr

here's what i posted minutes after that team relay and my surprise of their teams selection:
viewtopic.php?p=1844664#p1844664
yep, the triple isn't a big surprise... but the russians helped by obviously not setting the optimum 1st team.

It was the usual legkov in his 3d leg to close the gap allowed by his compatriots in the 1 classic legs, then seeing larkov in the last leg, imo was a mistake b/c in all other relays where the russian challenged for medals it was either vyleg (who ran 2nd classic) or ustiugov (who finished for russia 2). in fact, by my tentative assessment ustiogov was 2 d in absolute skating speed
as bullsfan noted, the poor selection could be explained by an early season lack of proven performance records for serhey.

it is true that their team selection decisions, not just in the relays, were/are subject to political currents, but i would not use such a strong word ('disdain') describing their attitude towards the foreign coaches or the foreigners in general. competitive suspicion, even a false-pride envy of foreign coaches ? certainly ! but if it was a matter of a strong russian dislike, neither reto nor knaute nor the chenousov's coach (vegard bitneson ?) nor cramer would ever be hired. and kept ! (though vegard will be let go i hear).

it seems that the sports ministry had imposed 'a foreign coach' option to keep the domestic experts in competition and, more importantly, to keep their typical 'chemical proclivity' in check. which imo is not a bad idea.

the problem is their management structure, its rigidity and the individual incompetence. the fed president (unlike say the norge system) is also the head national coach. and if the post was given due to political loyalty rather than competence, you get what you see - a chain-smoking, fat, flag-waving vialbe. not that she wasn't a great champion, but a competent sports manager she was just never meant to be...
 
Mar 19, 2009
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Belgium's position in cross indeed is similar. I've seen that as up close as it gets, while being Dutch.
While they have the numbers due to culture, they don't go around ptting the rest of the world on minutes over an hour. Czechs, Americans, French, and of course Dutch, get very close, if they don't get to sprint for the win.
Even if you take Johaug completely out of the equasion, the Norwegian women's dominance in terms of ski speed is sickening. Way, way worse than Belgium being able to field multiple candidates for the win. In XC skiing, no-one else has someone to finish within a few per cent of the win.
Truth is, the Dutch and Czechs love their cross as much as the Swedes and Germans love their XC skiing. And let's not pretend these countries can't come up with knowledgeable trainers or funding. This is all without introducing Russia to the equasion.
If indeed it's a testosteron-like substance, it would be logical that the women benefit more than the men. Could Sundby be a super responder?

Long time since I've heard about Aicar.
 
Mar 19, 2009
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Smaller gaps to the first non-Norwegian for the girls compared to the seniors. Not for the boys. Well, they're 19-20 y/o's.
 
Jun 22, 2010
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Cloxxki said:
Smaller gaps to the first non-Norwegian for the girls compared to the seniors. Not for the boys. Well, they're 19-20 y/o's.


Shorter distances. The longest race for the junior women is going to be 10k, for the men it will be 15k. You see variances in development at the junior races. Some develop earlier and thus might seem overwhelming, but give it a few years and you'll see the differences, either way. This has a lot to do with physical and mental maturity but also training and who is peaking and who isn't.
 
Jun 22, 2010
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Knutsen said:

Perhaps not motorized poles, but definitely good porridge, better grinds, and as Emil Iversen said after his sprint win last weekend in Lahti, we just train a lot in Norway. Thank you Emil, for that groundbreaking comment! Now that we all know the secret, we'll keep quiet!! Silly us.
 
Feb 20, 2010
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Cloxxki said:
Belgium's position in cross indeed is similar. I've seen that as up close as it gets, while being Dutch.
While they have the numbers due to culture, they don't go around ptting the rest of the world on minutes over an hour. Czechs, Americans, French, and of course Dutch, get very close, if they don't get to sprint for the win.
Idunno, at its worst, it was pretty bad.

