Dear Wiggo said:
			
		
	
	
		
		
			Dude you can't even keep your story straight. Don't strawman it with a personal attack.
		
		
	 
Just like DW, you've got no argument so you play the victim card. Every time I post in this forum I do so with the intent of stimulating proper and decent discussion of the facts, but without fail, you and others come along and derail the discussion with idiotic troll rubbish almost every time. It is childish and stupid. 
My argument has never changed. It has always been the same.  The fastest ascent times up major climbs are minutes slower compared to the 90s and early 2000s. There is a clear trend occurring here and it is a plain and simple fact.
1	37' 35"	Marco Pantani	1997
2*	37' 36"	Lance Armstrong	2004
3	38' 00"	Marco Pantani	1994
4	38' 01"	Lance Armstrong	2001
5	38' 04"	Marco Pantani	1995
6	38' 23"	Jan Ullrich	1997
7	38' 34"	Floyd Landis	2006
8	38' 35"	Andreas Klöden	2006
9*	38' 37"	Jan Ullrich	2004
10	39' 02"	Richard Virenque	1997
11	39' 06"	Iban Mayo	2003
12*	39' 17"	Andreas Klöden	2004
13*	39' 21"	Jose Azevedo	2004
14	39' 28"	Miguel Induráin	1995
15	39' 28"	Alex Zülle	1995
16	39' 30"	Bjarne Riis	1995
17	39' 31"	Carlos Sastre	2008
18	39' 44"	Gianni Bugno	1991
19	39' 45"	Miguel Induráin	1991
20	40' 00"	Jan Ullrich	2001
21	40' 46"	Fränk Schleck	2006
22	40' 51"	Alexander Vinokourov	2003
23	41' 18"	Lance Armstrong	2003
24	41' 21"	Samuel Sánchez	2011
25	41' 30"	Alberto Contador	2011
26	41' 46"	Cadel Evans	2008
27	41' 50"	Laurent Fignon	1989
28	41' 50"	Luis Herrera	1987
29	41' 57"	Pierre Rolland	2011
30	42' 15"	Pedro Delgado	1989
31	43' 12"	Ryder Hesjedal	2011
32	43' 12"	Thomas Danielson	2011
33	45' 20"	Gert-Jan Theunisse	1989
34	45' 22"	Fausto Coppi	1952
35	48' 00"	Bernard Hinault	1986
36	48' 00"	Greg LeMond	1986
There are 13 names on that list who went under 40mins. Several of those never won a GT. Azevedo's best result was 5th, but nowadays even GT winners can't get within 2 minutes of his time. I'm not the one who looks at a single rider in isolation and cherry picks one result here or there to fit the numbers to some preconceived bias. 
I don't know what to make of Sastre's time in 2008 except this, either he was doping, we are underestimating what a clean rider is capable of, or we are overestimating the effects of PEDs on maximal hill climbing performance.  No matter what, the trend is still there.