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And Nibali actually gained significant time in a cobbled stage.Also, Pogacar has yet to win a Tour de France by a bigger gap than Nibali did.
And Nibali actually gained significant time in a cobbled stage.Also, Pogacar has yet to win a Tour de France by a bigger gap than Nibali did.
Wet cobbles might I add, none of that fake dry ***And Nibali actually gained significant time in a cobbled stage.
a 0 watts marginal kg of body weightI think 1 minute more per hour of climbing is more accurate. (with 1 kg difference) This depends on the specifics of course.
Well there are two possibilities.I agree, but not sure it has to do with discipline, but with how nutritionists and and trainers decide what he needs to do. I can remember that before TDF 2024, he wasn't riding good enough at Dauphine. He took it up on himself, ignoring the nutritionist of SOQ advice to lose extra weight for TDF 2024.
Yea, that success as a junior and initial pro results still as a teenager created a hype within and around him that simply needed further data for verification. Doubtless he has a huge engine. Unfortunately, however, his junior career was magnified and projected upon a hypothetical Merckxian future, before high mountain performance data was really known. He did not race Avenir, no Baby Giro either, to see what signs of mountain goat status might have apperared or not. And then nobody at the time saw a Pogacar, a Vingegaard and now a del Toro, a Seixas on the horizon. In hindsight he should have done one more amateur season with the hardest climbing races on his schedule. It quite possibly would have prepared him and his sponsors better for planning his pro career and its realistic objectives.The major issue may be that he has such an unbounded view on what he can achieve, possibly strengthened by his successes as a junior and early results, that anything less is seen as a failure.
The problem is when you apply it to climbs of any length suddenly results on short climbs become rather implausible. There is some tradeoff at the very least, the shorter the effort and easier the overall stage the more it likely is.
I've honestly not looked into the physiological specifics, but wouldn't a lower fat% also just mean the body is gonna utilize less fat at the same intensity due to less fat easily available, so you just get tired more easily?On harder stages the difference on the final MTF could be considerably bigger than 1 sec/min of course due to cumulative fatigue.
I've honestly not looked into the physiological specifics, but wouldn't a lower fat% also just mean the body is gonna utilize less fat at the same intensity due to less fat easily available, so you just get tired more easily?
So being full anorexia mode made more sense in an era when you used to do a penultimate climb at 4w/kg and all it's glory.
I believe this would never be an issue in a road race. Also, how do you define being tired?I've honestly not looked into the physiological specifics, but wouldn't a lower fat% also just mean the body is gonna utilize less fat at the same intensity due to less fat easily available, so you just get tired more easily?
So being full anorexia mode made more sense in an era when you used to do a penultimate climb at 4w/kg and all it's glory.
But they run a marathon a month? Cycling racers do three marathon a dayThey consume ridiculous amount of carbs nowadays so I'm not sure if their fat comsumption is higher than before. I don't think so regarding high intensity MTF but maybe it's the case for earlier phases of races.
As for being more fatty, those marathon world-beaters are still super-thin aren't they? I think they still have enough fat reserves.
Getting droppedI believe this would never be an issue in a road race. Also, how do you define being tired?
But they run a marathon a month? Cycling racers do three marathon a day
Then no, a fully functioning road cyclist is not getting dropped because he does not have enough fat in his body.Getting dropped
Fat is also energyThen no, a fully functioning road cyclist is not getting dropped because he does not have enough fat in his body.
Fat is also energy
Being tired is not just running out of energy. There is soreness and other things... That is why I asked how did the OP define tiredness.Fat is also energy
This is an excellent point and he really just won every race by "brute strength".Yea, that success as a junior and initial pro results still as a teenager created a hype within and around him that simply needed further data for verification. Doubtless he has a huge engine. Unfortunately, however, his junior career was magnified and projected upon a hypothetical Merckxian future, before high mountain performance data was really known. He did not race Avenir, no Baby Giro either, to see what signs of mountain goat status might have apperared or not. And then nobody at the time saw a Pogacar, a Vingegaard and now a del Toro, a Seixas on the horizon. In hindsight he should have done one more amateur season with the hardest climbing races on his schedule. It quite possibly would have prepared him and his sponsors better for planning his pro career and its realistic objectives.
That sounds fine in the abstract until you analyse what the results were in the relevant year of 2019 in the Giro Next Gen and L’Avenir.Yea, that success as a junior and initial pro results still as a teenager created a hype within and around him that simply needed further data for verification. Doubtless he has a huge engine. Unfortunately, however, his junior career was magnified and projected upon a hypothetical Merckxian future, before high mountain performance data was really known. He did not race Avenir, no Baby Giro either, to see what signs of mountain goat status might have apperared or not. And then nobody at the time saw a Pogacar, a Vingegaard and now a del Toro, a Seixas on the horizon. In hindsight he should have done one more amateur season with the hardest climbing races on his schedule. It quite possibly would have prepared him and his sponsors better for planning his pro career and its realistic objectives.
True, but you still have something rather than nothing to go on. Pogacar won Avenir over Thymen Arensman and Gino Mäder. Not something to predict what Tadej went on to become, but indicative of good climbing genes nonetheless.That sounds fine in the abstract until you analyse what the results were in the relevant year of 2019 in the Giro Next Gen and L’Avenir.
Only Einer Rubio (2nd in Giro next gen) of the top 15 finishers in either race has multiple grabs tour top ten GC finishes on their palmares and only Rubio and Van Wilder have gone on to be GC riders from the U23 class of 2019.
Remco would have stomped the field in both races given the level of competition there.
But you also have to consider riders like Skjelmose, Tiberi, Carlos Rodriguez, THJ, Lipowitz... just to mention a few similar in age and who rode the U23s... while Remco went straight to the pros.That sounds fine in the abstract until you analyse what the results were in the relevant year of 2019 in the Giro Next Gen and L’Avenir.
Only Einer Rubio (2nd in Giro next gen) of the top 15 finishers in either race has multiple grabs tour top ten GC finishes on their palmares and only Rubio and Van Wilder have gone on to be GC riders from the U23 class of 2019.
Remco would have stomped the field in both races given the level of competition there.
The longer the climb weight becomes increasingly a factor, yes.A question from my ignorant brain: if the weight factor is such a deciding factor, according to many, why did he outperform quite a decent field in Cumbre del Sol, a climb over 9% on average? Does the weight become more crucial the longer the climb takes?
The climb wasnt long and he dropped a wattbomb. He has the brute strength and power for a shorter effort, but other things comes into play on longer ones.A question from my ignorant brain: if the weight factor is such a deciding factor, according to many, why did he outperform quite a decent field in Cumbre del Sol, a climb over 9% on average? Does the weight become more crucial the longer the climb takes?
You don't know. Giro next gen usually has tought mountains, and we don't know how he would have donde in those mountains.That sounds fine in the abstract until you analyse what the results were in the relevant year of 2019 in the Giro Next Gen and L’Avenir.
Only Einer Rubio (2nd in Giro next gen) of the top 15 finishers in either race has multiple grabs tour top ten GC finishes on their palmares and only Rubio and Van Wilder have gone on to be GC riders from the U23 class of 2019.
Remco would have stomped the field in both races given the level of competition there.
