- Mar 13, 2009
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come on, just no one beats ricky riccio! no one beats ricky riccio.Dear Wiggo said:
who says? I say.
no one beats ricky riccio
come on, just no one beats ricky riccio! no one beats ricky riccio.Dear Wiggo said:
but one tangible.Nick C. said:Pozzovivo is the only rider that shows up on both charts and he went up 22 seconds faster in 2012? Better drugs in 2012? Tailwind? Trained harder? Improved with age and experience? Tried harder? Better equipment? Better luck/positioning? Better legs? The possibilities are endless.
blackcat said:come on, just no one beats ricky riccio! no one beats ricky riccio.
who says? I say.
no one beats ricky riccio
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Kreuziger attacked 25km from the finish. He won the stage.sniper said:I see a doped up Kreuziger there losing almost one and a half minute on clean Hesjedal on an 8km climb.
Good to see doping makes you weaker.
sniper said:I see a doped up Kreuziger there losing almost one and a half minute on clean Hesjedal on an 8km climb.
Good to see doping makes you weaker.
Parker said:Kreuziger was in the break all day. He won the stage.
This is a prime example of someone who just looks at the times and jumps to a conclusion without actually watching the race.
Parker said:Kreuziger was in the break all day. He won the stage.
This is a prime example of someone who just looks at the times and jumps to a conclusion without actually watching the race.
Yeah, I corrected it. 'All day' was something of an exaggeration.burning said:He attacked around 25k to go, he was not in the first breakaway.
Parker said:Yeah, I corrected it. 'All day' was something of an exaggeration.
To be honest I rarely get to see the last week of a Giro as I'm usually away so I didn't really know how long he'd been out there. (I was in Croatia when it actually happened)burning said:I thought you literally mean "All day", your point still stands though.
Parker said:Kreuziger attacked 25km from the finish. He won the stage.
This is a prime example of someone who just looks at the times and jumps to a conclusion without actually watching the race.
i see you had to edit your post because you got it wrong.Parker said:Kreuziger attacked 25km from the finish. He won the stage.
This is a prime example of someone who just looks at the times and jumps to a conclusion without actually watching the race.
No. The conclusion that on that day Kreuziger was 'weaker'.Benotti69 said:What conclusion that Kreuziger is a doper?
I knew he won the stage though - the details were just overstated. And I didn't make any judgements on the performances either, did I?sniper said:i see you had to edit your post because you got it wrong.
prime example indeed.
fair enough, he was weaker the whole three weeks.Parker said:No. The conclusion that on that day Kreuziger was 'weaker'.
that fact had already been established independently.Parker said:I knew he won the stage though - the details were just overstated. And I didn't make any judgements on the performances either, did I?
Benotti69 said:What conclusion that Kreuziger is a doper?
The only conclusion a sane thinking person would draw is that the only change in the sport is better doping techniques........
Benotti69 said:ammattipyoraily on twitter has a very interesting table showing climb times up Alpe Di Pampeago from Giro 2008 and Giro 2012.
Menchov climbed it the fastest in 2008 with a time of 25:23
Hesjedal climbed it the fastest in 2012 with a time of 25:00.
Digger said:I think it's time we backed off Ryder. Jv says he's clean, and jv says he believes him when Ryder said he stopped doping before phonak. That's enough for me.
perhaps he meant that rather literally."And the testing in place now is very effective. My guess is fewer than 5 percent [of riders are doping]. When I crunch the numbers like mean hemoglobin, basically we see that if you took 200 people off the street you'd get a very similar average level. Climbing speeds are less impressive than in 20 years. To me, the combination of those factors means that if doping is occurring, it's at a small level and it's not effective. It's not going to win you the race every time. Not even close. While it is impossible and unrealistic to eliminate cheating in any sport, to me the doping problem in cycling is contained enough today that talented, hard-working riders on the best teams win the majority of top races. For the first time in 100 years of cycling, that formula is working more often than it ever has. 2012 was an incredible year for clean cycling. And we're on a good track for 2013."
http://espn.go.com/espn/otl/story/_...te-talks-doping-espn-magazine-interview-issue
