They are payed to do sportwashing by a human rights hellhole like UAE, I'm guessing the big bosses in the desert got scared to be portrayed as villains.Yeah, in hindsight it was a bad call UAE/Pig did not participate. Why was that anyway?
Zach Nehr gets his calculator out again -
https://velo.outsideonline.com/road...gaards-tt-and-sep-kuss-on-the-col-de-la-loze/
"After 19 minutes of riding full gas on the TT bike, Vingegaard produced the most insane climbing performance I’ve ever seen. There is no comparison to the power and speed that Vingegaard did on the climb to Combloux.
The 26-year-old Dane pushed ~7.5w/kg for over 13 minutes on his time trial bike, which is one of the most incredible performances in cycling history.
These power values were estimated using a variety of data, including years of historical power data from this exact climb to Combloux. The exact power numbers will never be 100%, especially when you consider calibration factors, temperatures, power meter brands, and more. But all that matters is that Jonas Vingegaard went insanely fast up the climb to Combloux, and I can say with 99.99% certainty that he did well over 7.3w/kg for 13 minutes…after already time trialing at 50.6 kph for 19 minutes."
He was loaded with a lot of love!![]()
historically, considering climbing ITT performances, only Rominger and Ugrumov (in the 17th Giro stage in 1995 ) were able to sustain 7.0 w/kg for 15 minutes (both on Colle Gallo).0,8 Watts more than Pogacars already fully crazy 6,7 they calculated for the same part of the TT. Does anyone remember what Armstrongs best performance was in a comparable effort?
In the same article they also mention that Gall did 6.1 watts/kg up Loze. In the third week. I am wondering: would Froome even be in the Top 10? Like prime Froome?
Can only speak for myself but I think it's a lot more mundane than that. Overload, progression, specificity and rest are the well established principles of training. Doping amplifies them, but doesn't remove them.So then the prevailing educated opinion of the clinic is that UAE/Pogacar came up with some kind of substance or protocol which enabled him to beat the snot out of all the clean or inadequately doped competition, but then Jumbo/Vingegaard developed something that totally trumped whatever Pogacar was on, and that even though no one else seems to be able to avail themselves of any of this rocket fuel they will all keep quiet because....omerta. Is that about right?
Zach Nehr gets his calculator out again -
https://velo.outsideonline.com/road...gaards-tt-and-sep-kuss-on-the-col-de-la-loze/
"After 19 minutes of riding full gas on the TT bike, Vingegaard produced the most insane climbing performance I’ve ever seen. There is no comparison to the power and speed that Vingegaard did on the climb to Combloux.
The 26-year-old Dane pushed ~7.5w/kg for over 13 minutes on his time trial bike, which is one of the most incredible performances in cycling history.
These power values were estimated using a variety of data, including years of historical power data from this exact climb to Combloux. The exact power numbers will never be 100%, especially when you consider calibration factors, temperatures, power meter brands, and more. But all that matters is that Jonas Vingegaard went insanely fast up the climb to Combloux, and I can say with 99.99% certainty that he did well over 7.3w/kg for 13 minutes…after already time trialing at 50.6 kph for 19 minutes."
He was loaded with a lot of love!![]()
Yeah, in hindsight it was a bad call UAE/Pig did not participate. Why was that anyway?
He has also been in this game long enough to know that no amount of Netflix documentaries or power analyses will eradicate all the scepticism that greets a performance as dominant as Vingegaard's. He insisted, however, that the climate of suspicion would not temper Jumbo-Visma's celebration of their success.
"No, not at all. We know what we do and that's why we are happy with this," Plugge said. "I have to admit that maybe especially the French are always very sceptical, you know. If it's not us and it's Pogačar or whoever is winning gets it. Apparently if you win in cycling, to the French you apparently never can do it do it right. Me, I would say, 'Come over, we can tell you everything.' I answer every question, like I do now."