2012 UCI World Cyclocross Championships (Koksijde) - Men's Elite Race
1 Niels Albert (BEL) 1'06'07
2 Rob Peeters (BEL) +24
3 Kevin Pauwels (BEL) +30
4 Tom Meeusen (BEL) +34
5 Bart Aernouts (BEL) +35
6 Klaas Vantornout (BEL) +1'09
7 Sven Nys (BEL) +1'11
8 Radomir Šimůnek (CZE) +2'15
9 Philipp Walsleben (GER) +2'24
10 Simon Zahner (SUI) +2'31

Admittedly, this was just after Štýbar started on the road, as he had typically been mixing it at the front prior to this, and this race was a bit of a special case, but that Belgian domination (remember, 7-man teams max in the Worlds at that point) was of the same kind we see from the Norwegian skiers.
 
Jun 22, 2010
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Libertine Seguros said:
Cloxxki said:
Belgium's position in cross indeed is similar. I've seen that as up close as it gets, while being Dutch.
While they have the numbers due to culture, they don't go around ptting the rest of the world on minutes over an hour. Czechs, Americans, French, and of course Dutch, get very close, if they don't get to sprint for the win.
Idunno, at its worst, it was pretty bad.

2012 UCI World Cyclocross Championships (Koksijde) - Men's Elite Race
1 Niels Albert (BEL) 1'06'07
2 Rob Peeters (BEL) +24
3 Kevin Pauwels (BEL) +30
4 Tom Meeusen (BEL) +34
5 Bart Aernouts (BEL) +35
6 Klaas Vantornout (BEL) +1'09
7 Sven Nys (BEL) +1'11
8 Radomir Šimůnek (CZE) +2'15
9 Philipp Walsleben (GER) +2'24
10 Simon Zahner (SUI) +2'31

Admittedly, this was just after Štýbar started on the road, as he had typically been mixing it at the front prior to this, and this race was a bit of a special case, but that Belgian domination (remember, 7-man teams max in the Worlds at that point) was of the same kind we see from the Norwegian skiers.

Wow. Are there no Walloons that do cyclo-cross in Belgium?
 
Mar 19, 2009
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Glad to say I seem to have missed (or forgotten) that cross season 2011-12.
There have been some riders who were winning in CX, but could barely be bothered with it. Like Lars Boom. Rather an also ran on the road than a multiple world champion CX legend. Or is there a conspiracy there?

But CX is just a tiny sport internationally. There's a reason it's not Olympic. XC Skiing is done with passion and in numbers, in many countries. Many people are at some point in their lives exposed to it. How people alive have plowed through mud and over singletrack on a cross bike? In that sense it's worse than speed skating.
I remember showing up to the GP Sven Nys for the elite race, circa 2001. Organizers gave me a hefty entry fee even though I did not even ask for it or know about it. So happy another foreigner showed up only to get lapped. More people behind the fences than around the world even consider themselves avid cross riders. Let alone outside Belgium.
Skiing has much more international recognition and participation. Several powers of magnitude. Dominance such as Norways, is not normal. Especially with the best of the rest being of suspect name en heritage. Finland, Russian, Italy, etc.
 
Apr 22, 2012
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Cloxxki said:
Belgium's position in cross indeed is similar. I've seen that as up close as it gets, while being Dutch.
While they have the numbers due to culture, they don't go around ptting the rest of the world on minutes over an hour. Czechs, Americans, French, and of course Dutch, get very close, if they don't get to sprint for the win.
Even if you take Johaug completely out of the equasion, the Norwegian women's dominance in terms of ski speed is sickening. Way, way worse than Belgium being able to field multiple candidates for the win. In XC skiing, no-one else has someone to finish within a few per cent of the win.
Truth is, the Dutch and Czechs love their cross as much as the Swedes and Germans love their XC skiing. And let's not pretend these countries can't come up with knowledgeable trainers or funding. This is all without introducing Russia to the equasion.
If indeed it's a testosteron-like substance, it would be logical that the women benefit more than the men. Could Sundby be a super responder?

Long time since I've heard about Aicar.
Truth is that cyclo-cross is losing popularity pretty fast these days and I even doubt that it was very popular. It is and always was marginal sport.
 
Jul 16, 2012
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Discgear said:
Armchaircyclist said:
kosmonaut said:
Discgear said:
I don’t know, but either EOS is completely stupid or he managed to – in a quite clever way – to raise questions that wouldn’t have been possibly to raise in a direct way.
It's the first one.

