- Jul 17, 2012
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The Hitch said:That depends on one's definition of "develop"
If we're talking 'transformation' then I can't see Brailsford taking credit for that if it turns out to be nefarious.
The Hitch said:That depends on one's definition of "develop"
Avoriaz said:But, using the above examples, wouldn't JTL's BP irregularities suggest that Sky are clean - JTL's blood has changed in values over the course of the year. Last year he won things; this year he didn't. That wouldn't point towards JTL having started to dope this year under a Sky programme.
JimmyFingers said:I've heard that Sky were only interested in signing Simon anyway, but you'd hope someone their age getting their first contract with a World Tour team would be willing to pay their dues. It will be interesting to see how OGE deploy them.
Good move though: statements like that will get them much more leniency from the internet finger-pointers, as evidenced by your post.
you're quite explicitly suggesting here that sky run a team program.Benotti69 said:Nope, It might point to JLT's body not responding to the get skinny, keep power recover quickly marginal gains and that what 'gains' he did to win in early 2012 worked but Sky are using different 'gains' that failed with JTL.
It also points to similar riders going backwards with Sky's methods.
LaFlorecita said:Me too!![]()
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sniper said:you're quite explicitly suggesting here that sky run a team program.
is that what you think?
to be sure, i do too, but several posters seem to think each rider has his own provider, with sky docs just making sure the riders pass the IQ test.
Benotti69 said:Willing to pay their dues? I guess Yates Bros took a long look at how Sky perform as a team and realsied they have 2 riders who will be getting full support, Froome and Porte then the rest is practically zero.
I wonder did the debacle of the Worlds prove to them that Sky/BC is not a 'healthy' environment to learn the pro trade.
Brit riders quitting a race due to rain is pretty pathetic.
Benotti69 said:
agreed.Brailsford appears to have been 'smart' not to get greedy and take all the big races and share the GTs and not contest monuments.
sad but o so true.To unravel pro cycling and all its dirty deals might take many many T&Rs.
the sceptic said:well you need someone new now that Contador is almost finished![]()
oldcrank said:Actually the team that won the last two TdF's is not the
team that shouts the loudest, nor did they join the
organisation of teams that shout the loudest.
Benotti69 said:I think they tone it down outside of the TdF or for their prep races for the TdF, but i think they had help from Uncle Pat and ASO for July.
DirtyWorks said:I don't know about that. They repeated their glorious run of stage racing domination from February to the end of July in 2013. In 2012, a slightly different cast did it for almost 8 months with the Olympics included.
Mysteriously, their once-a-month, permanent peak, field domination evaporates just like clockwork too.
Bexon30 said:It's the disappearance that confuses me. If your capable of performing at such high levels like Brad, Chris and Richie why loose form so much so quick? I can understand some reasons as why Brad didn't work for Chris but for both to show nothing of their best is odd for sure. Most of the top end of the peloton keeps form pretty well. But these riders drop massively away from their peak level. Not slightly but massively. Strange.
Bexon30 said:It's the disappearance that confuses me. If your capable of performing at such high levels like Brad, Chris and Richie why loose form so much so quick? I can understand some reasons as why Brad didn't work for Chris but for both to show nothing of their best is odd for sure. Most of the top end of the peloton keeps form pretty well. But these riders drop massively away from their peak level. Not slightly but massively. Strange.
as a hard-working pro-athlete you're always likely to drop back to your base level once a season.Bexon30 said:It's the disappearance that confuses me. If your capable of performing at such high levels like Brad, Chris and Richie why loose form so much so quick? I can understand some reasons as why Brad didn't work for Chris but for both to show nothing of their best is odd for sure. Most of the top end of the peloton keeps form pretty well. But these riders drop massively away from their peak level. Not slightly but massively. Strange.
EnacheV said:After winning a ton and have nothing left to prove that you are no1 it's hard to keep motivation. Also the planning schedule doesn't allow it.
As Sky are clean ofc they can't keep 100% level all year long.
Think at Froome. After 8 months of training and winning everything do you think he has any desire to try hard more ? Everything after TdF is like a criterium for him.
Bexon30 said:I get this point to a certain extent, but one thing that gets me ( I may need help on this please ) is the race after the TDF that Froome and Porte finished 1/2 in. Was it Belgium?, anyway, why try in that?! The WC is a massive thing to a cyclist and to win it is huge so I'm not sure I understand not having the desire for that when they win in a much lesser event. I know they had form then but Froome was the leader for GB so ???
Bexon30 said:It's the disappearance that confuses me. If your capable of performing at such high levels like Brad, Chris and Richie why loose form so much so quick? I can understand some reasons as why Brad didn't work for Chris but for both to show nothing of their best is odd for sure. Most of the top end of the peloton keeps form pretty well. But these riders drop massively away from their peak level. Not slightly but massively. Strange.
JimmyFingers said:Really? Generally riders train to one or two peaks in the year, or perhaps look to hold form through the frist half or second half, depending on their goals. Most of the top finishes in the Worlds rode the Vuelta, and it is seen as the best preperation for the event. Only Rowe out of the GB squad rode the Vuelta, while riders like Thomas and Stannard rode the early season classics and the TdF, while Froome had a long build from the early stages races in February towards the Tour. Shouldn't be a surprise that he wasn't in good form for the Worlds.
Arguably the two that should have been were Stannard and Wiggins, but I bet Stannard is suffering from fatigue after such a long season (and he is a beast of a rider in the wet as well) and Wiggins, who bottled it.
Grupetto1 said:Haha its because those post tour crits are completely fixed
Benotti69 said:Gilbert had a year long peak. JRod seems to be able to do well all year.
