Re: Re:
On Alpe d'Huez times,
86-LeMond & Hinault were out front from as far out as descent of Galibier and had a huge lead at foot of the climb. I think Montoya was the fastest ascent that year.
87- a group of favourites arrived at the base of ADH together with Herrera attacking as soon as the climb began, he was caught again by someone(cannot remember whom) then got a second wind and rode away. That was almost like a TT for Herrera.
88-Delgado and Rooks arrived at ADH together with a small group behind a good bit behind them. I think Theunisse was the fastest but I watched this recently and the ever changing scenario on the road was fascniating, riders going strong, then dying, some recovering. The like of Pino/Hampsten were in contention, cracked and lost big time.
89-Theunisse arrives alone with a small group of favourites chasing. Fignon rode away from LeMond with a few km to go.
90- A group of 5-6 arrive together but there is a lot of stalling with only Delgado working. Bugno wins sprint.
91- A large bunch arrive at ADH as the only climb of note beforehand is the Col D'Ornon, a 2nd cat climb. First real example of a massed race from the bottom with JF Bernard pacing Indurain for a lot of the climb. The first time that it is rode akin to modern mountains stages.
Merckx index said:sniper said:Were they? I will have to take your word for it. In which case I don't have a ready answer, but I assume there are many possible explanations (not all of them known to us).
http://www.climbing-records.com/2013/07/all-time-top-100-fastest-rides-on.html
According to this site, it’s even worse than I thought. It lists the fastest 100 times up ADH, and all of them were performed in 1991 or later (no. 60 is the fastest time prior to 1994; note also that this list does not include 2013, when Quintana had a sub-40 minute climb). The bottom of the list is a time of 41:13, which is more than 30 seconds faster than the fastest time in the 1980s, according to the ADH wiki. That is 41:50, by Herrera in 1987, and Fignon in 1989. Fignon finished about 1:20 ahead of Lemond in that stage, and as far as I can tell, they were together at the foot of the climb. So Lemond did the climb in about 43’10”, and as far as I know, that was his fastest effort on it.
Three years earlier, when he won his first Tour, he and Hinault finished together on ADH, in a time listed as 48:00. This is incredibly slow, and I’ve never understood how they could have won the stage with a finishing climb that slow. I know they escaped, and once they had a big lead on the others, probably let up a little. In fact, I think I recall from Slaying the Badger that Hinault was suffering and asked Greg to wait or slow down for him. But still, 48 minutes seems like a time that good climbers could do without making much of an effort.
Edit: From the same webpage as that link above, see this link: http://www.climbing-records.com/2013/07/nairo-quintana-sets-great-time-on-alpe.html
Best times up ADH:
2013- 39:28
2011 - 41:25
2010 - 42:17
2008 - 39:30
2006 - 38:35
2004 - 37:36
2003 - 39:08
2001 - 38:03
1999 - 41:10
1997 - 36:53
1995 - 36:40
1994 - 37:15
1992 - 43:10
1991 - 40:27
1990 - 43:15
1989 - 41:50
1988 - 43:44
1987 - 41:44
1986 - 45:25 (I guess this was a rider who actually won the stage ahead of Lemond-Hinault? Either that, or was in a following group and had a faster time up the final climb)
1982 - 42:14
1979 - 43:38
1977 - 44:49
The shooting is obviously one possible explanation.
Lemond is on the record stating that, if it weren't for the shooting, he would probably have beaten Fignon by several minutes in 1989.
He performed very well in the early part of that Tour, putting time on Fignon on several key climbs, and at one point said he thought he would hold the jersey till Paris. So even forgetting the shooting, he might have performed better on ADH. But they were together I think till about 4 km from the finish, when Fignon dropped him, so I don't think that even in the best of circumstances Lemond would have put several minutes into Fignon on this climb. And even if he had, that would still leave him far behind Pantani's best times.
Another thing to consider: I read somewhere that the climbing times started going up already in 1989. Could it be that Lemond's climbing times also went up in 1989? His TT-ing ability certainly improved.
Well, as I noted above, he did far better on ADH in 1989 than in 1986. He and Hinault weren't pushed in 1986, whereas he was pushed in 1989, but still the time difference is almost five minutes. But there are other possible factors like wind, and I'd want to compare some more climbs before concluding that for sure.
Isn't it possible that EPO simply works better with other dope? I'm not saying it does, I'm saying we don't really know (afiact).
Sure. One theory is that you want to increase muscle size to take advantage of greater oxygen transport. But that would apply just as well to transfusions as to EPO, and steroids should be effective as well as HGH.
The only advantage I can think of that EPO might have is that it has some stimulating effects other than on erythrocyte production. There is in fact evidence of that. But the major effect is clearly HT increase.
On Alpe d'Huez times,
86-LeMond & Hinault were out front from as far out as descent of Galibier and had a huge lead at foot of the climb. I think Montoya was the fastest ascent that year.
87- a group of favourites arrived at the base of ADH together with Herrera attacking as soon as the climb began, he was caught again by someone(cannot remember whom) then got a second wind and rode away. That was almost like a TT for Herrera.
88-Delgado and Rooks arrived at ADH together with a small group behind a good bit behind them. I think Theunisse was the fastest but I watched this recently and the ever changing scenario on the road was fascniating, riders going strong, then dying, some recovering. The like of Pino/Hampsten were in contention, cracked and lost big time.
89-Theunisse arrives alone with a small group of favourites chasing. Fignon rode away from LeMond with a few km to go.
90- A group of 5-6 arrive together but there is a lot of stalling with only Delgado working. Bugno wins sprint.
91- A large bunch arrive at ADH as the only climb of note beforehand is the Col D'Ornon, a 2nd cat climb. First real example of a massed race from the bottom with JF Bernard pacing Indurain for a lot of the climb. The first time that it is rode akin to modern mountains stages.