Other great comments from him:

Praising Katusha for bringing in Stein Ørn to save them from having to dope to cope. Now the whole team can succeed with his magic training formula like Kristoff. (http://www.dagbladet.no/2015/10/16/sport/sykkel/stein_orn/alexander_kristoff/41535178/) Not going well so far, though.

Praising Edvald for "giving away his silver" to help Kristoff in Richmond because he will benefit from it in the long run. (http://www.dagbladet.no/2015/09/28/sport/sykling/sykkel-vm2015/alexander_kristoff/edvald_boasson_hagen/41260056/)

Sundby is the greatest of Norwegian sports. (http://www.dagbladet.no/2015/01/11/sport/langrenn/tour_de_ski_2015/martin_johnsrud_sundby/37120440/)
----------------------

Here is where you hit the nail: " EOS is completely stupid ". His commentary on football is maybe even worse and more moronic than in endurance sports..

You know Armchaircyclist: Being stupid, EOS still managed to raise extremely relevant questions that wouldn’t have been possibly to raise in a direct way. As an example, he points out that your and many others explanation about Norwegian dominance due to being the biggest ski nation, vast economical resources, number of skis sold etc. is dead wrong. Russia is bigger and still can't be competitive. And so on. It was actually quite funny to see how this stupid man (in your opinion) unintentionally managed to address all the usual Norse explanations with a devastating blow.
---------------------

If somebody means one thing and you interpret it as the opposite, and hold the opposite to be true, well I'm hard pressed to see how this makes the original statement any clever or smart. EOS can be a good clown, but it's not his intention, so really, I still think he is of the worst commentators in the Norwegian press. He has gone on endlessly raving about the bad morale of foreigners etc etc, so I hold it as higly unlikely that he is suspicious of the Norwegian skiers.
Every question is possible to raise if one wants to, the normal answer would be that cross-country today is clean, and dominance by Norway is caused by a great training culture and many outstanding athletes over the last years. The most talented russians seem to be in other sports, athletics for instance. Russian women are so far behind that it is obvious they are not training right. Russian men are quite close to the top. Germany seems to have problems With biathlon being way more popular, and the best skiers go to that sport instead.
I dont know if foreigners really can understand the popularity of cross country in Norway, and how it draws in the best athletes. For instance we have separate series of tv-shows, both about the best women, and about Northug. Nobody knows who is Norway's best 10.000m runner, everybody recognices the names of all the world cup skiers from norway.

Anyway, if Northug or somebody else gets busted, you can all laugh at me, but even as I'm usually sceptic, the idea of team wide doping on a national Level, and no leaks, no rumours nothing, seems highly unlikely to me-
 
Jun 22, 2010
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Re: Re:

Armchaircyclist said:
Discgear said:
Armchaircyclist said:
kosmonaut said:
Discgear said:
I don’t know, but either EOS is completely stupid or he managed to – in a quite clever way – to raise questions that wouldn’t have been possibly to raise in a direct way.
It's the first one.

Other great comments from him:

Praising Katusha for bringing in Stein Ørn to save them from having to dope to cope. Now the whole team can succeed with his magic training formula like Kristoff. (http://www.dagbladet.no/2015/10/16/sport/sykkel/stein_orn/alexander_kristoff/41535178/) Not going well so far, though.

Praising Edvald for "giving away his silver" to help Kristoff in Richmond because he will benefit from it in the long run. (http://www.dagbladet.no/2015/09/28/sport/sykling/sykkel-vm2015/alexander_kristoff/edvald_boasson_hagen/41260056/)

Sundby is the greatest of Norwegian sports. (http://www.dagbladet.no/2015/01/11/sport/langrenn/tour_de_ski_2015/martin_johnsrud_sundby/37120440/)
----------------------

Here is where you hit the nail: " EOS is completely stupid ". His commentary on football is maybe even worse and more moronic than in endurance sports..

