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Jonas Vingegaard: Something is Rotten

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That is irrelevant. The post belongs in the general part of the forum. Name anything in the article that hints at doping.
It was a feel good tv interview with Vingegaard and his wife. Both started crying at various points when talking about the crash and the following recovery process. Not the moment for questions about doping - it wasn't that kind of interview.

However, as I wrote before, I find it interesting and relevant in the context of this part of the forum to hear his own explanations of what from the outside looks like a very remarkable/incredible/unbelievable/miraculous recovery and post-crash training process.

It's like when he was asked back in 2022 about the leap in his time trial performance - from what the national team coach had called a decent (in Danish: "fornuftig") time trial ability to consistently being top 3 in the TdF - and he said he'd been working a lot on aerodynamics.
 
whilst the numbers are always a bit random about how much fitness you lose in only 2 weeks and whether pro athletes recover quicker because of the routine or literal muscle memory. any extended time off the bike absolutely crashes your power numbers, and it takes time to rebuild.

the only way time off the bike boosts your performance, is if you were overtraining to begin with and not allowing enough body recovery time for the efforts. but pro cyclists numbers are analysed to death by the teams, theres no way JV wouldnt have spotted that from his data.
Doesn't make sense to me either. Unless his level prior to the crash was just so outrageously high that it had enough buffer built in to allow for a long break without falling behind the other top riders.

Who knows how strong he would have been without that crash. His 2023 level was already scary
 
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well maybe the reference to doping was in the act that Vingo had to say something about his quick return to form "less weight less muscle" or whatever. Maybe to justify it? Not sure
Who knows. But I think it's fair to say that there are some pretty big contradictions and paradoxes in this cycling era. We hear about this constant strive towards perfection and increasing attention to detail. Everything being optimized. Yet, apparently, Pogacar didn't know how to train properly until he changed his coach ahead of this season, and Vingegaard finished 2nd in last year's Vuelta without having studied the route before hand and, as far as I remember, with no altitude training after the Tour; then, this year, he finished 2nd in the TdF in the wake of a life threating crash and with only a month and a half-two months' training. If everything is in fact about these miniscule twists and tweaks of detail, then how are these leaps and miracles possible?
 
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Peter Ian Staker. Hott Fuzz fans will get the reference. I mean check out this beauty...

View: https://x.com/CyclingUpToDat3/status/1880584982009094324


In words to Le Monde, the Dane explained once again how the Dutch team claims to use it: "My team uses carbon monoxide to measure blood volume and total hemoglobin mass. We inhale the monoxide a first time, before doing an altitude training camp. At the end of it, we repeat the operation to calculate our maximum oxygen absorption capacity," or as it's more commonly known, the VO2Max.

Taken in small doses, it has been highly suggested that it could improve the riders' ability to increase their VO2Max, increasing the body's ability to turn oxygen into energy, and so be able to put out more power. Vingegaard himself has been asked about this subject several times since the Tour de France, but he hints at being concerned over the misdoing of rivals who may take advantage of the method.

"Some teams divert its use by regularly inhaling low doses of carbon monoxide, which causes a significant gain in performance of their riders," he states.

I salute this man's bullshitting skills. Bravo.
 
I salute this man's bullshitting skills. Bravo.
I don't know what is the norm for French journalists when it comes to direct quotes and paraphrase, you should be better able to interpret the original article (judging by the formatting of the article, it seems to me that it's all paraphrase). The final question and answer is about CO.

Original source: https://www.lemonde.fr/sport/articl...sage-du-monoxyde-de-carbone_6503602_3242.html

Full article: https://archive.ph/uNOIe

Original exchange (well, after Le Monde's translation from English to French, I assume):

Depuis plusieurs mois, l’inhalation de monoxyde de carbone fait polémique. Confirmez-vous avoir eu recours à cette méthode et, si oui, pouvez-vous expliquer en quoi cela consiste ?​


Mon équipe utilise le monoxyde de carbone pour mesurer le volume sanguin et la masse totale d’hémoglobine. On inhale le monoxyde une première fois, avant d’effectuer un stage en altitude. A la fin de celui-ci, on réitère l’opération pour calculer notre capacité maximale d’absorption d’oxygène.

Mais certaines équipes détournent son usage en inhalant régulièrement de faibles doses de monoxyde de carbone, ce qui provoque un gain significatif de performance de leurs coureurs. Ce n’est pas juste et il faudrait que l’Agence mondiale antidopage l’interdise.
ChatGPT:

For months, the use of carbon monoxide inhalation has been controversial. Can you confirm if you’ve used this method, and if so, can you explain what it involves?

My team uses carbon monoxide to measure blood volume and total haemoglobin mass. We inhale carbon monoxide once before an altitude training camp. At the end of the camp, we repeat the process to calculate our maximum oxygen absorption capacity.

However, some teams misuse it by regularly inhaling small doses of carbon monoxide, which significantly enhances performance. That’s unfair, and the World Anti-Doping Agency should ban it.
 
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https://www.lemonde.fr/sport/articl...sage-du-monoxyde-de-carbone_6503602_3242.html

Googling translation gave me - which sounds unlike shy, retired, reticient etc Jonas -

... the rider of the Visma-Lease a Bike team surprised the special correspondent of Le Monde, by showing, on several occasions, derision and wishing to continue the discussion in all frankness, against the advice of his press officer.

Who's his "press officer/baby sitter" and do they still have a job at Visma? :)
 
Vingegaard throwing out doping insinuations for seemingly no reason in pre-season interviews is hilarious, things are really heating up.

Yeah imagine if they get cold feet and suddenly start trundling up climbs at 5 w/kg, lets be honest nobody wants to see that.
Something's up with Vingegaard. New kid, near death experience last year - these things change a man.
I'd prefer to see guys actually sweating and being out of breath after beating old doping fueled climbing records.
 
I think Vingegaard needs to hire someone other than his wife to do his PR. First, that interview where his wife says the tour wasn't hard enough for him/ the team wasn't good enough now he is throwing out doping allegations for a product he himself is using?

Even if UAE are using it outside of testing, Vingegaard beat Pogacar twice and was still on a good level this year despite the crash so there is no way to say these things without implicating himself...