Aru had the trots didn't he ? Bit of a shame really because it might have been a good battle for pink otherwise but that's part of the job of being a GC rider - don't get sick
how does thisIamIronMan said:Dear Wiggo said:*ridiculous.
ie ridiculous midway miracle comeback.
From cracked to 2 stage wins back to back dropping everyone else on the hardest mountain stages of the Giro on the penultimate stages of a 3 week GT.
Merde di Torro.
If there is no clearer sign, then what is there? I'm no doctor, and I didn't diagnose Contador's "broken shoulder and he will abandon", but the human body just doesn't work like this. You become tired, then exhausted, and soon you look like death, which is what Aru looked like for the second week. Then literally overnight, you become the strongest rider in the peloton, and win back to back stages, finishing with some good roid rage on one of them. Does anyone NOT see this and find it ridiculous? Somewhere Greg Henderson is muttering TO HIMSELF no doubt....
Many things can explain this, all of them banned....SeriousSam said:Aru's trajectory in the Giro is rather hard to swallow indeed. What could possibly explain this other than a bag or two?
irondan said:I don't think there are any questions at all. He's obviously a protected rider because he should be glowing right now or he did a BB and the results will never make it to his BP. The only question there is here is who's covering up for Aru? For all of Astana for that matter?Electress said:There are certainly big big questions to ask of Aru's resurrection, and Astana's strength.
irondan said:Many things can explain this, all of them banned....SeriousSam said:Aru's trajectory in the Giro is rather hard to swallow indeed. What could possibly explain this other than a bag or two?
Eyeballs Out said:irondan said:Many things can explain this, all of them banned....SeriousSam said:Aru's trajectory in the Giro is rather hard to swallow indeed. What could possibly explain this other than a bag or two?
It's obvious. He was juicing the first week. Then when it looked like he had a chance of winning the race, he decided to stop for 10 days so that he would keep getting dropped. Then he started juicing again for the last two stages
victorschipolrijk said:In yesterday's ITT, on the first 2 segments, the best suited for him, he lost 1' 44" (first segment loss of 44", second loss of 1') to Dumoulin, then on the last 10 km, the best suited for rouleurs, he lost only 9", and in the process going 21" faster than Kiryienka and 17" faster than Bodnar.
That reeks of mechanical doping, in the last 10 km he put the turbo.
The last segment wasn't suited for TT specialists. It was technical with lots of tight bends and what not. If you saw the graphic, both Majka and Purito also lost less time on the final segment relative to what they lost on the first two.victorschipolrijk said:In yesterday's ITT, on the first 2 segments, the best suited for him, he lost 1' 44" (first segment loss of 44", second loss of 1') to Dumoulin, then on the last 10 km, the best suited for rouleurs, he lost only 9", and in the process going 21" faster than Kiryienka and 17" faster than Bodnar.
That reeks of mechanical doping, in the last 10 km he put the turbo.
Escarabajo said:Is Fabio Aru doing a Tyler Hamilton at the Dauphine?
no the guy was idiotic enough to go from long altitude camp straight to this race without a day rest. really stupidEscarabajo said:Is Fabio Aru doing a Tyler Hamilton at the Dauphine?
Kokoso said:Third week is here and with it TM Astana leader "superpeak". Aru who couldn't follow nobody at Andorra resurrected. I'm really surprised this is first post after today's time trial. It is probably most suspicious performance.
you said what?Fernandez said:Here we go with the typical Astanas third week. Nothing new under the sky.
DanielSong39 said:Dude performed like a clean rider in stage 20, LOL.
movingtarget said:DanielSong39 said:Dude performed like a clean rider in stage 20, LOL.
So clean he forgot to eat !