Teams & Riders Froome Talk Only

Page 745 - Get up to date with the latest news, scores & standings from the Cycling News Community.

Tyr

Jul 18, 2015
67
0
0
Also I am unaware of a performance enhancing property of thyroid hormones. Those drugs are usually used for fat loss. Can anyone explain to me the mechanism by which they improve the performance?
 
Re: Re:

armchairclimber said:
TheSpud said:
armchairclimber said:
Pre-vuelta there was weight loss. Also significant and not entirely unconnected was a visit to his Doctor in Kenya (covered earlier in this thread) to be treated for Badzilla. Part of that treatment was to also take Prednisolone. This also happened to coincide with his desperation to earn a new contract. My hypothesis is that the combination of weight loss and Pred brought about a dramatic improvement in performance in training. A light bullb went on and the rest is history.
Check out the list of side effects that accompany pred use and then look at Froome at the Vuelta...skin, coughing etc.

I don't think it is any coincidence that it was for Prednisolone that he needed an emergency TUE at Romandie. If you add to this the use of an inhaler for a mysterious case of asthma, also legitimised by the UCI and you have the picture of someone who isn't averse to taking PEDs (if they can get away with it/keep it just within the rules).
What's the betting that he is also on meds for hypothyroidism? Out of competition of course.

I actually don't think he's blood doping. Steroids and messing with endocrine meds more likely.

What are the drugs for hypothyroidsim? I googled and got some (levothyroxine) but its not on the Wada list, nor is any reference to 'roid' in Thyroid terms.

Have a look at what Salazar has been up to. There seems to be a high incidence of hypothyroidism amongst NOP athletes. Galen Rupp being one. http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424127887323550604578412913149043072

Well yes - I understand the thyroid 'issue', etc. (Salazar and others) but I couldnt find anything that was banned or subject to TUE based on the earlier posts.
 
Re:

Tyr said:
Also I am unaware of a performance enhancing property of thyroid hormones. Those drugs are usually used for fat loss. Can anyone explain to me the mechanism by which they improve the performance?

Fat loss would help with the W/Kg.

Off Topic : Can you get this legit - I could do with it ...
 
Sep 29, 2012
12,197
0
0
Re: Re:

TheSpud said:
Tyr said:
Also I am unaware of a performance enhancing property of thyroid hormones. Those drugs are usually used for fat loss. Can anyone explain to me the mechanism by which they improve the performance?

Fat loss would help with the W/Kg.

Off Topic : Can you get this legit - I could do with it ...

Hyperthyroidism is a thing, which nets the same effect as taking hypothyroidism medication when you do not have hypothyroidism.

You do not want it, trust me.
 
Mar 25, 2013
5,389
0
0
Re:

Benotti69 said:
So Froome might be open to doing some physiology tests to show how he is naturally the best athlete in the sport.

MailOnline Sport ‏@MailSport Jul 14

Froome vows to prove he's clean after epic victory | @Matt_Lawton_DM http://dailym.ai/1M4r5dZ
well guess what?
Paul Kimmage ‏@PaulKimmage 4 hours ago

Major pieces on Brailsford and @TeamSky in @MailSport @TelegraphSport and @TimesSport
today. No mention of the promised physiological tests


Shane Stokes ‏@SSbike 1 hour ago
@PaulKimmage I asked Chris Froome at the Saturday press conference, he said then he didn't know anything about such tests. Confusing

Now can any skyfans enlighten the clinic why Froome would tell such lies?

I can. He's a doper.

Said yesterday he's going back for testing. Has no problem publishing it.

http://www.skysports.com/watch/video/sports/cycling/9926995/froome-to-share-test-results

Whether he does it remains to be seen.
 

Tyr

Jul 18, 2015
67
0
0
No, you can't it's a prescription drug and a very serious one that will shut down your own thyroid production.
I don't think anyone needs a drug for fat loss but there are much cheaper and safer alternatives: ephedrine (I think somewhere you can still get it without prescription) and clenbuterol. Then there are the legal ones which are much less effective like caffeine.
They all work the same way, they increase your metabolic rate so you end up burning more calories.
 
May 26, 2010
28,143
5
0
Re: Re:

gooner said:
Benotti69 said:
So Froome might be open to doing some physiology tests to show how he is naturally the best athlete in the sport.