You know Armchaircyclist: Being stupid, EOS still managed to raise extremely relevant questions that wouldn’t have been possibly to raise in a direct way. As an example, he points out that your and many others explanation about Norwegian dominance due to being the biggest ski nation, vast economical resources, number of skis sold etc. is dead wrong. Russia is bigger and still can't be competitive. And so on. It was actually quite funny to see how this stupid man (in your opinion) unintentionally managed to address all the usual Norse explanations with a devastating blow.
---------------------

If somebody means one thing and you interpret it as the opposite, and hold the opposite to be true, well I'm hard pressed to see how this makes the original statement any clever or smart. EOS can be a good clown, but it's not his intention, so really, I still think he is of the worst commentators in the Norwegian press. He has gone on endlessly raving about the bad morale of foreigners etc etc, so I hold it as higly unlikely that he is suspicious of the Norwegian skiers.
Every question is possible to raise if one wants to, the normal answer would be that cross-country today is clean, and dominance by Norway is caused by a great training culture and many outstanding athletes over the last years. The most talented russians seem to be in other sports, athletics for instance. Russian women are so far behind that it is obvious they are not training right. Russian men are quite close to the top. Germany seems to have problems With biathlon being way more popular, and the best skiers go to that sport instead.
I dont know if foreigners really can understand the popularity of cross country in Norway, and how it draws in the best athletes. For instance we have separate series of tv-shows, both about the best women, and about Northug. Nobody knows who is Norway's best 10.000m runner, everybody recognices the names of all the world cup skiers from norway.

Anyway, if Northug or somebody else gets busted, you can all laugh at me, but even as I'm usually sceptic, the idea of team wide doping on a national Level, and no leaks, no rumours nothing, seems highly unlikely to me-

I've been to Norway. I've raced there. I skied for a few weeks in several different places and competed at the Scandinavian Cup. This was when Sundby, Joensson, Brandsdal, Jespersen, etc weren't quite regulars on the national team. Northug was, however. I skied there with one of the bigger Norwegian clubs and saw first hand how popular skiing is. Before I even went to Norway, I knew how big skiing was. I saw how many kids the club that I skied with had. I don't think anyone disputes that cross country skiing is a national sport in Norway. I've followed skiing for a while, and I love the sport. It has some of the smartest, nicest people you'll meet, involved in it. People work hard and they do so (most of them, anyway) that they are not gonna earn a great living in it, unless of course they are mainstay on their national team and/or they win WC's, championship medals which in turn will help them get more and better sponsorship. I don't need to go into great details about that, because I am sure everyone here is well aware of that. In that regard, skiing isn't so different from other professional sports.

There are a number of other elements, besides good training and preparation involved. Unlike running, for example, equipment is a big part of skiing. Nobody disputes that. The Norwegians, have, traditionally, had some of the best equipment available. Daehlie had the luxury of top notch Fischer's starting in the lat 80's when he started winning. So too Ulvang, so too Alsgaard with Madshus, and Skari with Fischer a little later on, now it's Bjoergen and Johaug and Weng, Northug, Sundby, Hattestad, etc. That said, the others are not some gypsies from the street. They too, get top notch skis, poles, boots, and while they may not have the service team the size of Norway's most teams don't screw up their ski preparation too often. That advantage might be long gone. The now infamous trouble that the Norwegians had at Sochi as due to not being in good enough shape, except the sprinters and the women, while teams like Russia (their men), Sweden, Cologna, and the Finns hit their peak, more or less.

