roundabout said:His brake was rubbing?
Kinda obvious that his prep was wrong that day.
Yeah, Beloki and Ullrich too
roundabout said:His brake was rubbing?
Kinda obvious that his prep was wrong that day.
pmcg76 said:Yeah, Beloki and Ullrich too![]()
roundabout said:Ullrich was sick IIRC and Beloki went from 2 minutes down to finishing s.t.
So yeah, 2 minutes of your 3.30 are quite explainable
pmcg76 said:....personal attacks.........
Why were they faster in 2012? any number of reasons as has been pointed out a million times. Race conditions, race tactics, weather conditions, race route, there are so many factors that can affect times year to year.
except of course when the claim is made that cycling has slowed down compared to the Dark era.pmcg76 said:Well if that 66km is flat or mostly flat and there is a huge distance between the first climb and the next one, Tonale-Mortirolo its neglible because it means they can cruise until the Mortirolo, therefore arriving relatively fresh.
A bit different if you are hitting a major Col every 30km, the cumulative wearing down effect will have more of an impact. None of the climbs might be as hard as the Mortirolo but the fatigue factor will play a bigger part.
No I am not arguing times should be faster in the 3rd week, the simple argument is that race conditions, tactics are different so therefore if riders are still battling for the win in the 3rd week, they are more likely to be going full-on than if things are mostly already decided. There are so many varying factors that it is pointless to even compare.
I posted about times on Alpe d'Huez 2003 V 2001. Why the time differences? Why a 3.30 time difference for Lance?
There's a difference between using a small amount of data to reach a specific conclusion and using a large amount of data to reach a general conclusion. (And even then I think there are some flaws in reaching that general conclusion)sniper said:except of course when the claim is made that cycling has slowed down compared to the Dark era.In that case the comparison is useful.
When it points to the opposite, the data are suddenly pointless.
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really?Parker said:There's a difference between using a small amount of data to reach a specific conclusion and using a large amount of data to reach a general conclusion. (And even then I think there are some flaws in reaching that general conclusion)
sniper said:except of course when the claim is made that cycling has slowed down compared to the Dark era.In that case the comparison is useful.
When it points to the opposite, the data are suddenly pointless.
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Benotti69 said:A millions times? care to link 100 examples?
In 2008, Alpe di Pampeago was the first mountains stage(st 14) which are not always raced to the max. The following day was the 5 Col Classic, Pordoi, San Pellegrino, Giau, Falzarego and finishing on the Marmolada, an epic stage and the toughest of that Giro. At a guess I would say they were keeping their powder mostly dry for that particular stage, especially when the following day was the Plan des Cornes Mountain TT.
In comparison 2012 came on the 3rd last day when the overall victory was still up for grabs so nobody would have been holding back, all trying to gain time before the TT on the last day.
See, differing race circumstances at the minimun.
...........snipped...........
Don't worry, I don't expects answers. Just more avoidance and the usual waffling.
pmcg76 said:My God, you guys are slow.
.............
Different posters with different opinions.Nick C. said:This is a funny place. One thread up I see this from Red Flanders (I think):
"I did not say winning = cheating. Did anyone? I said riding faster than any clean athlete ever and as fast or faster than the best dopers ever = doping. Which is true. Winning = Cheating is nonsense.
If you need to alter, twist or reframe things to continue a debate, maybe consider why that might be."
The post I respond to says otherwise. So confusing. Then again it's only a message board so what exactly should I expect.
Nick C. said:This is a funny place. One thread up I see this from Red Flanders (I think):
"I did not say winning = cheating. Did anyone? I said riding faster than any clean athlete ever and as fast or faster than the best dopers ever = doping. Which is true. Winning = Cheating is nonsense.
If you need to alter, twist or reframe things to continue a debate, maybe consider why that might be."
The post I respond to says otherwise. So confusing. Then again it's only a message board so what exactly should I expect.
fair points.pmcg76 said:My God, you guys are slow.
Comparing year to year is pointless unless you have the exact same factors, wind, route, tactics etc. Some years are fast, some are slow becasue of all the varying factors.