MailOnline Sport ‏@MailSport Jul 14

Froome vows to prove he's clean after epic victory | @Matt_Lawton_DM http://dailym.ai/1M4r5dZ
well guess what?
Paul Kimmage ‏@PaulKimmage 4 hours ago

Major pieces on Brailsford and @TeamSky in @MailSport @TelegraphSport and @TimesSport
today. No mention of the promised physiological tests


Shane Stokes ‏@SSbike 1 hour ago
@PaulKimmage I asked Chris Froome at the Saturday press conference, he said then he didn't know anything about such tests. Confusing

Now can any skyfans enlighten the clinic why Froome would tell such lies?

I can. He's a doper.

Said yesterday he's going back for testing. Has no problem publishing it.

http://www.skysports.com/watch/video/sports/cycling/9926995/froome-to-share-test-results

Whether he does it remains to be seen.

If it is not done independently there is no point.

edit: it also points to Sky's lies about 'marginal gain's and 'leaving no stone unturned', Brailsford 'master of details' in their quest to get as much out of every 'clean' gain they can. Froome is there 5 years and they still need to do tests to find his 'natural' ability???????

DOPERS.
 
Re: Re:

TheSpud said:
Tyr said:
Also I am unaware of a performance enhancing property of thyroid hormones. Those drugs are usually used for fat loss. Can anyone explain to me the mechanism by which they improve the performance?

Fat loss would help with the W/Kg.

Off Topic : Can you get this legit - I could do with it ...


This. The main gain is fat loss. there are some arguments about enhancing recovery after hard workouts, but I am unsure of the mechanism.
 
Re: Re:

Catwhoorg said:
TheSpud said:
Tyr said:
Also I am unaware of a performance enhancing property of thyroid hormones. Those drugs are usually used for fat loss. Can anyone explain to me the mechanism by which they improve the performance?

Fat loss would help with the W/Kg.

Off Topic : Can you get this legit - I could do with it ...


This. The main gain is fat loss. there are some arguments about enhancing recovery after hard workouts, but I am unsure of the mechanism.

That's not true. Let's back up.

Thyroidism, hypo or hyper is a hard topic because it is not an x causes y, or alternatively, pretend to have x, so you can take y, and get z effects.

No doper only takes thyroid hormones. No clean athlete who wants to dope will start with thyroid hormones.

A few scenarios: Genuine hypothroid athlete feels tired, achy, and sick. Diagnosed, prescribed, but it isn't a cure. The hormones make you feel less bad, in general, but of course can make you feel good.

People see that case though, and misinterpret thyroid hormones as an anti-overtraining drug.

It is not.

A healthy person taking thyroid hormones does not feel less tired, less fatigued and less sick; it is not an extension of it's role as a medicine to the role of PED. A healthy person taking thyroid hormones will be agitated, jittery and anxious. There is more risk of overtraining because your body never settles down after exercise; you are in a constant state of arousal (for lack of a better word). There are more severe side effects, but I bring that up because it is thought of as a cure for overtraining. It is not.

The body is too complicated. Very few things are x -> y -> z. EPO for examples, as a hormone, causes y and z, but also a, b, c, to your endocrine system. Which cause e, f, and g, to your organ function, metabolism, and other processes. Yes, catabolism can increase with thyroid hormones, but not in a good way.

Instead, in the doper's regimine, Thyroid is the balancing act. If you take HGH, Testo, EPO, and other substances that mess with your hormone profile, the beat way to bring everything back to some normalcy is thyroid medication. Doping itself screws you up, and you genuinely need medicine to bring your hormone profile to healthy levels.

Thyroid hormones should not be thought of as a PED, but the cousin of a masking agent: it doesn't directly affect performance, but a doper needs it to keep doing what they do.
 
Re: Re:

Benotti69 said:
So Froome might be open to doing some physiology tests to show how he is naturally the best athlete in the sport.

MailOnline Sport ‏@MailSport Jul 14

Froome vows to prove he's clean after epic victory | @Matt_Lawton_DM http://dailym.ai/1M4r5dZ
well guess what?
Paul Kimmage ‏@PaulKimmage 4 hours ago

Major pieces on Brailsford and @TeamSky in @MailSport @TelegraphSport and @TimesSport
today. No mention of the promised physiological tests


Shane Stokes ‏@SSbike 1 hour ago
@PaulKimmage I asked Chris Froome at the Saturday press conference, he said then he didn't know anything about such tests. Confusing

Now can any skyfans enlighten the clinic why Froome would tell such lies?

I can. He's a doper.

Imo, give it time. Its only been 2 days since the TDF. I don't expect him to do it but I don't think its worth counting chickens before they hatch, just yet.
 
Re: Re:

Dear Wiggo said:
TheSpud said:
Tyr said:
Also I am unaware of a performance enhancing property of thyroid hormones. Those drugs are usually used for fat loss. Can anyone explain to me the mechanism by which they improve the performance?

