i'd tell the tennis fans that we can only speculate remotely about this.Andynonomous said:Thanks for the replies (at least the serious ones).
I guess that the sentiment is that (unless he put a hidden motor in his bike), he would have won zero TDFs (or zero grand tours for that matter). He just didn't have the natural stamina to pull it off.
I will post a link from "Mens Tennis Forums" to this thread. Feel free to add any more (serious) responses.
Eyeballs Out said:He'd have paid everyone else off so probably no change
sniper said:of whom can we be sure he was a greater talent than Lance?
I'll agree on Lemond, but that wasn't Lance's time.
Agree on Contador, I guess, from the looks, but let there be no doubt that Contador was an early doper, so difficult to measure his true lung capacity.
FoxxyBrown1111 said:sniper said:1903 tour was 6 stages, spread out over 17 days.ppanther92 said:sniper said:how many would've finished the tour riding clean?
any doctor without a steak in cycling will tell you that it's close to impossible to ride the TdF without doping.
you could try but you'd either get sick or surpass the time limit and be disqualified well before reaching Paris.
What are you even talking about? I guess the Tour didn't exist since 1903 than, when there weren't any damn drugs available. (except tabac and alcohol) The finishing number would be more or less the same like it is now, since the tempo would drop massively.
Regarding the topic: zero. Maybe some good results in classics, but than again he was on roids and other stuff pretty much since ever. So who knows...
i agree that's perfectly possible without peds.
So how about the 1907 edition?
Winning time 158 hours (today 80something)
Total length: 4.500 km (nowadays a little bit over 3.000)
... all on tobacco, alc, bad roads, heavy bikes, etc...
On topic: LA? Zero TdF wins, not even a T-20...
SeriousSam said:Hey you guys over there at the MensTennisForums
Everything else equal, the stronger, faster athlete that can go longer wins in tennis. Thus if one could dope in Tennis, the benefits would be great.
Testing in tennis is an absolute joke. Everyone who isn't a complete idiot can dope it up hugely, especially in training, and not be caught.
This strongly suggests that Djokovic, Murray, Federer and Nadal are probably worse dopers than any athlete currently involved in pro cycling.
Have a good day.
fair points, admittedly.Metabolol said:You can look at his early numbers. Nothing special for a pro cyclist.
The type of transformation that Lance made in the late 90s is amazing, specially considering he had already been on EPO etc for several years. He must have responded incredibly to whatever Ferrari had him do. He also benefited from others having to change/reduce their protocols and I also believe he had access to stuff that no one else had (maybe not in 99 but after that).
I agree with your post but to be fair, Federer seems to be fighting for more testing while the other guys seem to be whining about whereabouts. Not that I'm very informed. But I got curious and found the beautiful thread the OP was referring to:SeriousSam said:This strongly suggests that Djokovic, Murray, Federer and Nadal are probably worse dopers than any athlete currently involved in pro cycling. .
I still find it quite funny that self-proclaimed avid fighter vs imaginary supposed PED usage in tennis, is also an avid cycling fan and supporter <hand to face smiley>
And Barry Bonds just laughed his ass off his Tarmac.Then again, here the ''tennis is a technical sport'' argument does apply. Doping may turn a cyclist into a champion, since the sport is largely stamina-based, but it won't give Nadal his forehand, which is pure technical tennis talent.
The Hitch said:SeriousSam said:Hey you guys over there at the MensTennisForums
Everything else equal, the stronger, faster athlete that can go longer wins in tennis. Thus if one could dope in Tennis, the benefits would be great.
Testing in tennis is an absolute joke. Everyone who isn't a complete idiot can dope it up hugely, especially in training, and not be caught.
This strongly suggests that Djokovic, Murray, Federer and Nadal are probably worse dopers than any athlete currently involved in pro cycling.
Have a good day.
But have you seen Nadal and Federer give interviews? They are such nice guys. They always smile and behave like gentlemen. Armstrong wasn't like that. He wasn't a pleasant person.
If you actually knew Federer and Nadal, rather than make jealous baseless accusations from behind your anonymous username you would know that they are not the kind of people who would dope. They wouldn't risk their legacies by taking performance enhancing drugs. Have you seen Nadal train? He does hours on the court every day in souring heat. That is why he can then play 6 hour finals vs Djokovic who was helped greatly by the glutten free diet. You get out in tournaments what you put in training, no need to cheat.
