- Feb 19, 2013
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JimmyFingers said:Certain posters are fond of aggrandising this place, themselves and its role
You mean, like describing themselves as
Galic Ho said:the clinic guard, the elect few
for example?
JimmyFingers said:Certain posters are fond of aggrandising this place, themselves and its role
Galic Ho said:the clinic guard, the elect few
willbick said:what complete nonsense. are u seriously suggesting that being by far the best 4km pursuit rider in the world is not a good indication that Wiggins could go up a mountain pretty well (especially if he lost a few kgs)
lavieclaire said:Just out of the mildest of interest, what metric are you using for this judgement?
willbick said:what complete nonsense. are u seriously suggesting that being by far the best 4km pursuit rider in the world is not a good indication that Wiggins could go up a mountain pretty well (especially if he lost a few kgs)
the sceptic said:common sense
Moose McKnuckles said:1. Palmares, for one.
2. History of climbing capacity.
3. Froome only recently acquired the ability to climb in a straight line.
JMBeaushrimp said:The course benefited those riders, and Purito. A GT climber isn't necessarily going to be strong at a short 30% climb, especially if it's done 3X; nor is a GT climber going to be reknowned for b*lls-out descending ability.
Sagan and Nibali are known to be awesome descenders, and the vast majority of Froome's time was lost on the descent. With those three off the front working together, and they were obviously driving it, a chase group doesn't have much of a chance to bring them back in a few kms.
..
Escarabajo said:Jimmy,
It has been stated here already, numbers at or below 5.9-6.0 w/kg are not suspicious. What is suspicious is most of the team members hitting it at the same time. Sometimes driving up the mountains in group together at this power output (read Michael Rogers comments last year) is just suspicious because of statistical selection. A person hitting that number is a very special athlete, let alone most of the team doing it. In the 80's the only riders that were doing it were the Tour champions usually or some special mountain goats. This is not proof but is suspicious.
What Acoggan said about the natural freaks could be true, but if a fan were to choose between 1- doping and 2- natural freak, given the doping history of the sports, which one do you think the fan is going to pick? So don't get emotional over people suspecting doping on team Sky.
The Hitch said:Rodriguez is a winner of the Giro di Lombardia in similar conditions, a former podium finisher and a podium finisher of Liege Bastogne Liege as well as several podiums and wins in semi classics
Nibali is a podium finisher of Liege Bastogne Liege and Milan San Remo.
Sagan last year at 22 came top 5 in MSR Flanders and Amstel Gold.
All 3 riders are clearly more well suited to yesterdays stage than Froome or Contador.
JMBeaushrimp said:The course benefited those riders, and Purito. A GT climber isn't necessarily going to be strong at a short 30% climb, especially if it's done 3X; nor is a GT climber going to be reknowned for b*lls-out descending ability.
Sagan and Nibali are known to be awesome descenders, and the vast majority of Froome's time was lost on the descent. With those three off the front working together, and they were obviously driving it, a chase group doesn't have much of a chance to bring them back in a few kms.
Yesterday wasn't representative of much apart from who can fight their way up a retardedly steep col, and who can pull off risky descents.
Besides, I'm in no way saying anyone on the podium yesterday is clean.
I still love cycling, but the sport is going to have to do a lot more before I think any of the elites are riding paniagua...
BYOP88 said:Just wondering and this may have been covered already. But when Sky warm down after they've won a stage, got the leaders jersey or random selection, do they do it pre or post the after stage doping controls?
Fearless Greg Lemond said:It was a deja vue to the Olympic Road Race, where the Italians/Swiss/Spanjards and VINO went gungho against Team Brittain. Uncontrollable with 4 domestiques.
I was mostly impressed by the ease of Rodriguez. But this is those guys terrain. L-B-L/la Fleche Walonne profile. Why was for instance Mollema right up there? Or Poels? Evans? Sanchez?
Uran could have been up there if he wouldnt have had to play the domistique.
But who said those guys are clean? Their carreer path is just somehow more gradient/believable.
Moose McKnuckles said:1. Palmares, for one.
2. History of climbing capacity.
3. Froome only recently acquired the ability to climb in a straight line.
JimmyFingers said:I will say T-A proves that Sky can't necessarily bring those numbers up throughout the team 'on tap' all the time. If you were to look at T-A objectively, you only see one stage when Sky were able to dominate. In a race over 7 stages, you should expect one team to be able to put on a show of force, and perhaps also expect them to fade afterwards, as Sky did. As I said, performance is inconclusive.
Fearless Greg Lemond said:Tour de France, the ranking of the 2000s (W / kg)
1 Lance Armstrong | 2003 | 6.18 W / kg
2 Alberto Contador | 2009 | 6.17 W / kg
3 Lance Armstrong | 2004 | 6.09 W / kg
4 Lance Armstrong | 2005 | 6.09 W / kg
5 Lance Armstrong | 2001 | 6.07 W / kg
6 Bradley Wiggins | 2012 | 5.98 W / kg
7 Lance Armstrong | 2000 | 5.97 W / kg
8 Lance Armstrong | 2002 | 5.97 W / kg
9 Alberto Contador | 2007 | 5.92 W / kg
10 Carlos Sastre | 2008 | 5.85 W / kg
11 Alberto Contador | 2010 | 5.78 W / kg
12 Cadel Evans | 2011 | 5.68 W / kg
13 Floyd Landis | 2006 | 5.67 W / kg
The Hitch said:What was the source for this?
I have taken the liberty to take a look there, I must say, FOX News is fair and balanced in comparison to that dribble.The Hitch said:Have you checked into the dark side lately Byop? the prevailing explanation is very much that the fields are weak (yes even in TA) and Sky clearly have 10 times better training techniques than anyone else.
I dont think the peloton is against them, the peloton is just tired of the roboraces.I totally agree with this: if the peloton is against you, you have no chance.
vetooThe Hitch said:What was the source for this?
The Hitch said:That just reminds me. We heard Froome didnt warm down yesterday.
That 6th place is darn impressive then. Imagine if had warmed down. Tony Martin should be grateful.
BYOP88 said:Yeah and Nibbles should also be greatful, infact the entire field should be greatful or they'd have missed the time cut if Froome had warmed down yesterday. #marginalgains
Dr. Maserati said:How many GTs do you expect Sagan to win?
I didn't get to see yesterday's stage til after work but I saw comments here first and thought the was a savage MTF at the end, there wasn't it was a series of walls. Perfect for JRod &Sagan.
Contador was just meters behind Nibs at the top, but on a stage like that it all that's needed.
