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roundabout said:Bernocchi is the sprinter race in the Trittico.
Mellow Velo said:You may want to check my initial post. It says age 17: Junior P-R.
You can only wear rainbow bands in the discipline in which they were won,
as we all know.
So, the youngest starter and finisher of the 2007 Tour as a domestique, while winning a senior world title on the track.
At 21, Olympic champion, starts and finishes a tough Giro as a domestique and finished 5th in an "rolling" Italian semi classic.
This is all meaningless.
This started out as a debate about natural progression.
When talented riders mature and are given a chance to move up the ladder.
Yet it seems if you ride for Sky, but can't climb like young Nairo Quintana from day one, you should never be able to get over a speed bump.
That is the exception to the natural progression rule.
which is incorrect.Taylor 2 Thomas 1.
JimmyFingers said:Sky rider rides well, he's a doper. Particularly if he's a British Sky rider, definitely a doper. I'm confident in G
JimmyFingers said:Sky rider rides well, he's a doper. Particularly if he's a British Sky rider, definitely a doper. I'm confident in G
martinvickers said:I think two issues cloud the Boardman question.
1) his link with Peter Keen, the original godfather of the British renaissance. Boardman was to all intents and purposes Keen's "proof of concept" for the rejuvenated high performance track squad, the first signing of which was one 19yo Bradley Wiggins.
If Boardman was dirty with Keen, it places the entire track program in a dangerous light, unless the argument is that a clean Boardman went to France, saw 'the way things were' and THEN joined in.
2) Obree. Pretty much matched Boardman in both IP and going for the hour, with less resources. And Obree has a solid record re: doping if anyone does.
The point being, if Obree could do it clean, then in theory there's no pure performance reason why boardman could not have done it clean either, at least the bits and at the times where they were in direct competition.
I haven't read the Gaumont book yet, only hearing stuff second hand from it. not sure my Year 5 french will be up to it, but Must chase it up, sounds interesting.
BYOP88 said:You may have said in your initial post, Junior P-R, but when I asked how many P-R's Phinney had won you answered which is incorrect.
BYOP88 said:So he was the youngest starter in the TdF, well someone in the race has to be the youngest and barring no one finishing the race there will always be a youngest finisher. Yes he did win a Senior world title on the track but track and road are different beasts, otherwise Theo Bos and Grégory Baugé would be elite road sprinters with green jerseys and boatloads of GT stage wins.
22 years old isn't that young for an Olympic champion. So he finished a "tough" Giro whilst being a domestique, I'm guessing he wasn't the first 22 year old to achieve that. 5th in a semi-classic!!!!! World Beater right there! So he finished 5th in an Italian semi-classic STFW! Harm Ottenbros must be one of the greatest cyclists ever then because he won the Worlds in 1969.
Sky do have a great success rate of (un)natural progression, turning donkeys into race horses since the end of 2010.
I mean what's your take on Froome's transformation from autobus to destroying busted and known dopers on climbs and beating world ITT champs in TT's whilst looking like an inmate from a concentration camp.
Also by your logic the guys that were 'climbing' with Thomas in 2007 and 2008 should also have progressed just like Thomas, I mean sure some of them might be bone idle bankers and runts and just taken the paycheck but I'm sure some of them actually work just as hard as Thomas.
Regarding climbing, do you not find it 'more believable' when a guy shows some ability at a young age instead of transforming later in their career?
the sceptic said:Jimmy, just because they are british doesnt mean they must be dopers.
Take Wiggins for example. He now takes on turn on the front, and then goes straight out the back as soon as there is an incline on the road. Today I saw him on the back of the peloton, struggling to hang on. He looks credible to me now, I believe he could be clean.
Mellow Velo said:My fault for not realising/recognising that you'd moved it on.
Hadn't entered my head, since the average age of a P-R winner is around 30 and I was talking about young riders naturally progressing.
He was the outstanding rider in the 2011 Tour of Flanders, as a domestique, which shows the relative early ability to manage short climbs.
I won't try to address the issues regarding swapping between two disciplines, mid season.
They wouldn't be considered relevant, if I did.
He's featuring in the GC battle in the flattest P-N just about ever.
So far, one 800 metre effort on a 3km hill.
This is a race that Tony Martin has won.
He will lose the jersey tomorrow and further seconds on Saturday.
He's never won a MTF. He's never won a hilly GC.
He's 3rd from last in a proper mountain train.
The "heated" portion of your post reads as if he's about to win the Tour, which is you progressing his climbing ability very unnaturally.
It was on TVBYOP88 said:For the bolded part can you post the links to the articles that state 'Thomas was the outstanding rider in the 2011 Tour of Flanders'. Thanks
JimmyFingers said:Sky rider rides well, he's a doper. Particularly if he's a British Sky rider, definitely a doper. I'm confident in G
red_flanders said:I'd be so much more interested in your POV if you could lose the nationalistic, defensive posture. No one gives a crap if they're British.
They get attacked because they're winning a LOT, some are putting in ridiculous performances, and they claim to be clean. Full stop.
Let it go.
BYOP88 said:Nothing 'heated' about my post. I never said or implied that he was going to win the TdF. I was surprised that he could climb well enough to put GC leaders of other teams under pressure. But that's my bad for not remembering he once finished 5th in a semi-classic in Italy.
For the bolded part can you post the links to the articles that state 'Thomas was the outstanding rider in the 2011 Tour of Flanders'. Thanks
Also where do you stand on Thomas and his love of Omertà?
Catwhoorg said:This is very true.
Boardman (and to a lesser extent Obree), paved the way for the whole lottery funding of British Track Cycling.
SundayRider said:But less confident in Wiggo? He's been 'outed' by Floyd.
martinvickers said:Floyd's opinion is obvious enough - but given their paths barely crossed, I'm not sure you could call it an 'outing'...
lllludo said:1) Boardman was a gold medalist at Barcelona in 1992 coached by Keen. He joined Legeay and GAN in 1993. In 1992-93 Legeay's team only bright spot was Duclos-Lassalle winning Paris-Roubaix so I'm not sure at all there was a EPO team doping ring at that time. IMO it's unlikely Boardman discovered EPO at GAN'93. According to some, he was already using it in Barcelona'92.
2) Obree ...how do we know Obree was clean ? Of course he has been vocal but we'll probably never know. If he was clean he was probably a superior athlete assisted by supeior technology
DirtyWorks said:For now!! Let's see if there's a transformation. In the history of oxygen vector dopers, you have a few of them suffering in total anonymity most of the year. And then suddenly...
red_flanders said:I'd be so much more interested in your POV if you could lose the nationalistic, defensive posture. No one gives a crap if they're British.
They get attacked because they're winning a LOT, some are putting in ridiculous performances, and they claim to be clean. Full stop.
Let it go.
thehog said:A spanking?![]()
martinvickers said:But there is a subset sometimes seem to find 'anglos' (I wouldn't say just brits) winning, as inherently unacceptable. And it's fair to note that too.