Fat loss would help with the W/Kg.

Off Topic : Can you get this legit - I could do with it ...

Hyperthyroidism is a thing, which nets the same effect as taking hypothyroidism medication when you do not have hypothyroidism.

You do not want it, trust me.

More of a tongue in cheek comment - my current dietary habits arent too good!
 
Sep 29, 2012
12,197
0
0
Re: Re:

TheSpud said:
Dear Wiggo said:
TheSpud said:
Tyr said:
Also I am unaware of a performance enhancing property of thyroid hormones. Those drugs are usually used for fat loss. Can anyone explain to me the mechanism by which they improve the performance?

Fat loss would help with the W/Kg.

Off Topic : Can you get this legit - I could do with it ...

Hyperthyroidism is a thing, which nets the same effect as taking hypothyroidism medication when you do not have hypothyroidism.

You do not want it, trust me.

More of a tongue in cheek comment - my current dietary habits arent too good!

I realise, but as More Strides intimates - the results are icky

A healthy person taking thyroid hormones will be agitated, jittery and anxious.

and the response is read by more than just you - consider it a PSA :D

I've seen hyperthyroidism first hand and it's unpleasant.
 
Re: Re:

Dear Wiggo said:
TheSpud said:
Dear Wiggo said:
TheSpud said:
Tyr said:
Also I am unaware of a performance enhancing property of thyroid hormones. Those drugs are usually used for fat loss. Can anyone explain to me the mechanism by which they improve the performance?

Fat loss would help with the W/Kg.

Off Topic : Can you get this legit - I could do with it ...

Hyperthyroidism is a thing, which nets the same effect as taking hypothyroidism medication when you do not have hypothyroidism.

You do not want it, trust me.

More of a tongue in cheek comment - my current dietary habits arent too good!

I realise, but as More Strides intimates - the results are icky

A healthy person taking thyroid hormones will be agitated, jittery and anxious.

and the response is read by more than just you - consider it a PSA :D

I've seen hyperthyroidism first hand and it's unpleasant.

whats a PSA??

I'll be doing it the good old fashioned way - better diet & more exercise ...
 

Tyr

Jul 18, 2015
67
0
0
TheSpud said:
Tyr said:
I understand your point although you don't explain why they need it Strides, I also found something:

Thyroid hormone induces erythropoietin gene expression through augmented accumulation of hypoxia-inducible factor-1.

Thyroid hormones enhance hypoxia-induced erythropoietin production in vitro.

So I guess this is why they use it.

So it produces more natural EPO? Never seen that link before.

It looks to initiate the cascade by activating hypoxia-inducible factor 1 which triggers the natural production of EPO.
 
Jul 27, 2015
2
0
0
Great comments & discussion: have followed this thread for awhile & probably angle more towards the "they're mostly (75%) geared up, most of the time" and Froome/Sky are the only latest iteration of team wide or state sponsored/facilitated activities. One can call it US Postal 2.0 but, IMHO, it's really no different from many other teams since the 1990's in terms of dominance. I hadn't seen anyone else post this in these pages (did a quick forum search), so thought I'd add to the discussion by posting links. for example: http://veloclinic.com/comparing-performances-across-grand-tours/ . What is interesting about Froome's data in this link is that he's able to maintain a ~6w/kg output at ~50min which is only bested by one other podium finisher (prob Contador or ?) which suggests as others have previously pointed out, that Froome displays an incredibly high anaerobic threshhold (right?). His power decay is certainly much shallower than Nibali's and would be interesting how it compares to Quintana's.

Sure, one can point to the problems encountered by Movistar / Astana/Saxo in the early stages of the 2015 TDF where their big guns were 1-several min+ down by the end of the first week, but I was struck by Sky's dominance & Porte/Thomas' ability to reel in Quintana/Valverde as well as Froome looking like he was about to reach escape velocity by the end of the stage. It was ...uhh... impressive. The subsequent release and/or discussion of Froome's power data relative to others didn't really, as others have pointed out, clarify things and, in many cases, raised more questions than answers.

I recently came across some blog post by veloclinic that, in a very simplistic manner, attempts to illustrate how power and relative perceived percentages of doping can be illustrated by a probability curve illustrating the probability of doping.
Link 1: http://veloclinic.com/estimating-the-probability-of-doping-as-a-function-of-power/
Link 1a: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1-YgGROA3ZPtZ_kycr4UIwdqOL1S85NRTpb3zDTQ3Tuw/edit?pli=1#gid=1114692435

While not interested in provoking wider debate, I was just interested in folks comments. Depending upon what numbers (perception of % peloton doping, etc) one can change in the spreadsheet (taking Sky's or Vayer's or others numbers), you can get a 'likelihood of doping' (at ~6.1w/kg) idea which is generally >60% if we're assuming that ~25% is doping (how likely is this?) or you don't reach a 60% likelihood until 6.4w/kg if one assumes only 5% are doping.

