Teams & Riders The "MVP" Mathieu Van der Poel Road Discussion Thread

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Mar 20, 2022
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Now compare this MVP with WVA. How can WVA beat this guy in 1 month? Both will improve significantly but their current shape is very different
 
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Mar 23, 2024
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His only chance is in PR since he doesn't want to race MSR.
It still saddens me to see Wout skip MSR. A rider of his skillset and caliber should always be on the start in my opinion. Totally understand him trying a different buildup but ride it anyway, who cares if its in the middle of a training camp. Get off the mountain the day before and fly in, next day ride the race and fly straight back. San Remo is the one races he can win against Pog and Mvdp without having to be stronger than them.
 
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Jan 31, 2021
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VDP has been ill as well after his ski vacation. Vs Van Aert who trained 30h that week
As much as people were dumping on van Aert over the weekend, I think he'd also have had a pretty good chance of winning against this field today.
 
Feb 20, 2012
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As much as people were dumping on van Aert over the weekend, I think he'd also have had a pretty good chance of winning against this field today.
Not if we're gonna claim Magnier is a great sprinter to beat and if we're gonna ignore he had to sit down after 3s of sprinting
 
Feb 24, 2015
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I've read somewhere that Wout is more of a sugar burner, which could suggest that even during less intense efforts his power percentage resulting from glycolysis is higher than MVP's. This could affect him more during long classics, even with steady effort level. But it's all just speculation as we don't have detailed comparable data from both.
If correct that indicates a higher Vlamax which in turn makes your durability lesser. In principle you would like to run as much as possible on fat for every effort, which of course is not possible, but still.
 
Feb 20, 2012
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If correct that indicates a higher Vlamax which in turn makes your durability lesser. In principle you would like to run as much as possible on fat for every effort, which of course is not possible, but still.
Not really. They are different adaptations, often down to specificity of training. Pogacar dropped an effort on PdB that probably requires a VO2 max of >100 or something, yet there is precious little to indicate that he struggles with endurance.

I also think Van Aert's struggles are more down to anaerobic repeats and recovery than strictly fat oxidation.
 
Not really. They are different adaptations, often down to specificity of training. Pogacar dropped an effort on PdB that probably requires a VO2 max of >100 or something, yet there is precious little to indicate that he struggles with endurance.

I also think Van Aert's struggles are more down to anaerobic repeats and recovery than strictly fat oxidation.
Not sure I follow this? As I understand (relative) VO2 max is desirable for climbers and grand tour contenders (like Pogacar and Vingegaard). But Vlamax (maximum rate of lactate production) is a more desirable attribute for riders with superior anaerobic power but at the cost of a lower anaerobic threshold (like Wout and MVDP).
 
Jul 7, 2013
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Not sure I follow this? As I understand (relative) VO2 max is desirable for climbers and grand tour contenders (like Pogacar and Vingegaard). But Vlamax (maximum rate of lactate production) is a more desirable attribute for riders with superior anaerobic power but at the cost of a lower anaerobic threshold (like Wout and MVDP).

I think Red Rick confused VO2max with Vlamax. Obviously high VO2max is very important to any kind of sustainable performances (from a few minutes to a few hours). High Vlamax indicates very strong anaerobic glycolysis, which is crucial to performances lasting i.e. a few dozens of seconds. As for Van Aert I didn't necessarily mean this but rather that his glycolysis contributes more at a moderate effort level (it's easily cleared by his aerobic engine but precious fuel is still used up).
 
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Feb 20, 2012
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I think Red Rick confused VO2max with Vlamax. Obviously high VO2max is very important to any kind of sustainable performances (from a few minutes to a few hours). High Vlamax indicates very strong anaerobic glycolysis, which is crucial to performances lasting i.e. a few dozens of seconds. As for Van Aert I didn't necessarily mean this but rather that his glycolysis contributes more at a moderate effort level (it's easily cleared by his aerobic engine but precious fuel is still used up).
I did.
 
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Feb 20, 2012
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Not sure I follow this? As I understand (relative) VO2 max is desirable for climbers and grand tour contenders (like Pogacar and Vingegaard). But Vlamax (maximum rate of lactate production) is a more desirable attribute for riders with superior anaerobic power but at the cost of a lower anaerobic threshold (like Wout and MVDP).
I messed up with VO2 max.

Still I don't think the tradeoff should be as big as it seems. Also, fairly specifically the recovery and repeats from these efforts. When really fresh MvdP doesn't really tend to drop everyone the first go around.
 
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