However, take the times over a period of time(3 years/5 years etc) and average them out, that is where it becomes more relevant because the outliers and varying factors will average themselves out giving a clearer view of things.
I demonstrated this in the Power Estimates thread using Alpe d'Huez as it is the most frequently climbed historical finishing Col in the Tour.
Average Top 5 time for 2001-03-06 is 39.57
Average Top 5 time for 2008-11-13 is 41.08
That is a trend. Times have slowed.
But. Is their outliers? Yes.
Average times for Top 5 by year.
2001: 39.24
2003: 40.49
2006: 39.03
2008: 41.14
2011: 41.50
2013: 40.31
If you extend it out to Top 10, it becomes more pronounced.
Now if someone wants to go through lots of differing climbs to do this, be my guest.
Benotti69 said:You need to clean up your post and get the quotes in correct order.
Is a forum, not an Anti doping agency.
I think if doping was no longer part of the fabric of the sport we would see and hear that monumental change, but all we hear is talk and nothing to back up that talk.
Take Ryder's blood values from his Giro win. When it was pointed out to Vaughters his 3rd week values showed an anomaly, Vaughters dismissed it with the excuse of machine calibration error and left it at that, just an excuse, nothing to demonstrate the machine was at fault.
plus ça change![]()
sniper said:fair points.
A pity you didn't do 2012.
Anyway, so the trend is towards slower times.
Doesn't that make Froome's and Hesjedal's outliers all the more suspicious?
Benotti69 said:You need to clean up your post and get the quotes in correct order.
Is a forum, not an Anti doping agency.
I think if doping was no longer part of the fabric of the sport we would see and hear that monumental change, but all we hear is talk and nothing to back up that talk.
Take Ryder's blood values from his Giro win. When it was pointed out to Vaughters his 3rd week values showed an anomaly, Vaughters dismissed it with the excuse of machine calibration error and left it at that, just an excuse, nothing to demonstrate the machine was at fault.
plus ça change![]()
Nick C. said:But it is still somewhere between amusing and logically incoherent even coming from different people who are typically on the same side of the argument.
DirtyWorks said:Somewhere between amusing and logically incoherent nicely summarizes the UCI's anti-doping activities. Unfortunately, it's all we have to work with.
Nick C. said:You missed the point. The quote was one guy says noone ever says winning=doping. One page down I read exactly that. There was a whole Dan Martin thread that inferred we won a Monument ergo he must dope or else he could not beat or hang with dopers. I get that "we are a forum not WADA or a court of law". But it is still somewhere between amusing and logically incoherent even coming from different people who are typically on the same side of the argument.
I appreciate the lecture on calibration. I got the point three years ago when it came up initially but I guess the horse still has a pulse.
Benotti69 said:So what do you do on Garmin?
Internship?
Benotti69 said:So what do you do on Garmin?
Internship?
pmcg76 said:My God, you guys are slow.
Comparing year to year is pointless unless you have the exact same factors, wind, route, tactics etc. Some years are fast, some are slow becasue of all the varying factors.
However, take the times over a period of time(3 years/5 years etc) and average them out, that is where it becomes more relevant because the outliers and varying factors will average themselves out giving a clearer view of things.
I demonstrated this in the Power Estimates thread using Alpe d'Huez as it is the most frequently climbed historical finishing Col in the Tour.
Average Top 5 time for 2001-03-06 is 39.57
Average Top 5 time for 2008-11-13 is 41.08
That is a trend. Times have slowed.
But. Is their outliers? Yes.
Average times for Top 5 by year.
2001: 39.24
2003: 40.49
2006: 39.03
2008: 41.14
2011: 41.50
2013: 40.31
If you extend it out to Top 10, it becomes more pronounced.
Now if someone wants to go through lots of differing climbs to do this, be my guest.
GoodTimes said:RE comparing climbing times from year to year, I have to agree that this method actually has some value. I think if multiple different climbs were added, it would start to and show meaningful trends.
You've stated you don't want to go through the exercise of collecting all of this data (and fair enough, I don't want to go through the time, either...). Bu, would you be able to compute the student t distribution for these years to show the variability and statistical relevance of the data, or provide me with the source data so that I can do the computation?