Thus, I think that the “they’re all dirty crowd” would skew the % doping to >>25% and the “Sky/Froome is clean crowd” would lower the bar somewhat to 5-10% doping with evidence of doping only entering the picture when you have Armstrong or Pantani 6.5-7w/kg power numbers.
 
Sep 29, 2012
12,197
0
0
Re:

FullRetardRacing said:
Great comments & discussion: have followed this thread for awhile & probably angle more towards the "they're mostly (75%) geared up, most of the time" and Froome/Sky are the only latest iteration of team wide or state sponsored/facilitated activities. One can call it US Postal 2.0 but, IMHO, it's really no different from many other teams since the 1990's in terms of dominance. I hadn't seen anyone else post this in these pages (did a quick forum search), so thought I'd add to the discussion by posting links. for example: http://veloclinic.com/comparing-performances-across-grand-tours/ . What is interesting about Froome's data in this link is that he's able to maintain a ~6w/kg output at ~50min which is only bested by one other podium finisher (prob Contador or ?) which suggests as others have previously pointed out, that Froome displays an incredibly high anaerobic threshhold (right?). His power decay is certainly much shallower than Nibali's and would be interesting how it compares to Quintana's.

Sure, one can point to the problems encountered by Movistar / Astana/Saxo in the early stages of the 2015 TDF where their big guns were 1-several min+ down by the end of the first week, but I was struck by Sky's dominance & Porte/Thomas' ability to reel in Quintana/Valverde as well as Froome looking like he was about to reach escape velocity by the end of the stage. It was ...uhh... impressive. The subsequent release and/or discussion of Froome's power data relative to others didn't really, as others have pointed out, clarify things and, in many cases, raised more questions than answers.

I recently came across some blog post by veloclinic that, in a very simplistic manner, attempts to illustrate how power and relative perceived percentages of doping can be illustrated by a probability curve illustrating the probability of doping.
Link 1: http://veloclinic.com/estimating-the-probability-of-doping-as-a-function-of-power/
Link 1a: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1-YgGROA3ZPtZ_kycr4UIwdqOL1S85NRTpb3zDTQ3Tuw/edit?pli=1#gid=1114692435

While not interested in provoking wider debate, I was just interested in folks comments. Depending upon what numbers (perception of % peloton doping, etc) one can change in the spreadsheet (taking Sky's or Vayer's or others numbers), you can get a 'likelihood of doping' (at ~6.1w/kg) idea which is generally >60% if we're assuming that ~25% is doping (how likely is this?) or you don't reach a 60% likelihood until 6.4w/kg if one assumes only 5% are doping.

Thus, I think that the “they’re all dirty crowd” would skew the % doping to >>25% and the “Sky/Froome is clean crowd” would lower the bar somewhat to 5-10% doping with evidence of doping only entering the picture when you have Armstrong or Pantani 6.5-7w/kg power numbers.

Nah Wiggo in 2012 did a couple of TTs for around an hour at around 450W - his publicly admitted watts, which averages out to around 6.4W/kg.

Penultimate stage of the 2012 TdF was 63 minutes at 6.4W/kg.
 
shark_feeding.jpg

wwabbit said:
Michel Thèze said:
"All the potential was evident in the very first physical and physiological tests that we could do: enormous. It was enormous. It fell within the norms that we understood of Bernard Hinault in his day. On that level, it was the same."
 
Jul 17, 2015
774
0
0
Re:

Dear Wiggo said:
Bernard Hinault could only place 2nd at the Anatomic Jock race? :confused:

Thanks for the article.

It helps to put that quote into context by reading the full article. Thezé seems to be saying that Froome was devoid of cycling skills but had huge athletic potential.

Don't know about the huge athletic potential, but he certainly was devoid of cycling skills until recently
 
Re: Re:

wendybnt said:
Dear Wiggo said:
Bernard Hinault could only place 2nd at the Anatomic Jock race? :confused:

Thanks for the article.

It helps to put that quote into context by reading the full article. Thezé seems to be saying that Froome was devoid of cycling skills but had huge athletic potential.

Yeah, but that doesn't suit The Clinic rhetoric ...