He won the TT nationals.
No, it's not a of anything, but rather to disprove any suggestions that he is slowing down.
No, it's not a of anything, but rather to disprove any suggestions that he is slowing down.
roundabout said:He won the TT nationals.
No, it's not a of anything, but rather to disprove any suggestions that he is slowing down.
The Hitch said:I certainatly didnt expect when I created it back before LBL that Gilbert and this thread would still be going.
Slipstream said:All joking asides though. His exploits in the classics especially this Year has raised an eyebrow of suspicion. Given the nature of the difficulty of these one day races. His recovery ? rate in such a short space if time between victories, and the manner in which he won is undoubtedly very questionable.
djerkson said:He has his own line of clothing, where they are experimenting in clothing to faster improve recuperation. There was a newspaper article about this item a few weeks ago. He's being helped by scientists and clothing specialists in this matter. Maybe there's a revolution going on here (compare the revolution in swimming, merely by changing clothes)?
djerkson said:No way Bo Hagen is clean. I mean, he was outstanding in the Tour of Bayern in june, won 2 stages in the Tour De France, won the Eneco tour (UCI World Tour) against thé super-TB500-doped Philippe Gilbert and won the Vattenfall Cyclassics (UCI World Tour) today. That is a peak of 2 months where he's only becoming stronger so it seems, even after an exhausting Tour de France...Yep, there is your proof!![]()
Those days both being consistent and being inconsistent seems to be a proof for doping. Tough life! (personally I find roller-coaster form faaaaaar more suspicious).djerkson said:No way Bo Hagen is clean. I mean, he was outstanding in the Tour of Bayern in june, won 2 stages in the Tour De France, won the Eneco tour (UCI World Tour) against thé super-TB500-doped Philippe Gilbert and won the Vattenfall Cyclassics (UCI World Tour) today. That is a peak of 2 months where he's only becoming stronger so it seems, even after an exhausting Tour de France...Yep, there is your proof!![]()
djerkson said:No way Bo Hagen is clean. I mean, he was outstanding in the Tour of Bayern in june, won 2 stages in the Tour De France, won the Eneco tour (UCI World Tour) against thé super-TB500-doped Philippe Gilbert and won the Vattenfall Cyclassics (UCI World Tour) today. That is a peak of 2 months where he's only becoming stronger so it seems, even after an exhausting Tour de France...Yep, there is your proof!![]()
Zam_Olyas said:He may not be doping right now. "MAY"
delbified said:so in summary no one here has any real idea if gilbert is on the juice
delbified said:so in summary no one here has any real idea if gilbert is on the juice
Not really no, Hushovd's form has been exactly like this the past two seasons. He was just as bad last year. His problem is that he always gets sick in March or so and loses two weeks. Usually he just manages to find his form for P-R, but he always sucks in RVV so nothing new there.zigmeister said:We could say the same with Hushovd also. Mysteriously how their "form" has been so poor from one year to the next.
Well, perhaps 2010 is a better example. Still, it's nothing out of the ordinary. Just a common case of the flu. He was clearly finding his form before he got ill.hrotha said:Hushovd wasn't bad last year. He didn't get early results, but he impressed in Tirreno and did alright in RVV.
but this is the case for so many riders. form is such a nebulous quality, no one really knows precisely what influences it. if they did, racing would be boring.zigmeister said:It was quite remarkable last year how on a slight incline he would just ride away from the bunch and win.
It has many people inquiring how one can go from such good performance, with no apparent injuries or other excuses others have (or had) in the past like Boonen.
danjo007 said:of course he is. anyone mentioned here in the "clinic" is automatically a horrible person in life and sport!
With Gilbert I think the key is taking into account the different qualities lumped under his "form". The ability to produce insane accelerations up grades is probably largely genetic. Yet he has to be up there with the select group in a relatively fresh state to utilise it. Curiously, to me it seemed that precisely his endurance improved last year.delbified said:but this is the case for so many riders. form is such a nebulous quality, no one really knows precisely what influences it. if they did, racing would be boring.
if gilbert's dominance was as simple as taking juice, then everyone would (try to) do it. i don't think it's that simple. i'm not saying he's definitely clean, but there seem to be a range of other factors that influence form, that a lot of people overlook in favour of settling on the easy (and juiciest) explanation.
burnout would be an equally obvious explanation, for my money.