- Jul 5, 2009
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Re: Re:
Oh man. That takes me back to the days when marginal gains meant cave-aging your tubulars. The best kept secret a mechanic had was how many months they were put in storage.
John Swanson
Benotti69 said:Jeroen Swart said:carton said:Thanks, Jeroen. I apologize if you had addressed that question before, I didn't catch it. Personally, would seem to me that sometimes they are really attuned to the thornier issues but then they put out some really daft or even defiant stuff. It's a strange lack of cohesion for an organization of their general competence.Jeroen Swart said:Or are they simply targeting the fans and not taking account of how it will be perceived by anyone with skepticism?
P.S. Am I right in taking from your answer that you think a lot of the the sports science and training innovations they trot out is somewhat over-inflated? That there's some truth then to the "there are no miracles in cycling" quote?
A bit of both.
I know from feedback from riders that their attention to detail is second to none.
And I am sure that attending to detail can eventually add up to a significant sum.
However, some of the "innovations" touted are definitely over-hyped.
One area that would definitely add value is actively focusing on enhancing recover, which results in a reduced "alarm phase" as per my previous post link. That then allows the athlete to increase training intensity and make further gains. In addition, monitoring response by objectively measuring recovery has been completely neglected until recent years. HRV, LSCT test etc are all fairly recent introductions.
Now we know you are trolling.
That myth has been dispelled numerous times.
Every team pays attention to details. Cyclist have been doing this attention to detail since Gino Bartali/Coppi/ Merckx etc to today.
Oh man. That takes me back to the days when marginal gains meant cave-aging your tubulars. The best kept secret a mechanic had was how many months they were put in storage.
John Swanson