- Apr 17, 2009
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blackcat said:yeah. they get to bank their 8 cortisone TUE's also
According to Peters, Geert thought it was wrong to issue cortisone TUEs.
The real reason Leinders left. Agitating for joining the MPCC..?
blackcat said:yeah. they get to bank their 8 cortisone TUE's also
badboygolf16v said:According to Peters, Geert thought it was wrong to issue cortisone TUEs.
DirtyWorks said:Now, does that mean automatically that Sky is doping and, more specifically, BC has some role in Sky's doping? No. Is it possible BC has some role protecting Sky? Absolutely. Is it likely? I don't know.
Our training philosophy is simple; “Train to the demands of the race”. This is why our athletes race with their SRM Training Systems, and why we spend significant time analyzing the data.
Why is this important? Well if you don’t know it, you won’t train it. If you don’t train it, you won’t have it when you need it. And then it’s “Kaboom – race over”! So, while doing fifty sprint efforts in a training session might sound like unnecessary self-flagellation to some, it just may be what our athletes needs to prepare for success in Europe.
5,9w/k/hRitchie Porte said:But did you ride on feel or your SRM numbers? “I think I rode it on…to be honest? I rode it on feel and then I had a look at my SRM and it said close to 400 and that was it, job done I guess…” confessed Porte rather sheepishly.
DirtyWorks said:You hit on something that gets lost with the Sky program. Like USA Cycling/USPS, the national federation (BC) is the Sky program. Which, is nice when it comes time for anti-doping enforcement.
Now, does that mean automatically that Sky is doping and, more specifically, BC has some role in Sky's doping? No. Is it possible BC has some role protecting Sky? Absolutely. Is it likely? I don't know.
As posted in the MsR thread, Sky now has two classics leaders. Which is suspicious. Dropping in out of nowhere to clobber the field at MsR is really suspicious.
As I am still a cycling fan, Stannard's ride was part of a great race.
hrotha said:Of course, every individual case might be explained away in a believable manner. When you put them all together, though...
No one has claimed to know. We take the scarce data available to us and analyze it. EBH may or may not be on the program. I'm inclined to think he isn't, but that's my opinion, not necessarily the opinion of all, or most, Sky cynics.JimmyFingers said:And yet you have EBH, or is he just an outlier? Oh wait, he's not on the programme....
It's amazing how people can look at Sky, watch them race and discern the inner workings of the team, or give prescient insights to how they are going to perform
hrotha said:No one has claimed to know. We take the scarce data available to us and analyze it. EBH may or may not be on the program. I'm inclined to think he isn't, but that's my opinion, not necessarily the opinion of all, or most, Sky cynics.
Dear Wiggo said:I think it might be a good time to remind people: when you are on or slightly off the front of the race, and there is noone in front of you, threatening your yellow jersey, you do not have to ride at your limit. You just have to dominate the guys behind you.
Just because Wiggins and Froome are not riding "implausible" numbers does not necessarily mean they can't.
Consider that in the final TT, Wiggins smashed everyone, including Froome, to the tune of 6.5W/kg for over an hour.
And whilst I agree you can't determine effort based on facial expression or body language, I think you need to consider Wiggins wasn't collapsing post-TT, but rather he was energetically punching his fist in an aggressive victory salute.
Moncoutié was a star at Cofidis. A Tour winner hopeful.JimmyFingers said:This I can accept and respect. My opinion is there isn't a programme, that if the riders are doping they are doing it on their own. If there was a programme it would be illogical not to have one of your star riders on it.
I see what you mean, but don't forget that even if there is a team-wide program, an individual can still choose to refuse...Moncoutie wasn't part of Cofidis doping program, for example. Sure, he didn't say anything either (he must have known), but that was probably because he was a shy person who didn't want that kind of attention, or maybe he just couldn't dare to say anything. He just wanted to ride his bike with no drama involved.JimmyFingers said:This I can accept and respect. My opinion is there isn't a programme, that if the riders are doping they are doing it on their own. If there was a programme it would be illogical not to have one of your star riders on it.
The exception rather than the rule thoughhrotha said:Moncoutié was a star at Cofidis. A Tour winner hopeful.