What I don't understand from the Norwegians and their way of thinking about foreigners, is that they feel that if they get beat by any foreigners, it's doping or the Norwegians had bad skis, or whatever. When the Norwegians win, it's because of better preparation, better equipment, skiing is popular, everyone else needs to stop complaining about us winning and needs to start training like us, etc, etc, etc. When Skari was beating talented skiers that worked hard and had team camaraderie like the Russians, but they were proven dopers, isn't it strange that the Norwegians think that's possible to do being clean? It's like when I was telling some friends that Armstrong was doping, they laughed it off and said that was unlikely. So he was beating other top racers, talented racers like Basso, Ullrich, Hamilton, Landis, Valverde, Kloden, Zulle, Mancebo, Mayo, Zubeldia, Vinokurov, etc..while being clean? Highly unlikely. Like the Norwegians, he had access to top notch equipment and funding, more so in fact, but again, the guys I mentioned had access to top equipment as well. Ok, Ullrich was his top rival, he was widely regarded as the top talent in the pro peloton at the time, but was not always serious about training and racing. In 2001, he was pretty close to his shape of 1997, where he crushed guys like Virenque, Pantani, Riis, Casagrande, etc, he lost like 6 minutes to Armstrong at the end of the tour. He was beaten by 90 seconds in the last time trial by Armstrong. This was supposed to be Ullrich's strength. Same thing in skiing. Kowalczyk, although coming to the sport late, was a super talent. With hardly any coaching, she was quickly making inroads at the international level. She was caught using a substance, but her suspension was reduced because it was for something she took for a knee injury in 2005. That seems very likely because as we all know, she's had various problems and procedures done on the knee. The latest one being after Sochi. Where was Bjoergen? She made quite leap after SLC. She was not old, obviously, but made the jump fast, winning sprints and ultimately the 2003 spring at the Val Die Fiemme World's. That was her big breakthrough. She continued to dominate sprints but then in her mid twenty's started winning distance races, against people that were later caught for doping, suspended, and/or suspected of doping: Finns, Germans, Italians, Russians. Sundby, the first three attempts at the Oslo 50k, he dropped out, all three tries. He went 4 years from his 1st to his 2nd WC win, then he won the kuusamo triple (his hardest tour win, as he barely edged Legkov and Vylegzhanin by less than a second) and since then hasn't lost a mini tour or tour de ski. That's pretty remarkable. So if Sundby, who didn't particularly have spectacular junior results (though in fairness, neither did Legkov and Vylegzhanin, before Legkov won a couple titles at U23 in 2006), and going 4 years without winning a world cup race, (2008-2012) starts off 2013/2014 winning in Finland and the rest is history. Nobody's touching him this year. If we suspect the other top guys of doping, why shouldn't they suspect Sundby of doping? Why shouldn't the Norwegians? Oh, it's because skiing is 'so huge?' Running is huge in Kenya and Jamaica. Look at how many have been caught over the past 5 or 6 years. There is a chance that those two countries might not be in Rio because of this problem, certainly Kenya has a chance not to be allowed to participate.
 
Apr 22, 2012
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Armchaircyclist said:
For instance we have separate series of tv-shows...about Northug
I feel sorry for you and your nation, or whatever nation watch this shows. Masochism is prerequisity to watch this show I suppose :) Or plain dumbness.
 
Apr 22, 2012
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BullsFan22 said:
So he was beating other top racers, talented racers like Basso, Ullrich, Hamilton, Landis, Valverde, Kloden, Zulle, Mancebo, Mayo, Zubeldia, Vinokurov, etc..while being clean?
Do you think Zubeldia doped?
 
Jun 22, 2010
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TMobile41 said:
Well Kowalczyk was actually good today!!! Maybe she didnt like the joke :D :D

Still finished 1:42 behind a person that more or less ran the entire race today. Johaug go to the front after 5 minutes or so and didn't wait a single second to recover. She attacked straight away and that was that. She started 27th. Probably would have added another 20 or 30 seconds had she started in the first row. Kowalczyk is slooooowly getting better, but you can see she is way off her best. She, along with Bjoergen, would be the only ones able to stay with Johaug's ferocious skiing today. Perhaps not even Bjoergen, because I don't think those conditions would really suit her.
 
Jun 7, 2010
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BullsFan22 said:
roundabout said:
Is this a joke about Kowalczyk?

Because if it is, it's not very funny.


Which part was not clear to you?

Pretty much everything you wrote about her.

Let's put it this way, the quickest inroads coincided with her having achilles tendon problems.

Maybe she would have even won the 2005 World 30K had she been in good health in the buildup (sarcasm implied).

Which would have made Bjoergen's jump look normal.

And let's not even mention her godawful skating technique. Her win in the Liberec 30 free was an insult to a viewer's intelligence.
 
Mar 13, 2013
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Insult to a viewer’s intelligence was mentioned. Since mass start took over as the main mode of competition, the empirical understanding in the sport has been that pulling the field is wasteful. At least in the men’s races, where the top ten or so competitors consistently have been within fractions of a percent of each other’s capacity, when being pulled along in the field. This goes for the full on EPO 90’s, as well as the less full on EPO 00’s.

