bro is spitting the factspogi uses a motor, and the earth is flat.
bro is spitting the factspogi uses a motor, and the earth is flat.
I thought he changed bike the first time for speed, as there was some sort of issue with the chain. Then he got a puncture, so changed onto the original bike. I don't generally view Pogacar as having lots of bike changes to be honest.Good question. He has already been confronted in the podcast. He says that it is very time-consuming. There he says also that they are in the process of developing new control processes, as the current processes do not rule out the possibility of motor doping being used. Those are his words.
But ultimately they can do what they want as they are the only body authorised to control the bikes.
It is inexplicable to me that there is so little and inadequate control. There is really only one question I have to ask myself. Are they really trying to find something or is it just to look like it fot the good image of the sport?
Above all, we must not forget that they only check 1 bike per rider, if at all. What about all the bike changes? Like the one from Pogacar at Roubaix, for example. Why did he change his bike at all? He didn't have a flat tyre. In general, we've seen a lot of bike changes in recent years where I, as an amateur, always ask myself how shitty these high-end racing bikes must be. I ride more than 10k a year and have a maximum of 2 punctures a year. How can it be that the professionals with better material change their bikes that often?
Fair call, but I assume after checking the bikes after the stage the UCI mechanics give them back to the team mechanics who can do a quick check over to ensure zero issues before they are used for racing? Assuming the UCI and team mechanics have the right tools this should be quick and easy.And the teams probably don't trust the UCI either. I wouldn't want anyone but a team mechanic dismantling and reassembling a bike that will descend at 60mph the next day.
Mechanics ? Tools ? They ride them through a portable x-ray scanner in a back of truck. That's at least how it's done today.Fair call, but I assume after checking the bikes after the stage the UCI mechanics give them back to the team mechanics who can do a quick check over to ensure zero issues before they are used for racing? Assuming the UCI and team mechanics have the right tools this should be quick and easy.
But I am not sure when this happens though? If its a stage race then the UCI mechanics should be required to hand back the bike that night so that the team mechanics have time to do a quick recheck before the next day.
Rules are rules and for the betterment of the sport the teams should comply. But am more concerned the UCI isn't carrying out its own rules? The words of Lappartient are a worry.
Uninformed people are batting their eyes and scourging their backs against this heresy.
1.They also don't know how to ride a bike, at speed in a pack.
For all: you and some strong pals warm up a bit. Have them lead you out at 25 mph to a base of a 5-10% hill while you stay seated. You can gap off just a bit and take a spinning acceleration to the back end of the leadout. As you feel the grade toughen you can shift while staying in the saddle to maintain cadence. Keep doing that until you can't push a gear without getting out of the saddle.
Duplicate that exercise at a slower entry speed, staying close to the rider in front of you. Jump out of the saddle and gauge the difference in effort and how far you get up the hill until you are out of gears for bailout.
It's been done for years by riders that know how to do it, particularly riders that have raced high-speed and technical criteriums or fixed gear velodrome racing. A smart, not super-powerful rider once told me: "in a fast crit you can't spin too small a gear out of a corner". Saves tons of energy and allows the output to be even and not peak the pulse rate so soon you cannot adjust. It's also much more stable and aero to stay low while others thrash around you. You'll also be faster on an inside line allowing you to pass more thrashers.
If you don't see improvement; keep trying. If it seems impossible to spin that smoothly: see 1 above.
Or let one of your buddies try it.
I ve been using wireless shifting for more than 5 years and never had a problem with it nor a stuck front derailleur. I am not saying that these problems do not exist but the number of bike changes are ridiculously high. So I have to ask myself how that can be. How can it be that teams with the biggest budgets and the best technicians have so many mechanical problems? Above all, it's also bad publicity for all the brands if so many bikes are exchanged every race.Possibly because most are running the most current version of wireless shifting? How many times have you witnessed bike changes due to that or see riders banging their shoe against a stuck front derailleur? Couple that with debris stuck in disc brake calipers, etc and it's more than flat tires. It could even be sponsored tires that suck on slick pavement.
I've got cable shifting on my gravel bike and 13 speed, single ring Campy. Never a problem except sticky mud. It's rough here and few want to ride the newest stuff 'cause it's expensive to crash. The ProTour guys have no choice.
