If it's used, UCI would know and let them get away with it.Do you guys think that motor doping is actually being used? I just refuse to believe it.
The Cycling News forum is still looking to add volunteer moderators with. If you're interested in helping keep our discussions on track, send a direct message to
In the meanwhile, please use the Report option if you see a post that doesn't fit within the forum rules.
Thanks!
If it's used, UCI would know and let them get away with it.Do you guys think that motor doping is actually being used? I just refuse to believe it.
Do you guys think that motor doping is actually being used? I just refuse to believe it.
This year, that was pretty much the case. That's why I stopped watching.Well... let's go there, shall we? If motors are being used it's with the consent of the authorities. From that point onwards... just forget it. The whole thing would be a rotting corpse & pro cycling would be dead forever. Aka a relic of the 20th century along with a few other old habits and hobbies. I already at times get the distinct feeling we're watching pro-wrestling and not an actual real sport... but with motors involved? I'd actually be p*ssed off. Not just because of the implications... but because I watch most of these races. I mean... what a royal waste of time if I'm watching moto gp.
Well, I actually went ahead and read that Guardian article by Jonathan. First, it looks like he said as much as he could afford to say, even liking the current "UAEed" version of procycling to WWE (if that's not a dead giveaway, what would be, in an "official" article at least?). So I would wager he does not believe that "talented clean rider" story for a second. His conclusion though is hyperpessimistic and postmodernistic (Heideggerian and well beyond) to the extreme. In a nutshell: there is no objective truth but only a personal choice what myth ("fiction") to live in. And to top it off, the objective truth searching direction represented on this forum, in particular, is labeled "profane and fearful" sending a message of sorts as to what flavor of postmodernist "fiction" is preferred by the system these days.
We knew 100% Armstrong was doping when nobody knew he was doping, at least I and many others did. Now we have the better than Merckx done in an outfit run by Gianetti-Matxin, who guided Ricco, Piepoli and Cobo. Not even Armstrong had such glaring markers, while today those records get destroyed on porridge for breakfast. It's like believing in Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny and the Tooth Fairy.I do not know if Pogacar is doping, like all of us don't.
Aesthetics is a subjective philosophical truth , de gustibus non disputandem est, however, a certain virtue exists between an anatomical study by Leonardo da Vinci and my stick figure (while the ancient Greeks believed mathematical proportions resulting in harmony and symmetry constituted objective beauty). Apart from this, a factum happens, as in either Pogacar is doped or isn't, irrespective of if the tree falls in the woods and nobody is there to hear it.I'm a bit lost here, in what way is this a Heideggarian clonclusion or notion of truth. That it is postmodern, I might be inclined to agree with on certain aspects.
But the claim in itself that "there is no objective truth" does not necessarily make it postmodernist. Most concepts of truth nowadays are either literalistically naturalistic representationalist, or they are relativistic (not to be confusion with relational) insofar as they posit some absolute truth to exist, but to be given to us only in subjective deformations, so absolute but not objectively accessible. (I am not arguing for either here, I think they are both naive and paradoxical). There's also often a notion that truth is what we can (successfully) agree on, and so figurates as a basis for further truth, given a proper regime of implementation. All of this spoken very roughly of course. Liew seems to go into a different direction in that he evokes beauty as a guiding principle for truth in sports (if I may intepret him this way). So it's an aesthetical idea of truth, which usually belongs into art. And with art I guess the question really is how do put a demarcation line between seeming and being. But this does not seem to me to be to express what actually is revealed through the experience of sports, or competitions. So where beauty as such does not demand reality, I think the Idea of competetive sports does demand reality of performances, and reality meaning naturally possible.
I doubt it. But I will fess up and say its getting worrisome since the Tour. The manner of his worlds win and now Lombardia are simply crazy. He just pulled off the double. Then the triple crown and is going on with it. And he still looks so fresh after races and seems to be winning with ease its quite ridiculous.Do you guys think that motor doping is actually being used? I just refuse to believe it.
Aesthetics is a subjective philosophical truth , de gustibus non disputandem est, however, a certain virtue exists between an anatomical study by Leonardo da Vinci and my stick figure (while the ancient Greeks believed mathematical proportions resulting in harmony and symmetry constituted objective beauty). Apart from this, a factum happens, as in either Pogacar is doped or isn't, irrespective of if the tree falls in the woods and nobody is there to hear it.
😂I doubt it. But I will fess up and say its getting worrisome since the Tour. The manner of his worlds win and now Lombardia are simply crazy. He just pulled off the double. Then the triple crown and is going on with it. And he still looks so fresh after races and seems to be winning with ease its quite ridiculous.
Claiming he was empty after the Giro now seems very hard to accept. He might have been "dead" when he collapsed on Loze last year but I am yet to see him truly suffer in a race or stage this season - maybe stage 11 in the Tour when Vingegaard out sprinted him?
OTOH, Pogacar was so young when he came under Gianetti and he truly announced himself as the 2nd youngest ever winner of the Tour in 2020 at 21. So natural progression might explain why he is even stronger now at 26. But the lack of suffering? Even Miguel Indurain in his prime during the heights (depths?) of the EPO era grimaced.
No, it's simple, does he take performance enhancing drugs or have a mechanical enhancement? That is the question, my dear Watson. Ontology has nothing more to do with it as me saying the sky Is green with purple polka-dots. Not even the maintain classification has such.😂Still, it's a rather complex factum, if someone is doped or not. It's much closer to a truth that is dependent on someone hearing the tree, than say if it's a fact weather someone was on the moon or not, because doping is relative to our norms. Even if we try to give an ontological characteristic to doping, which we do as it pressuposes some - however fuzzy - notion of the natural. But that being said: there's an operating legal understanding of doping and ethical and moral ones, so we are not in the blue and I think the fuzzy ontological notion, that doping is what gives you an "unnatural advantage" is actually concrete enough in living cultures of evaluation to be worked with.