The mode of getting ahead of the field has been to do ONE focused push, playing one’s strongest card, and hoping it will work and any break away will last. This season MJS, or rather the entire sport, commentators, sports journalists, FIS, are insulting my intelligence. MJS did a pristine Mühlegg copy in Lillehammer, but Ustiugov in Montreal this Wednesday was very rude as well. With wind constantly blowing snow into the tracks, and sometimes right in the face of the leader of the field, he still broke away with infinite energy. That is insulting; those are horrible conditions for pulling the field. Sure, he didn’t win, he pulled along two Norwegians that overtook him at the end. Ustiugov finished third, 25 seconds before MJS on fourth, 36 seconds before Vylegzhanin on fifth, after Ustiugov pulling the entire 17,5 km. He was 1:50 before the first Swede, and 2:10 before the first Finn.

I guess Ustiugov’s amazing capacity comes down to the Russians having a superior talent pool. In Russia only the dedicated and talented pursue skiing, while in Norway the training and competitiveness gets diluted by a lot of non-talented and non-dedicated skiers. When everyone, no matter how bad, is doing it, you don’t get that Russian quality.

Anyway, I have started to think of this as being pioneered by the top women competitors. For at least five years, probably almost ten, 30 seconds or so gap between 1st and sometimes 2nd/3rd, but always the rest of the field, over 10 km have been the norm. Everyone has put that down to a weak women’s field, but seeing the same in the men’s field this year makes me think that the women’s field wasn’t weak at all, but rather that the new methods were pioneered in it. MJS has mentioned that the Norwegian women’s training dose inspired him to raise his own training dose. ”Training”, yes. I, as a Swedish cross country fan, was kind of disturbed to see Kalla, after having trained with the Norwegians in 2012, make a significant leap in her 30 second ability.

Yes, I think it is insulting. Also, having started this long time lurker’s post by hinting at the days before mass starts… this sport is pretty far removed from everything I fell in love with back then. I keep watching, but not for any good reason.
 
Jun 22, 2010
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abcdaniel said:
Insult to a viewer’s intelligence was mentioned. Since mass start took over as the main mode of competition, the empirical understanding in the sport has been that pulling the field is wasteful. At least in the men’s races, where the top ten or so competitors consistently have been within fractions of a percent of each other’s capacity, when being pulled along in the field. This goes for the full on EPO 90’s, as well as the less full on EPO 00’s.

The mode of getting ahead of the field has been to do ONE focused push, playing one’s strongest card, and hoping it will work and any break away will last. This season MJS, or rather the entire sport, commentators, sports journalists, FIS, are insulting my intelligence. MJS did a pristine Mühlegg copy in Lillehammer, but Ustiugov in Montreal this Wednesday was very rude as well. With wind constantly blowing snow into the tracks, and sometimes right in the face of the leader of the field, he still broke away with infinite energy. That is insulting; those are horrible conditions for pulling the field. Sure, he didn’t win, he pulled along two Norwegians that overtook him at the end. Ustiugov finished third, 25 seconds before MJS on fourth, 36 seconds before Vylegzhanin on fifth, after Ustiugov pulling the entire 17,5 km. He was 1:50 before the first Swede, and 2:10 before the first Finn.

I guess Ustiugov’s amazing capacity comes down to the Russians having a superior talent pool. In Russia only the dedicated and talented pursue skiing, while in Norway the training and competitiveness gets diluted by a lot of non-talented and non-dedicated skiers. When everyone, no matter how bad, is doing it, you don’t get that Russian quality.

Anyway, I have started to think of this as being pioneered by the top women competitors. For at least five years, probably almost ten, 30 seconds or so gap between 1st and sometimes 2nd/3rd, but always the rest of the field, over 10 km have been the norm. Everyone has put that down to a weak women’s field, but seeing the same in the men’s field this year makes me think that the women’s field wasn’t weak at all, but rather that the new methods were pioneered in it. MJS has mentioned that the Norwegian women’s training dose inspired him to raise his own training dose. ”Training”, yes. I, as a Swedish cross country fan, was kind of disturbed to see Kalla, after having trained with the Norwegians in 2012, make a significant leap in her 30 second ability.

Yes, I think it is insulting. Also, having started this long time lurker’s post by hinting at the days before mass starts… this sport is pretty far removed from everything I fell in love with back then. I keep watching, but not for any good reason.