White noise of scepticism shrouds Vingegaard after Tour dominance
I think there are two different media-strategies here.In hindsight, that Netflix documentary was some sort of master coup of propaganda, i.e. Pogačar got the 'bad guy' label whilst Jumbo presented themselves as heroes overcoming an invincible adversary. Their "we're the underdogs" messaging is in conflict with their "show the world who is the strongest" stuff (& smashing the dude by 7 minutes this year) but the damage is done, i.e. Vingegaard is portrayed as a loving father & introvert from a peaceful, lovable little Danish community where packing fish is a rite of passage towards doing 7.5w/kg for 13 minutes.
Everything about Jumbo's TdF venture is corporate to the extreme, i.e. #rideyourdreams & all that stuff. Whilst Pog was messing about with Marc Soler in a swimming pool on rest day, Vingegaard was getting a professionally edited video interview about "making the dream come true" by taking the jersey to Paris (some cringe stuff like that).
Skeletor even did a voice recording for a children's bedtime audiobook as part of Jumbo's marketing campaign (like he's the star of a Disney movie): https://www.teamjumbovisma.com/shop/tour-de-france/reading-book-en-2023-the-velodrome/
So I'd say he's so full of sh*t but tbh that's not entirely accurate considering those 500 grams he probably dropped before the recording, yet the point stands: Jumbo are fake as f*ck.
Hmm, I bet current cycling mamils are more gullible to a narrative that is based on obsessive micromanagement of power, training, diet and whatever it is that can be optimised. The ghost writer would do well to borrow the structure from the latter parts of M. Foucault's History of sexuality and the subsequent lectures on the culture of the self.Now he just needs to write a book telling that while Pogacar is in Monaco enjoying coffee rides with his pals and going to the casinos, Vingegaard is all alone in the mountains, thinking of crushing the opposition with every pedal stroke up the volcano.
There are some comments on YouTube along these lines, under the highlight videos for stage 16Now he just needs to write a book telling that while Pogacar is in Monaco enjoying coffee rides with his pals and going to the casinos, Vingegaard is all alone in the mountains, thinking of crushing the opposition with every pedal stroke up the volcano
'simply, Jonas had 4-5 high altitude training camps, while Pogi is hanging around to much with his gf' is one I like a lot.
There are some comments on YouTube along these lines, under the highlight videos for stage 16
'simply, Jonas had 4-5 high altitude training camps, while Pogi is hanging around to much with his gf' is one I like a lot.
But if Pog focused on love… is that not what they said made Jonas so good here in the Tour? Having his wife and kid with him.
the amount of crap some are able to write here, I got no problems people connecting him to doping but shitting on character of people they dont know is to much.They are payed to do sportwashing by a human rights hellhole like UAE, I'm guessing the big bosses in the desert got scared to be portrayed as villains.
Pretty stupid on their part, considering that they got the "bad guy" treatment anyways and their champ Tadej has mastered the art of looking like an innocent puppy for the cameras like no one else. The guy is a borderline manipulator, I'm still baffled that he managed to befriend VDP.
Wow, your disappointment in your predictions about the race not coming to fruition has turned quite sour, I see. "Jumbo's tactics are never going to work, they need Roglic, they're arrogant because they believe they can do it this way". One week later, it turns out they were 100% right, but what do you do? Surely not admitting you were wrong. No, now Jumbo are a bunch of fakers.In hindsight, that Netflix documentary was some sort of master coup of propaganda, i.e. Pogačar got the 'bad guy' label whilst Jumbo presented themselves as heroes overcoming an invincible adversary. Their "we're the underdogs" messaging is in conflict with their "show the world who is the strongest" stuff (& smashing the dude by 7 minutes this year) but the damage is done, i.e. Vingegaard is portrayed as a loving father & introvert from a peaceful, lovable little Danish community where packing fish is a rite of passage towards doing 7.5w/kg for 13 minutes.
Everything about Jumbo's TdF venture is corporate to the extreme, i.e. #rideyourdreams & all that stuff. Whilst Pog was messing about with Marc Soler in a swimming pool on rest day, Vingegaard was getting a professionally edited video interview about "making the dream come true" by taking the jersey to Paris (some cringe stuff like that).