How do we know? Moncoutie lived through an era of team-wide doping, in the most literal sense. That people who were deemed unwilling or unready to get on the program wouldn't be let on it, in an era when teams have to be a lot more careful about that kind of stuff, makes perfect sense.JimmyFingers said:The exception rather than the rule though
Its not only that Jimmy, it is also the info that keeps coming out.JimmyFingers said:It's amazing how people can look at Sky, watch them race and discern the inner workings of the team, or give prescient insights to how they are going to perform
Not arrogant at all.In as much as Team Sky has taken rider support and preparation to new levels (previously, arguably, only the Italian Mapei team had got close), we thought it prudent to ask him to outline his job.
It took trips to Tenerife to be exactly.Many riders are riding with SRM Powermeters, so we can measure power, speed, heart rate, cadence, altitude, temperature, so there is plenty of information out there, although it’s not necessarily managed as well as it could be. And that’s always one of the challenges when technology advances and the amount of information you have access to grows, the challenge is what you do with all this information. So it took us a while to get on top of that as well.
That must be why the Classic Squad was sent to Tenerife last month: Vlaanderen/Roubaix/Amstel/Liege are all at high altitude.The number one reason we go there is that it’s a climbing camp, it happens to be at altitude and one of the things we expect to see is an acclimatization to the altitude because one of the demands of the Tour is that you have to be able to perform at altitude. So we don’t go there as an altitude training camp to stimulate red blood cell production, we go there to adapt to be able to perform at altitude. Then there’s just the effect you get from being at a training camp, you are very isolated, there’s nothing you can do there except train and recover. And finally there’s heat acclimatization, it’s generally a lot hotter than anywhere else in the rest of Europe and that’s something else you need to be able to cope with at the Tour and we know that was something that Brad struggled with during the 2012 Tour. He’s now, of our riders, one of the best ones at handling the heat.”
Uh, he improved huge on both, never seen before. From top ten TT to the undisputed numero one, yet improving on his climbing. Never seen before. Or, wait, we had that Texas dude, liked Tenerife as well.After our first year as a team in 2010 we sat down and had a look at everything – we didn’t have a fantastic Tour in 2010 – so we sat down and looked at the areas where Brad was strong and where he needed work and some of the key things was that he had always been strong in time trialling – of course he comes from a pursuiting background his TT was strong and the balance between his TT and climbing needed some work so we did a lot of work on his climbing and one of the elements that’s important there is his power to weight ratio so he’s changed a bit.
thehog said:EBH needs to go to Garmin. They let riders earn cash and not be obliged to dope over there. FDJ might be a better option. Let him go on lone long breaks in boring flat stages at the Tour.
If EBH got on the Dawg program he'd be close to a Tour winner.
But the boy just doesn't want inject his own blood.
The Dawg mustn't be able to look him in the eye.
They need to cut him loose. If he's not going to borg it up then get someone who will. Like Stannard.
Fearless Greg Lemond said:Its not only that Jimmy, it is also the info that keeps coming out.
Michael Rogers saying he was on his best numbers ever, better than when he was training with Sassi? Kerrison must be a magician then.
http://www.biscuittinmedia.com/tim-kerrison-training-wiggins/
Not arrogant at all.
It took trips to Tenerife to be exactly.
That must be why the Classic Squad was sent to Tenerife last month: Vlaanderen/Roubaix/Amstel/Liege are all at high altitude.
Uh, he improved huge on both, never seen before. From top ten TT to the undisputed numero one, yet improving on his climbing. Never seen before. Or, wait, we had that Texas dude, liked Tenerife as well.
The Hitch said:The - why wouldn't they dope ebh argument cam easily be turned around into - why don't they marginal gains ebh. Afterall sky do aknowledge their riders undergo epic transformations after joining sky. Bailsford said he wants the training gains to be so large they match gains that can be acheived from doping. Why aren't these gain working on Hagen?
The Hitch said:The - why wouldn't they dope ebh argument cam easily be turned around into - why don't they marginal gains ebh. Afterall sky do aknowledge their riders undergo epic transformations after joining sky. Bailsford said he wants the training gains to be so large they match gains that can be acheived from doping. Why aren't these gain working on Hagen?
No one's saying EBH is crap. We're saying he hasn't improved much since his HTC days.JimmyFingers said:Maybe he was doping pre-Sky and now he's off the sauce
That said, he's hardly gone to donkey status, has he? Yesterday's race is a outlier, given the conditions. His 2013 season has barely got going, he was superb at the Tour and third in the Worlds last year.
Stories of his demise may be a little premature