Yes the first time he changed it after his crash at 37km to go and then at 20km to go. It's difficult to judge from the TV and its Paris Roubaix where riders have punctures but when a rider has a real flat tyre, you can see it. This was not the case. Maybe it was a slow puncture or maybe he just wanted to get rid of this bike like Cancellara back in the days. Same for MVDP who changed his bike 5km after Pog changed it. Maybe it's just a stupid coincidence, but some bike changes make me wonder. But maybe I've just read and heard too much about motor doping recentlyI thought he changed bike the first time for speed, as there was some sort of issue with the chain. Then he got a puncture, so changed onto the original bike. I don't generally view Pogacar as having lots of bike changes to be honest.
These x ray scanners are rarely used. At least that's what the UCI president says. Tablets are used most often, but they are a joke. Even engines from 10 years ago can bypass these tests, according to Stefano Varjas. So think about what is possible with modern technology.Mechanics ? Tools ? They ride them through a portable x-ray scanner in a back of truck. That's at least how it's done today.
I don't see any issues with his cadence. It's nowhere near Froome's strange seated attacks.he looks like he is out for a training ride while his "fellow" alien is visibly going deep.
he is spinning a very high cadence when climbing (a sign to many experts that he has assistance).
his transformation (and that is what it has been) from excellent rider with human moments (pre-2024), to simply unbeatable on almost any terrain (24-present).
his team sponsored by sports-washing UAE.
his Dracula director, probably one of the most implicated cycling personalities in history as both a rider and as director (Ricco, Cobo).
it is really hard to believe in pog at all anymore.
I'm glad you got a laugh. First, I'm not a defender of Pogacar; rather explaining what people want to see as a characterization of cheating is explainable. It's also a real tactical advantage. Try it before you poo-poo it or further on yourself. Things are different in a race.This is genuinely hilarious, next-level comedy. We have now reached a point where the Pogi-defence is not only pointing to crits as the holy grail of "good cycling," but is even implying that crit-tactics are one-to-one transferable to a climb like Combloux. In its own way, this would also somewhat suggest that a rider like Contador, famous for going out of the saddle, especially when attacking, was neither "smart" nor "efficient," which is an utterly ridiculous claim to make when Contador produced top-level performances time and again with this approach.
Also, it's next-level gatekeeping and elitism to say that people are uninformed if they "don't know how to ride a bike, at speed in a pack." Firstly, that has very little relevance in the context of Pogi doing seated attacks in one-versus-one situations against Vingegaard. Secondly, even though I have experience "riding a bike, at speed in a pack," I would never claim to be more informed than many of the commentators or journalists who do not have this experience but, in return, work professionally in and around the sport every single day.
I can't think of any other rider, who had already established themselves at the pinnacle of the sport, who has bumped up their level so significantly, and so suddenly.
I agree on UCI testing. It's disastrous for them if they actually find something.I ve been using wireless shifting for more than 5 years and never had a problem with it nor a stuck front derailleur. I am not saying that these problems do not exist but the number of bike changes are ridiculously high. So I have to ask myself how that can be. How can it be that teams with the biggest budgets and the best technicians have so many mechanical problems? Above all, it's also bad publicity for all the brands if so many bikes are exchanged every race.
Mechanical problems are part of cycling, but the high number of supposed mechanical problems makes me doubt it. Especially those changes when you don´t even see a flat tyre. Like Pogacar at Paris Roubaix.
Yes the first time he changed it after his crash at 37km to go and then at 20km to go. It's difficult to judge from the TV and its Paris Roubaix where riders have punctures but when a rider has a real flat tyre, you can see it. This was not the case. Maybe it was a slow puncture or maybe he just wanted to get rid of this bike like Cancellara back in the days. Same for MVDP who changed his bike 5km after Pog changed it. Maybe it's just a stupid coincidence, but some bike changes make me wonder. But maybe I've just read and heard too much about motor doping recently
These x ray scanners are rarely used. At least that's what the UCI president says. Tablets are used most often, but they are a joke. Even engines from 10 years ago can bypass these tests, according to Stefano Varjas. So think about what is possible with modern technology.
And as Marshall-Bell exposed even in the Giro, for example, there are stages where there are no controls at all. So the controls are a joke and according to insiders and even the UCI president, motor doping is technically possible and that is really worrying.
You mean the two time tdf winner and monument winner suddenly being more highly competitive?I don't see any issues with his cadence. It's nowhere near Froome's strange seated attacks.