Skeletor even did a voice recording for a children's bedtime audiobook as part of Jumbo's marketing campaign (like he's the star of a Disney movie): https://www.teamjumbovisma.com/shop/tour-de-france/reading-book-en-2023-the-velodrome/
So I'd say he's so full of sh*t but tbh that's not entirely accurate considering those 500 grams he probably dropped before the recording, yet the point stands: Jumbo are fake as f*ck.
I don't know. I seem to remember they said something about not wanting a disrupting outside presence in their team (in fact this was presented as 'suspect' in & of itself in some conversations, like they had something to hide, i.e. which is evidence of how the balance between good & bad public relations is extremely fragile).
With regards to Jumbo, their "Danish Dynamite" put them in an embarrassing situation on Tuesday & they've now devolved into Armstrong-esque bash the French talk, i.e. "they don't like winners": https://www.cyclingnews.com/news/ju...on-over-vingegaards-tour-de-france-dominance/
F*cking French eh, I guess it's too bad the Tour de France takes place... in France. And sorry Mr Plugge, it's not the winning which makes people think your rider is full of radioactive sh*t, it's the 'how' you win. In this instance, destroying the field in an ITT with the biggest seconds per km gains since the 1960's in the third week of a Tour which already had stratospheric ascent times & average speeds.
They are disappointed because now Jonas looks like he is the only alien left in the room.Wow, your disappointment in your predictions about the race not coming to fruition has turned quite sour, I see. "Jumbo's tactics are never going to work, they need Roglic, they're arrogant because they believe they can do it this way". One week later, it turns out they were 100% right, but what do you do? Surely not admitting you were wrong. No, now Jumbo are a bunch of fakers.
The narrative you're trying to create doesn't correspond at all with reality, though. After the Loze stage, Merijn Zeeman almost seemed disappointed. He really hadn't liked to see Pogacar crack like that because he's a "great cyclist" and "it would be inappropriate to start cheering now". How's that for an arrogant faker? Wasn't Pogacar himself a bit more arrogant when he ridiculed Van Aert after stage 2? Pogacar, the "people's champion" as Cyclingnews now apparently likes to call him. You could even say that revenge has been sweet for Van Aert and his team. But you'll never hear them say that, they're always respectful to Pogi (maybe even a little too much).
As for the performance by Vingegaard in the time trial: sure, it was otherworldly. But the only guy who possibly could have beaten him clearly isn't on his best form ever anymore. That's something you obviously need to take into account. Add to that the stupid bike change, which cost him about 20 seconds, and the 40 seconds more he lost on the climb aren't even that huge... as he also didn't have the aero bars for the final few kms, which were clearly an advantage.
If it's any of these two, it's probably Niermann, but I doubt he used that word. It was Dumoulin who wondered how he could be beaten by a "guy who sits on his bike like a miner". He wasn't wrong thoughThey are disappointed because now Jonas looks like he is the only alien left in the room.
Is Zeeman the one who called Pogacar a c*nt for beating Roglic? Or was it Niermann? But I guess it's easy to respect your rivals after you annihilated them.
They are disappointed because now Jonas looks like he is the only alien left in the room.
Is Zeeman the one who called Pogacar a c*nt for beating Roglic? Or was it Niermann? But I guess it's easy to respect your rivals after you annihilated them.
Wow, your disappointment in your predictions about the race not coming to fruition has turned quite sour, I see. "Jumbo's tactics are never going to work, they need Roglic, they're arrogant because they believe they can do it this way". One week later, it turns out they were 100% right, but what do you do? Surely not admitting you were wrong. No, now Jumbo are a bunch of fakers.
I actually stopped reading here.
I can't make race predictions based on the possibility one guy is going to go 4.5 seconds per km faster than his rival (& 4km/h faster than the rest of the field) over a 22.4km's ITT.
I nope out. Nearly 3 minutes back to Wout van Aert (who was third, so not exactly sh*t either) on a rolling route? Yeah, how about no.
Jumbo could ride around for two weeks however they want (fast, slow, dressed like killer clowns) & they'd still nuke the field whenever they wish with that sort of power. That's not sport anymore & I have no interest in debating its merits.