the sceptic said:If the norwegians had better skiis throughout the 90s then it looks like they forgot to tell their womens team.
Cloxxki said:Kristian, good comments.
However we all know a fine young gentleman (Oprah's buddy) who is famous for exiting the EPO era and keep on winning whatever he pleased. And how he did it.
The lack of medals by Sweden in the EPO era is really intriguing. And Swedish men losing to Norwegians at the end of races, is very, very obvious. In pure sprinting, the speed difference just is not there. All current Swedes have proper distance speed, but cannot accelerate like Russians and Norwegians, and Swiss, and...
Another angle, what if Sweden were a hard core blood doping nation, at least for their medallers? And so since the 70's/80's where we know it to have been present in the Nordic region. What if they just never went on EPO, and thus lagged behind in that era? It could also explain Swedish's relative dominance before EPO and return to form after. They were ahead in blood doping where the others were cold turkey off EPO and figuring it all out the hard way.
Nicko. said:Blood values in the 90's, huh?
What about medals in the 90's?
http://forum.cyclingnews.com/showpost.php?p=1087121&postcount=672
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Ferminal said:Seems Norway really focused on Ski prep in the 90s whilst everyone else forgot about it.
the sceptic said:If the norwegians had better skiis throughout the 90s then it looks like they forgot to tell their womens team.
Cloxxki said:Lives in AUSTRIA. Had a few weaker years. Finding form back...sounds like an Austrian real-time fairytale, doesn't it?
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Armchaircyclist said:--------------
Well, there is the stone-grinding, which I know has been attacked as myth by somebody here on the clinic. Not sure who has the facts right on that one.However, watching XC norwegians have very often been gaining time on the downhill sections, indicating good skis, but losing on the climbs, indicating they are not the ones with the strongest "engine".
Back to the graph - kind of silly to show the results like Norway did nothing in the 80s just because Dæhlie was still a kid then.
The swedes had their Gunde Svan, we've had Dæhlie, Alsgaard, Northug, and Bjørgen. Truly outstanding athletes like these are not something one can count on getting, and will of course show up on the medal-count in their era.
Armchaircyclist said:He has been living out of Norway for a long long time, not sure if he moved over the border from Italy, or if he already was in Austria before the divorce from italian nataly santer. Suspicious maybe, but nothing new, they were married for 6 years.
Bjørndalen has ranked 12,10 and 10 in the 3 previous years in the world cup. I fail to see how his current rank of 19 indicates that he has suddenly found his form again.
Bjørndalen is a man extremely dedicated to details. He talks about moving to a location 150meters further up, as that would put him in the exact same altitude as the olympic races in Sochi. I think if Bjørndalen was doping he would do it so well that there would be no gold medals to take for anybody else. This is a guy who well into his 30s would lie down in the hall at the hotel to practice shooting position and shooting drill in the evening. He is also a guy who could compete with the best XC-skiers while he was younger. That he can still hang in there with biathletes at 39, is no surprise, though he is not as good as he once was.
Well, he pretty much did. In the 2002 olympics he crushed all opposition (maybe except Frode Andresen who kept failing on the last shooting). And that was after he almost won a medal behind Mühlegg, Hoffmann and Botvinov on the XC 30 km.Armchaircyclist said:Bjørndalen is a man extremely dedicated to details. He talks about moving to a location 150meters further up, as that would put him in the exact same altitude as the olympic races in Sochi. I think if Bjørndalen was doping he would do it so well that there would be no gold medals to take for anybody else.
MrRoboto said:Well, he pretty much did. In the 2002 olympics he crushed all opposition (maybe except Frode Andresen who kept failing on the last shooting). And that was after he almost won a medal behind Mühlegg, Hoffmann and Botvinov on the XC 30 km.
zapata said:That blue column might just as easily be called "Gunde Svan in the golden era of blood transfusions".
This 30km freestyle race from 1994 Olympics in Lillehammer is a good example. We know Myllyla (3rd) took EPO. Most likely Isometsa (6th) and Rasanen (11th) as well. Botvinov of Austria (4th) and Smirnov (10th) of Kazakhstan were considered amongst the biggest dopers of the time. Muehlegg (9th) is a giveaway. You're implying (and I am agreeing) that Italians doped - that takes care of DeZolt (5th) and Fauner (7th). The only clean skiers in top 11, according to you, would have been Alsgaard (1st by a mile) and Dahlie (2nd by another mile).
Walkman said:Sour grapes from a norwegian, what a shocker.
Had you done some research, you would have know that in 1989, Gundes most successful World Championships (he won three gold) the blood test showed no signs of any doping. In fact, mean values at the 1989 World Nordic Ski Championships were lower than population reference values, as would be expected from plasma volume expansion associated with endurance training.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10755280
There is no evidence against the Swedes. But there are a lot of suspect results and HB values from Norweigan skiers during the 90's.
Swedish (male) Hb values during the 90's.
Season, In-season avg, Off-season avg, Peak value
93–94 156,7±7,7 153,6±4,6 172 (No limit)
94–95 150,5±9,3 149,5±7,2 166
95–96 152,9±9,2 149,5±9,2 168
96–97 152,2±7,4 149,5±1,2 164 (limit: 185)
97–98 146,4±3,5 149,2±3,1 161
98–99 150,2±4,0 147,7±2,5 159
99–00 149,3±7,0 154,5±8,1 168
00–01 150,8±6,4 150,7±4,7 161 (limit: 175)
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12792206
This has been posted in the thread before:
Furthermore, consider this:
1995; some skiers had 20 g/100 ml with all medal winners above 17.5 g /100 ml. From 1997 upper allowed limit for men 18.5 g/100 ml.
1999 some 30 male skiers between 17.0- 18.7 g/100 ml; medal winners > 17.0 g/100ml.
Just check out the guys who did medal in those Championships:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FIS_Nordic_World_Ski_Championships_1995
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FIS_Nordic_World_Ski_Championships_1997
Armchaircyclist said:--------------
Sour grapes that were given back to a swede to begin with.
Did the swedes use altitude-training in the same way the Norwegians did in the 90s ? Altitude-houses are now banned in Norway, but worked well for the norwegians in the 90s.
It's just as suspect to ascribe Dæhlie's dominance to doping, as Svan's. I don't think either doped, but the possibility is always there. I can't believe blood tests were very frequent in the time when no method to find blood-doping was invented yet.
Hög höjd har annars alltid varit ett prioriterat område inom norsk skid- åkning. Speciellt mängden dagar. Exempelvis kommer Petter Northug att, sedan i våras, ha tillbringat 105 dagar på hög höjd innan VM-premiären i Val di Fiemme i mars.