- Aug 30, 2012
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Sky High said:Yeah I guess some people have their TVs in quite small living rooms.
Welcome to the forum. I look forward to more cutting-edge contributions from you.
Sky High said:Yeah I guess some people have their TVs in quite small living rooms.
ffs.nslckevin said:...
My point is that I have no idea if any of them are doping now. I may have concerns, but I know NOTHING for a fact. I choose to admit my lack of knowledge and not make statements asserting a riders guilt or innocence.
You take your lack of certain knowledge and make a bunch of hand waving arguments to "prove" your contention that they are all on dope. You might very well be right, but that would only be luck as your arguments are empty.
Of course they don't, cos they can't. If a team calling itself UK postal, came out during the doping era and started smashing tdfs and setting unrealistic speeds, with riders who had just magically transformed from bottle carriers to tdf winners, and they were clean, they would actually try to show they were cleanebandit said:as will 'brits don't dope' standard rhetoric for those whom don't think for themselves
strangely I read more about team sky's ztp here than on team sky's own website
for team sky it's just a statement of intent..........they see no reason to have to prove themselves to those here............sorry guys!
Mark L
sniper said:ffs.
we've gone through the fact/proof/evidence discussion plenty of times already. please don't go there again.
Benotti69 said:Also most teams have sports psychologists so that cancels it out pretty much.
Dear Wiggo said:No chance Dr Steve Peters is simply a very effective beard?
Wallace and Gromit said:I'd take this assertion in respect of chefs and dieticians etc. but psychologists and coaches are not all the same.
The most obvious example is Manchester United this season compared to last season. By your argument, they had a manager both seasons, so there's no reason to expect a change in performance. But Sir Alex was a motivational genius and David Moyes was completely out of his depth. Hence the team was cr*p this year.
Likewise, I doubt that simply any psychologist could have handled Queen Vic. It's not to say that Steve Peters was the only one out there that could, but Peters converted her from a basket-case to a flint-eyed killer on the track.
The Hitch said:Of course they don't, cos they can't. If a team calling itself UK postal, came out during the doping era and started smashing tdfs and setting unrealistic speeds, with riders who had just magically transformed from bottle carriers to tdf winners, and they were clean, they would actually try to show they were clean
This team however, calls doubters ****ers, makes nonesence arguments aimed at idiots about how they proved they are clean by not attacking, selectively release data they know is meaningless and make a big deal out of it, dump their bad news in the offseason, find it offensive that people would ask for the vo2 max of what according to them is the greatest rider ever lived and act all round shocked that anyone would find anything remotely suspicious in the story.
Wallace and Gromit said:I'd take this assertion in respect of chefs and dieticians etc. but psychologists and coaches are not all the same.
The most obvious example is Manchester United this season compared to last season. By your argument, they had a manager both seasons, so there's no reason to expect a change in performance. But Sir Alex was a motivational genius and David Moyes was completely out of his depth. Hence the team was cr*p this year.
Wallace and Gromit said:Likewise, I doubt that simply any psychologist could have handled Queen Vic. It's not to say that Steve Peters was the only one out there that could, but Peters converted her from a basket-case to a flint-eyed killer on the track.
Benotti69 said:You appear to offer little to nothing...
Armstrong made a huge deal over having a technological advantage over others. It counted for little in the end as it was doping that won out, at the time. A gold medal is won more likely with PEDS than without as history has shown, but that tiny little detail is not important when talking about ones own nations athletes
Paris Roubaix has had the indurstrys top names try to win it by using better technology and it always came down to the best program. Canc and his motor-bike might be the exception, but that has not been proven, yet!
Peters can beat dopers, yes of course he can.....![]()
Benotti69 said:There has been a recent study of Premier league coaches. It appears that the coaches have as much affect on teams as the chef or dietician would. Cant find the link, but if i do, i will post it.
Moyes was hung out to dry by the 'old' players at ManU, Giggs & Co.
Or doping did![]()
oldcrank said:Yes, my friend, it was not the 'technology' that made
the difference for Team GB, it was the 'psychology'.
All their opponents believed they had stiffer bikes,
rounder wheels, faster skinsuits, more aero helmets,
etc. etc. It was Mr. Boardman's job to make the
rest of the world believe that, and I think he was
most successful in that regard.
andy1234 said:flatcap speaks.....
Benotti69 said:I am unable to comprehend anything other than doping.
Benotti69 said:Moyes was hung out to dry by the 'old' players at ManU, Giggs & Co.
stutue said:"Bottle carrier"- Wiggins? Get off.
In May 2003, Wiggins made his Grand Tour debut at the Giro d'Italia. On the 18th stage he was eliminated from the race, finishing outside of the time limit in a group of 53 riders
In 2005 Wiggins competed in the Giro d'Italia, finishing 123rd overall.
He moved to Cofidis for the 2006 season, and was selected to ride in the Tour de France, finishing his first Tour in 124th place
(2007 DNF, Wiggins making staunchly anti-doping statements) Cofidis withdrew from the race before stage 16 after Cristian Moreni failed a doping test. In the aftermath of the positive drug tests on Moreni and on race leader Alexander Vinokourov of Astana, Wiggins spoke out against dopers in the Tour and threw away his Cofidis kit in a bin in Pau Pyrénées Airport, vowing never to race for the team again. (He did continue to race for the team)
In 2008 at the Giro he was part of the lead-out train that helped Cavendish win two stages. Wiggins came fourth in the final stage's 28.5 km (17.7 mi)-long time trial in Milan, six seconds behind team-mate Marco Pinotti, finishing the race in 134th place, three hours, one minute and 39 seconds down on overall winner Alberto Contador of Astana.
red_flanders said:Bottle carrier may not be a great label for someone of Wiggins' track palmares, but when it came to the road and GT's, yes, literally he was a bottle carrier. Grupetto fodder.
with riders who had just magically transformed from bottle carriers to tdf winners
20SecondsToComply said:That is true. Although not sure whether he ever thought of himself as a GT contender in his first foray in to road (or even his second until a bit later). Prologue and shorter TTs maybe, and a possible lucky breakaway win.
stutue said:Not a bottle carrier in 09, nor a TdF winner...so bottle carrier when? 2008? That's the latest possible date.
So, four years from 2008 to 2012. Four years isn't an instant transformation by anybody's reckoning.
red_flanders said:If we're being honest here, his transformation was more surprising than Froome's, though Froome's top end post-transformation was and is shocking.
red_flanders said:No, clearly he didn't nor did anyone else. And he did passably well in those things which you mention before 2009.
If we're being honest here, his transformation was more surprising than Froome's, though Froome's top end post-transformation was and is shocking.
red_flanders said:He was a bottle carrier in 2008. Everything changed in 2009. The point was, that he was in fact a bottle carrier for years. Then a miraculous change. I don't see how anyone can dispute those simple facts.