That is also why Nadal has recurring knee injuries. If he doped he would be able to recover from knee injuries. That is why Armstrong was never injured, athletes who take drugs can recover from injuries so it makes no sense to suggest Nadal dopes.
Seriously STFU and <edited by mod>
ps, mods, I am not impersonating a mod just engaging in satire
carton said:I agree with your post but to be fair, Federer seems to be fighting for more testing while the other guys seem to be whining about whereabouts. Not that I'm very informed. But I got curious and found the beautiful thread the OP was referring to:SeriousSam said:This strongly suggests that Djokovic, Murray, Federer and Nadal are probably worse dopers than any athlete currently involved in pro cycling. .
http://www.menstennisforums.com/showthread.php?t=228489&page=267
Some samples (to be honest, on the whole the discussion wasn't that terrible):
I still find it quite funny that self-proclaimed avid fighter vs imaginary supposed PED usage in tennis, is also an avid cycling fan and supporter <hand to face smiley>And Barry Bonds just laughed his ass off his Tarmac.Then again, here the ''tennis is a technical sport'' argument does apply. Doping may turn a cyclist into a champion, since the sport is largely stamina-based, but it won't give Nadal his forehand, which is pure technical tennis talent.
It's amazing how naive non-cycling fans are about doping. The other day on the Mayweather-Pacquiao fight, a friend was totally confused: "You're saying you think they might both doping? Why? It's a skill sport! It would probably hurt them more than help them to dope!" Even worse when the Messi-Poser story broke. I heard something along the lines of "FIFA has millions and are super stringent on testing. They surely have it under control." I mean I guess I could say something like "have you ever gone a round with someone or even two minutes against a punching bag" or "have you ever read anything about FIFA?" , but honestly I have to admit I don't even try anymore. If anyone dissents without absolutely any knowledge aforethought, I just tend to agree to disagree and move the heck on.
carton said:I agree with your post but to be fair, Federer seems to be fighting for more testing while the other guys seem to be whining about whereabouts.SeriousSam said:This strongly suggests that Djokovic, Murray, Federer and Nadal are probably worse dopers than any athlete currently involved in pro cycling. .
The Walsh book, the Kimmage interview, the constantly getting himself out there and answering questions, asking for more testing, checking the future testing box ... probably more than shaded by the fact that I tend to ride my bike similarly (relatively high cadence, constantly checking my HR, sit down even on some 'attacks', 1,700+ Vm/h): yeah I buy into the Kool-Aid to some extent (the marginal gains crap -not so much). Not that I'm going to be buying his jersey, but I do give Froome a chance of being clean. Certainly a much higher one than pretty much everyone else on here.SeriousSam said:Agreed, that should be taken into account. And dismissed as having close to no bearing on the chance Federer is doping.carton said:I agree with your post but to be fair, Federer seems to be fighting for more testing while the other guys seem to be whining about whereabouts.SeriousSam said:This strongly suggests that Djokovic, Murray, Federer and Nadal are probably worse dopers than any athlete currently involved in pro cycling. .
Or did you really adjust your beliefs about Froome being doped to the eyeballs after he tweeted about the lack of testing at Mt Teide? Cheap self promotion.
The difference between the Djokovics, Murrays and Nadals of the world and the other guys seems to be mainly endurance. Yeah, you need some skill, but the likes of Tsonga, Raonic, et al can hit the crap out of the ball as well (I'd say better than any of the "top" guys). When I was watching a fair bit of tennis guys like Safin and Nalbandian could outhit pretty much anyone for a set, they'd just tire quicker. So seems to go with Federer, so used to happen with Wawrinka.SeriousSam said:As for the "skill sport" argument, there is some truth to that. The skill component in tennis means that strength, agility, speed and endurance are merely necessary, but not sufficient to succeed. You can't acquire the technique necessary to hit Nadal's or Federer's forehand from doping. We could take a gifted athlete and train his every measurable physical characteristic, using PEDs, such that it exceeds those of Djokovic. That guy wouldn't be in the top 10 of the ATP. By contrast, in cycling, skill isn't neeed. Pure physical ability will do.
But that merely means that it's easier to identify talent in tennis even though everyone is doping than it is in cycling. It does not change the incentive to dope, and so it does not change the prevalence of doping.
MacRoadie said:Lance Armstrong: 0
Chicago Bears: 150
sniper said:so slow they'd lack time to recover in between the stages and thus inevitably would get sick or become so weak they'd have to abandon.RobbieCanuck said:If they were all clean would the attrition rate not be the same but the times just a whole lot slower? Just asking.