You forgot Olsson's 2010 Olympic Skiathlon performance, and Olsson's 2012 Nove Mesto performance (in fact, that entire season raises eyebrows-veerpalu would have been proud of racing about 5 wc races in a season and winning 3 of them), and Olsson's 2013 15km and especially 50km, the now legendary race where he led for close 40 km and skied alone after Cologna fell for, what, 30-35 km? In 2014 he again barely raced, citing illness and not being sure if he would even go to Sochi to race at all, then wins two medals. Last year he did the same exact thing, this time winning 3 medals. One of them a gold, in the 15km skate. This guy is either one of the most mentally tough, most talented, most confident athletes that has ever lived or he took a few pages out of Muehlegg and Veerpalu's books. I actually like the guy, he is relatively modest and doesn't ask for favors and let's his skiing do the talking. That said, he has had some of the more eye opening performances of the past five or six years.

I don't disagree with anything you said, but as much as we like to punch the Norwegians and Russians here, we have to wonder about other staggering races as well. Particularly those coming from people that compete in more races at a two week championships than the rest of the season.

He apparently won't take part in the Vasaloppet this weekend. Knowing he's pulled these sort of stunts before, I am not sold on that 100%.
 
Jun 22, 2010
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BullsFan22 said:
abcdaniel said:
Insult to a viewer’s intelligence was mentioned. Since mass start took over as the main mode of competition, the empirical understanding in the sport has been that pulling the field is wasteful. At least in the men’s races, where the top ten or so competitors consistently have been within fractions of a percent of each other’s capacity, when being pulled along in the field. This goes for the full on EPO 90’s, as well as the less full on EPO 00’s.

The mode of getting ahead of the field has been to do ONE focused push, playing one’s strongest card, and hoping it will work and any break away will last. This season MJS, or rather the entire sport, commentators, sports journalists, FIS, are insulting my intelligence. MJS did a pristine Mühlegg copy in Lillehammer, but Ustiugov in Montreal this Wednesday was very rude as well. With wind constantly blowing snow into the tracks, and sometimes right in the face of the leader of the field, he still broke away with infinite energy. That is insulting; those are horrible conditions for pulling the field. Sure, he didn’t win, he pulled along two Norwegians that overtook him at the end. Ustiugov finished third, 25 seconds before MJS on fourth, 36 seconds before Vylegzhanin on fifth, after Ustiugov pulling the entire 17,5 km. He was 1:50 before the first Swede, and 2:10 before the first Finn.

I guess Ustiugov’s amazing capacity comes down to the Russians having a superior talent pool. In Russia only the dedicated and talented pursue skiing, while in Norway the training and competitiveness gets diluted by a lot of non-talented and non-dedicated skiers. When everyone, no matter how bad, is doing it, you don’t get that Russian quality.

Anyway, I have started to think of this as being pioneered by the top women competitors. For at least five years, probably almost ten, 30 seconds or so gap between 1st and sometimes 2nd/3rd, but always the rest of the field, over 10 km have been the norm. Everyone has put that down to a weak women’s field, but seeing the same in the men’s field this year makes me think that the women’s field wasn’t weak at all, but rather that the new methods were pioneered in it. MJS has mentioned that the Norwegian women’s training dose inspired him to raise his own training dose. ”Training”, yes. I, as a Swedish cross country fan, was kind of disturbed to see Kalla, after having trained with the Norwegians in 2012, make a significant leap in her 30 second ability.

Yes, I think it is insulting. Also, having started this long time lurker’s post by hinting at the days before mass starts… this sport is pretty far removed from everything I fell in love with back then. I keep watching, but not for any good reason.


You forgot Olsson's 2010 Olympic Skiathlon performance, and Olsson's 2012 Nove Mesto performance (in fact, that entire season raises eyebrows-veerpalu would have been proud of racing about 5 wc races in a season and winning 3 of them), and Olsson's 2013 15km and especially 50km, the now legendary race where he led for close 40 km and skied alone after Cologna fell for, what, 30-35 km? In 2014 he again barely raced, citing illness and not being sure if he would even go to Sochi to race at all, then wins two medals. Last year he did the same exact thing, this time winning 3 medals. One of them a gold, in the 15km skate. This guy is either one of the most mentally tough, most talented, most confident athletes that has ever lived or he took a few pages out of Muehlegg and Veerpalu's books. I actually like the guy, he is relatively modest and doesn't ask for favors and let's his skiing do the talking. That said, he has had some of the more eye opening performances of the past five or six years.