I agree that all your other points add to the plausibility that something, beyond physical doping, could be going on. For me the most suspicious thing is the leap in level from '23 to '24.
Look at the stats here:
![]()
Tadej Pogačar - Performance level, year-by-year analysis, watts estimations
The ultimate database of cycling performancewatts2win.eu
I can't think of any other rider, who had already established themselves at the pinnacle of the sport, who has bumped up their level so significantly, and so suddenly.
His teammates were astounded at the extra body weight he added at early season camps. He'd lift weights after they had finished 5+ hr rides. Ochowicz quizzed several riders to inquire if they knew what he was using. This was before his cancer diagnosis in '95.He won a world championship
Yeah, we mean exactly that one:You mean the two time tdf winner and monument winner suddenly being more highly competitive?
Thanks for this.Look at how the newspapers are attacking Gilbert for writing on X that he is "arrogant". He will never be caught.
Right now he could be racing on a scooter and people would still defend him, believe in him and tell you "without him Vingegaard would have won 10 TDF"
Read this interesting comment under a Substack article.
https://lesquale.substack.com/p/le-cyclisme-ne-sera-jamais-propre/comment/126456290
Raising the biological passport values before they become professionals is a possible option that many have already talked about.
This would also be a serious risk to their health.
Obviously Lance's rise was shocking, but it was a very different situation, as he had been away from the sport for a while, and hadn't been an established GT rider before the comeback.
Did you click the link in my post? There you can see what I mean. It's the 10% bump in w/kg from one season to the next, from a rider who was already number 1 in the world. I believe that's unprecedented. Possibly in any sport.You mean the two time tdf winner and monument winner suddenly being more highly competitive?
Ivan Basso's jump to RoboBasso in 2006?I don't see any issues with his cadence. It's nowhere near Froome's strange seated attacks.
I agree that all your other points add to the plausibility that something, beyond physical doping, could be going on. For me the most suspicious thing is the leap in level from '23 to '24.
Look at the stats here:
![]()
Tadej Pogačar - Performance level, year-by-year analysis, watts estimations
The ultimate database of cycling performancewatts2win.eu
I can't think of any other rider, who had already established themselves at the pinnacle of the sport, who has bumped up their level so significantly, and so suddenly.
Look at how the newspapers are attacking Gilbert for writing on X that he is "arrogant". He will never be caught.
Right now he could be racing on a scooter and people would still defend him, believe in him and tell you "without him Vingegaard would have won 10 TDF"
Read this interesting comment under a Substack article.
https://lesquale.substack.com/p/le-cyclisme-ne-sera-jamais-propre/comment/126456290
Raising the biological passport values before they become professionals is a possible option that many have already talked about.
This would also be a serious risk to their health.
Maybe. It's hard to judge exactly how good he was. He was already a guy who, in '04 and '05, could hang with Armstrong in the mountains at the Tour. I'm not sure a big leap in level was necessary to dominate the competition in the Giro. The Tour that year would have given us some answers, but it wasn't to be.Ivan Basso's jump to RoboBasso in 2006?
This is so true!Nicolas Fritsch from French Eurosport has apparently been bombarded with hate messages on social media after he criticized Pog for displaying some arrogance and disrespect during the Dauphiné. And Gilbert is getting hammered as well.
We're entering into peak Lance territory here except with a 2025 twist. Social media didn't exist during L.A.'s 7 TdF rampage. If it had done, then just imagine how aggressive his fans would have been. They probably would have employed some AI bots to defend his cause as well.
It won't get better for Pog either, i.e. once the dominance sets in and he's no longer got that 'youth' thing on his side, he becomes just another Terminator. It doesn't matter how much his fanboys defend him and love him, there's a large number of followers (certainly in France) who'll start to criticize him. We've seen it all before (& we'll hear the old "French people hate winners" stuff soon as well, I imagine).
I disagree, LA got absolutely hammered by the press from day one. These days the press don't even dare ask questionsWe're entering into peak Lance territory here except with a 2025 twist. Social media didn't exist during L.A.'s 7 TdF rampage. If it had done, then just imagine how aggressive his fans would have been. They probably would have employed some AI bots to defend his cause as well.
Yep. With people like Armstrong and Riis, there were many journalists asking questions. There's a famous interview with Riis angrily responding to a doping question.I disagree, LA got absolutely hammered by the press from day one. These days the press don't even dare ask questions