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Team Ineos (Formerly the Sky thread)

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Parker said:
The answers:

No, becuase there are only three gold medallists of the modern era. A set too small to be statistically relevant. However, a silver medallist came eighth in the Giro

Yes. Evans had an almost indentical seaon the year before. And you don't 'peak' for a whole month to win the Tour of Romandie - just for a couple of days

Because they didn't have any decent riders. Their leader was Jani Brajkovic.

Lemond was also a IP medalist on the track.
 
Parker said:
Was he? Are you sure?

I was taking 'modern' as 1996 onwards (when the Olympics went pro)

Plenty of pursuiters from history won GTs. Of modern guys Rohan Dennis will be a contender I think, but team pursuit is now moving to more sprinter types.

1896 is when the first "modern" Olympics were held.

What's this 1996 business? Making up selective ranges again? Prior to 1996 you were allowed to swap between amateur and professional status.
 
Dec 11, 2013
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Benotti69 said:
pretty simple once you have that big engine to race for 4kms then extend it to 4000kms

No
You don't need to extend it to 4000kms
You need it to be able to do a dozen or so 45-60 min efforts over a 3 week period.

Unless it's a 1 week race - then it's 1 maybe 2 efforts over 1 week
 
TailWindHome said:
No
You don't need to extend it to 4000kms
You need it to be able to do a dozen or so 45-60 min efforts over a 3 week period.

Unless it's a 1 week race - then it's 1 maybe 2 efforts over 1 week

You need to climb up mountains as well. Apparently. Last time I checked there are no mountains on a track unless you include the steepness of banking ;)
 
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thehog said:
You need to climb up mountains as well. Apparently. Last time I checked there are no mountains on a track unless you include the steepness of banking ;)

Luckily there are roads up the mountains so the bicycle can be pedalled as per the track. Some of the more expensive machines have 20 gears.
Amazing stuff
 
Jul 17, 2012
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This isn't meant to be too serious...

There are two riders (LeMond and Mig) who've won the Tour de l'Avenir since 1979 who've subsequently won the Tour de France. This is the same number of riders (LeMond and Wiggo) who have medalled in the World Junior IP and then won the Tour de France.

So maybe being a good junior pursuiter is not such a bad indicator of Tour potential. Or maybe the Tour de l'Avenir is rather misnamed, as it's not a very good predictor either.
 
TailWindHome said:
No
You don't need to extend it to 4000kms
You need it to be able to do a dozen or so 45-60 min efforts over a 3 week period.

Good god:eek:

That is some astonishing ignorance.

Ironically ebandit made this same idiotic comment (while hijacked by joachim).

If you ever strayed outside of this subforum, read some actual interviews with domestiques, gt contenders, coaches, damn near anyone in the sport, you might realize how stupid what you just said is.

Every gt rider is pretty clear about having to be on top form for every stage in a gt (including wiggins who said he has to be 90% every day). No one just coasts along 2500km of flat in a gt. It would totally defeat the purpose of the flat being there.

No, gt riders do not just ride dozen 45 minute efforts. They ride the complete thing and every cm they go over contributes to the exhaustion.
 
Wallace and Gromit said:
This isn't meant to be too serious...

There are two riders (LeMond and Mig) who've won the Tour de l'Avenir since 1979 who've subsequently won the Tour de France. This is the same number of riders (LeMond and Wiggo) who have medalled in the World Junior IP and then won the Tour de France.

So maybe being a good junior pursuiter is not such a bad indicator of Tour potential. Or maybe the Tour de l'Avenir is rather misnamed, as it's not a very good predictor either.
Wouldn't it be fairer to compare podium vs podium and not podium vs. win?



How many riders who have podiumed Avenir has podiumed a GT?

How many riders who have podiumed the World Junior IP has podiumed a GT?

PS: Why didn't Fignon count?
 
May 26, 2010
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TailWindHome said:
No
You don't need to extend it to 4000kms
You need it to be able to do a dozen or so 45-60 min efforts over a 3 week period.

Unless it's a 1 week race - then it's 1 maybe 2 efforts over 1 week

sssh dont tell the rest of the peloton or they will all be willing. :rolleyes:

You have no understanding of racing GTs;)
 
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The Hitch said:
You said that all a gt rider needs is to be able to do a dozen or so 45-60 min efforts over a 3 week period.

Which is extremely ignorant and totally false. And not surprising that your only defense is deflection.

No.
You added the 'all'
 
The Hitch said:
You said that all a gt rider needs is to be able to do a dozen or so 45-60 min efforts over a 3 week period.

Which is extremely ignorant and totally false. And not surprising that your only defense is deflection.

The context of the quote is clearly in regards to the big efforts required for a rider to succeed in a GT, not the ONLY thing needed. The physiologic data we receive from selected riders in the TDF during the flat stages seem to indicate that they are not going full gas much of the time. You may have a good debate over how much recovery and mental/ physical endurance effect those maximal efforts in a GT, but twisting words to try to paint another poster as ignorant isn't really necessary.
 
Wallace and Gromit said:
This isn't meant to be too serious...

There are two riders (LeMond and Mig) who've won the Tour de l'Avenir since 1979 who've subsequently won the Tour de France. This is the same number of riders (LeMond and Wiggo) who have medalled in the World Junior IP and then won the Tour de France.

So maybe being a good junior pursuiter is not such a bad indicator of Tour potential. Or maybe the Tour de l'Avenir is rather misnamed, as it's not a very good predictor either.

lemond won the gold in the road race race at the same champs in '79...he probably rode the pursuit for fun...when you're that good you can win anything at that age...he also got a silver...so three medals

so totally outperforms Wiggins at same age...totally different ballpark

and...well...as for Froome's early career ;-)
 
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gillan1969 said:
so totally outperforms Wiggins at same age...totally different ballpark

and...well...as for Froome's early career ;-)

I was commenting on the relative merits of the Junior IP and the Tour de l'Avenir as predictors of subsequently winning the Tour.

I wasn't comparing Wiggo to LeMond and I don't think Froome has ridden a pursuit or l'Avenir, so he's irrelevant to the discussion.
 
May 26, 2010
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djpbaltimore said:
The context of the quote is clearly in regards to the big efforts required for a rider to succeed in a GT, not the ONLY thing needed. The physiologic data we receive from selected riders in the TDF during the flat stages seem to indicate that they are not going full gas much of the time. You may have a good debate over how much recovery and mental/ physical endurance effect those maximal efforts in a GT, but twisting words to try to paint another poster as ignorant isn't really necessary.

Way to go attacking the wrong poster for obfuscation.:rolleyes:
 

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