The question remain open and interesting though what idea(s) of nature we actually presuppose and what tells us about our selfs, or what we want "true sport" to be like and why.
No, it's simple, does he take performance enhancing drugs or have a mechanical enhancement? That is the question, my dear Watson.
Ontology has nothing more to do with it as me saying the sky Is green with purple polka-dots. Not even the maintain classification has such.😂
First of all, would you agree that this Jonathan fellow said enough on whether he himself believes in that "clean talented rider" narrative by likening the show we witnessed this year to pro wrestling? I thought that was pretty clear. Then he said that it did not matter 'cause it is basically nothing more than a show (and not a sporting competition in the traditional sense) that should be judged on the criterion of "beauty" (apparently, the kind of "beauty" that makes people on this forum cringe). I thought that was pretty clear as well -- and very postmodernistic.I'm a bit lost here, in what way is this a Heideggarian clonclusion or notion of truth. That it is postmodern, I might be inclined to agree with on certain aspects.
But the claim in itself that "there is no objective truth" does not necessarily make it postmodernist. Most concepts of truth nowadays are either literalistically naturalistic representationalist, or they are relativistic (not to be confusion with relational) insofar as they posit some absolute truth to exist, but to be given to us only in subjective deformations, so absolute but not objectively accessible. (I am not arguing for either here, I think they are both naive and paradoxical). There's also often a notion that truth is what we can (successfully) agree on, and so figurates as a basis for further truth, given a proper regime of implementation. All of this spoken very roughly of course. Liew seems to go into a different direction in that he evokes beauty as a guiding principle for truth in sports (if I may intepret him this way). So it's an aesthetical idea of truth, which usually belongs into art. And with art I guess the question really is how to put a demarcation line between seeming and being. But this does not seem to me to express what actually is revealed through the experience of sports, or competitions. So where beauty as such does not demand reality, I think the Idea of competetive sports does demand reality of performances, and reality meaning naturally possible.
Seriously? Do you understand that Pogacars Giro and TdF were more dominant than Armstrongs best TdF ever?I'm more inclined to give the benefit of the doubt to riders like Pogacar who have a rounded programme throughout the year - riding in the one-day races - rather then spending long periods out of competition. I feel this is something that the most suspect riders (Ving, Indurain etc) do not do - and Armstrong of course,
Distributed? How does that work, how many watts boost and does such a system even exist? Some kind of magnetic assistance? Magnetic assistance will require Iron, steel, nickel or cobalt - all very heavy.system distributed along the length of the lower half of the seat tube
So does any electric motor. Still, a brushless motor capable of producing 300W of power weighs less than a pound. Carbon bikes can be made so light that some of them require extra weight just to make UCI limit. So that should not be a problem. How exactly does such system work? In principle, in the same way as any electric motor, utilizing the good old Faraday law. What exactly are the parameters of the system likely utilized by UAE this year? As soon as they fill me in, I'll dutifully share it on these pages.Distributed? How does that work, how many watts boost and does such a system even exist? Some kind of magnetic assistance? Magnetic assistance will require Iron, steel, nickel or cobalt - all very heavy.
Nah, I still don't believe you can hide a motor system generating significant boost. If true that would already have been tried in Formula 1 with far bigger budgets than even UAE (Formula 1 team budgets are restricted to $US 135mil). UAE's budget is €55 million to €60 million.So does any electric motor. Still, a brushless motor capable of producing 300W of power weighs less than a pound. Carbon bikes can be made so light that some of them require extra weight just to make UCI limit. So that should not be a problem. How exactly does such system work? In principle, in the same way as any electric motor, utilizing the good old Faraday law. What exactly are the parameters of the system likely utilized by UAE this year? As soon as they fill me in, I'll dutifully share it on these pages.
Nevertheless LA was more humble inside the bike. He just cared about the Tour, and during the Tour after having a good gap he let the breakaways and the french riders win stages.To just deppreciate a rider? Of course not. And no, we don't have different opinions, Pogacar is doped to the gills but coming here saying he is worse than LA? Are we serious? And I'm not talking about doping, I'm talking about personality. I was a huge fan of LA but he humiliated a lot of people and reading here Pogacar is worse than him, it's not okay.
That which makes you go artificially faster is doping, however we want to put it on the plain of quantum physics.I wasn't arguing that it's hard to know or that it's up to mere interpretation. Rather the opposite actually. Of course that's the question that it boils down to, but it's still a 'complex' fact because you need all sorts of concept's to constitute it. And with which concepts we do that and why is stil linteresting. I don't see why now. At least to me it is.
I don't really know what part of my post you are relating this to, so I'll just say: sure ontology has something to do with it. The existence of a substance is characterized by it being "performance enhancing", it furthermore is supposed to not to be used because it interferes with the natural 'being' of the cyclist. And also if you view 'ontology' as a basic inventory of types of stuff that can exist, than well this also happenes in Anti-Doping, you even have a list of banned substances, that have a common characteristic, in being "performance enhancing".
Why not?Nah, I still don't believe you can hide a motor system generating significant boost.
Because it can't be hidden and nothing posted here says they exist. It is only possible with UCI collusion. It would already be tried in Formula 1 if it was technically feasible.Why not?
He was a jerk on the bike too. Miss the Filippo Simeoni incident? I just don't see Pogacar as that kind of personality.Outside the bike, LA was obviously a jerk.
I wasn't talking in those circumstances. I was talking about not rage the other teams, by not let breakaways happen, for example.He was a jerk on the bike too. Miss the Filippo Simeoni incident? I just don't see Pogacar as that kind of personality.