I don't disagree with anything you said, but as much as we like to punch the Norwegians and Russians here, we have to wonder about other staggering races as well. Particularly those coming from people that compete in more races at a two week championships than the rest of the season.

He apparently won't take part in the Vasaloppet this weekend. Knowing he's pulled these sort of stunts before, I am not sold on that 100%.


Another thing. Sundby fell in yesterday's race. Right as he was about to make contact with the leaders, he caught some ice on a tricky left hand turn. BTW, as we all saw, there were PLENTY of those types of corners. Point is, he was in all likelihood gonna latch on to the leaders and who knows, attack them and try to win. He hardly look exhausted. He was doing the pulling in the chase group and skied much of the 2nd half by himself. At least Ustiugov had people right behind him to give him some 'mental' energy. And Ustiugov collapsed in exhaustion right as crossed the line and he laid in the snow for a good two minutes. Of course, it doesn't mean he is clean or at least anymore clean than the other top guys, but at least he wasn't hiding anything.

You mentioned Kalla. I am wondering what's going on with her. Since the Swedes have really peaked well (that's another topic, but maybe for later) for big championship races since Liberec 2009, and this not being a championship season, is that the reason for her not really challenging for wins? She's only had one or two podiums this season, and that was in December. Hellner and Halfvarsson have had sickness and injury problems, Peterson isn't in shape, Joensson hasn't done much racing either and didn't even go to Canada (Vasaloppet), and they are starting to bring young guys like Burman and Svensson and see what they can do. RIchardsson, like Olsson, is focusing on marathon races. It's one thing if one or two people are having some issues, but the entire core of that team? At least teams like the Russians started the year rather poorly and have picked up their form for the 2nd half of the season.
 
Jun 22, 2010
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roundabout said:
BullsFan22 said:
roundabout said:
Is this a joke about Kowalczyk?

Because if it is, it's not very funny.


Which part was not clear to you?

Pretty much everything you wrote about her.

Let's put it this way, the quickest inroads coincided with her having achilles tendon problems.

Maybe she would have even won the 2005 World 30K had she been in good health in the buildup (sarcasm implied).

Which would have made Bjoergen's jump look normal.

And let's not even mention her godawful skating technique. Her win in the Liberec 30 free was an insult to a viewer's intelligence.

Kowalczyk has more natural talent than Bjoergen. I think people like Weng and Jacobsen and Ostberg do as well. Does that mean Kowalczyk is clean? No. What I said was all fact about her history. She started racing late, having come from another background. Has she had injury problems? Yes. Has she had a number of procedures done on the knees? Yes. Did she get busted for a banned substance following the 2005 season? Yes. Did the positive get covered up? No, because we would never have heard of it. The fact that FIS busted her, but then reduced her sentence is telling. They would never do that for someone like that. I mean, a Polish 21, 22 year old upstart, getting a ban reduced? Now, do I think she is taking or did take actual PED's? Yes. Do I know what they were? Not specifically, but I am sure all of us here could take a bunch of guesses and be correct on at least one or two of them. Is her technique bad? Yes. Johaug's technique doesn't exactly remind me of Per Elofsson either. Johaug also went from a nobody as a 15, 16, 17 year old to winning a bronze medal at 30km in Sapporo as an 18 year old. That's a pretty remarkable jump, if you ask me. Her technique has improved since then, but hardly enough to make those sort of difference. Then she had three good years, but no invidiual medals and 0 world cup wins and not that many world cup podiums in general, to crushing the 2011 World's and the rest was history.
 
Apr 22, 2012
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Re:

abcdaniel said:
When everyone, no matter how bad, is doing it, you don’t get that Russian quality.
Also, having started this long time lurker’s post by hinting at the days before mass starts… this sport is pretty far removed from everything I fell in love with back then. I keep watching, but not for any good reason.
There are different levels of competition in Norway, but? The best meet the best I suppose...than you have same situation as in Russia.
I feel the same as you about almost all proffesonal sports... I stoped following football which I used to do professionaly, stoped to follow hockey and all major sports. But cant stop following xc, cycling and biathlon - but Id like to. It feels dumb to follow proffesional sports. Exception would be climbing (or bouldering) for me.