- Oct 30, 2011
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Jeremiah said:I'd be willing to bet that as super charged as he is now he could get a top ten at the Tour.
I would take that bet.
Jeremiah said:I'd be willing to bet that as super charged as he is now he could get a top ten at the Tour.
Caruut said:I would take that bet.
Caruut said:I would take that bet.
23 Lance Armstrong (USA) Team Radioshack
Caruut said:I would take that bet.
JPM London said:Or as LA himself would say when hitting Paris "I didn't see who won - I was a bit behind"![]()
Race Radio said:It would be a good bet. I doubt he has improved in the last 2 years
Jeremiah said:I was writing hypothetically as if he had free reign to prepare in cycling as much as he's now preparing in Tri.
mewmewmew13 said:and how's the weather in Austin today?
Glenn_Wilson said:Yesterday and the day before it was very warm with the Humidity up in the 40% range. Mostly sunny with temperatures steady or falling to near 86F. Winds light and variable.
Today is more of the same but the day’s official high was at 89F...which is extremely warm for this time of year. Winds were variable at or about 3mph out of the south southeast. Air quality is poor.
Expect more of the same in the upcoming week.A real heat wave is building for Memorial Day weekend.
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Race Radio said:Watching Lance beat up on age group Tri geeks in his retirement in order to make a few $$ is like seeing some Heavyweight champion become a doorman in Las Vegas
Caruut said:As was I. He's 40 now, and I don't think he'll have got any better than 2 years ago.
mewmewmew13 said:ugh. Thankx for the update Glenn
hang in there
how the h$ll do you run and train for a triathlon when the weather is like that
Jeremiah said:I was writing hypothetically as if he had free reign to prepare in cycling as much as he's now preparing in Tri.
I think he's back to 1999 levels in his preparation for events. It just falls under the heading of life extension.
Quick question, why do all these Tri people talk about "nutrition?" Now armstrong is talking in this stupid lingo.
Glenn_Wilson said:Nutrition …..Because they need to eat during the event in order to keep energy levels up. JUST like in cycling…???? Or are you just jerking my chain?
Jeremiah said:There's always an element of jerking the chain, but these Tri people are so "precious" about their "nutrition." As if this precise balance is the be all end all and it's going to make a silk purse out of a sow's ear. Cyclists have been eating something since before Tri even existed.
Pre event nutrition for Frank Shorter was a handful of M&M's and a gin and tonic. During he'd drink some flat coke. Now they need all this junk concocted in a lab run by Bill Romanowski.
Glenn_Wilson said:You are either giving away your age or you read a little bit about runners. Anyhow....Yes about the flat coke. I still use this with my races (Have not raced in a long time though). Open a coca cola the night before race leave it opened overnight put it into a water bottle the morning of the race. Also leave a snickers bar along with this water bottle at mile 20 of a marathon.
Today people will buy anything that someone says gives an edge or is trending. gu / power gel / Encapsulated goat snot. It is all the same pre packaged garbage that will sell to the minions. Sorta like yellow bands..![]()
amp300 said:Quite possibly the best "energy bar" ever. Give me a snicker's bar over a power/cliff/encapsulated goat(nice one) snot bar any day.
mewmewmew13 said:ugh. Thankx for the update Glenn
hang in there
how the h$ll do you run and train for a triathlon when the weather is like that
amp300 said:Quite possibly the best "energy bar" ever. Give me a snicker's bar over a power/cliff/encapsulated goat(nice one) snot bar any day.
MacRoadie said:A Snickers bar and a can of Coke will cure even the worst bonk in about 5 minutes....
Cloxxki said:I used flat coke also, it was a real hit in MTB racing for the last lap.
I know know that probably putting a single small sugar cube in my mouth would have had the same effect. It's more about the signal to the brain than anything else. You're not going to burn that half a bottle of flat coke on your way to the finish. Runners now sip something sweet, and spit it out, to save the stomach the burden. Point taken, race on.
Glenn_Wilson said:Easy,,,,,I think these guys Maxim Kriat, and Francesc Godoy are not just age groupers. Just saying.![]()
Race Radio said:Watching Lance beat up on age group Tri geeks in his retirement in order to make a few $$ is like seeing some Heavyweight champion become a doorman in Las Vegas
L'Etranger said:I agree with this. I think you're on the wrong tack here, RR. It is not that Armstrong is so slow these days that he can barely beat some no-hoper age-group athletes, it's that his performances (or at least some of them, including Sunday) are, for his age and training history, literally unbelievable, in the familiar way. Likewise, the claim that 100th place in the Tour is a better athlete than any triathlete is going over the top. There are not many examples of triathletes trying their luck in cycling or vice versa, but such examples as I can think of off the top of my head (LA in one direction, Udo Bolts in the other) don't exactly confirm that prejudice.
Race Radio said:Of course Armstrong is doing well. He has a very good swimmer back in the day, clearly can ride, and is a decent runner.
When a Triathlon gets 700,000 people on the side of the road cheering them on and live, global TV then I will believe that the competition level is similar. It isn't, and to pretend it is absurd.
Funny Udo Bolts name should come up. A few weeks ago I was riding with a couple friends, both former Pro Triathletes. One did 8:40 Ironman at 40 and the other top 3 at Kona, twice. They knew Udo well and said he was the hardest, badass mofo they had ever met.
Udo never won a Classic, the Worlds etc.
It is a niche sport inhabited mostly by entrants who "Just want to finish" . There are some amazingly dedicated athletes in Tri but nowhere remotely close to what you get in the Pro Cycling