Ferminal said:9. [RUS] MENCHOV Denis KAT 50"
26. [KAZ] VINOKOUROV Alexandre AST 02'17"
27. [ESP] VALVERDE BELMONTE Alejandro MOV 02'19"
Ferminal said:9. [RUS] MENCHOV Denis KAT 50"
26. [KAZ] VINOKOUROV Alexandre AST 02'17"
27. [ESP] VALVERDE BELMONTE Alejandro MOV 02'19"
The Hitch said:btw personally i hope it will be Quintana not Pinot making that top step. Of course one thing Quintana has in his favour is the perception that Colombians, who were a force in the 80's fell off in the 90's because of doping. Not entirely true that Colombians didnt dope, but the perception is there that they didnt have the same access, and will increase if him and maybe Chavez start to compete for the Tour after some limits on doping have been placed.
Also Quintana is from Boyaca where the highest Tour de France peaks would be considered lowlands, so perfectly explainable natural advantages would be far more persuasive explanations than the traditional go to argument accross all sports when doping is suggested - we train hard.
Fearless Greg Lemond said:Just to answer Wallace:
* Basso
* F. Schleck
* Sammy Sanchez
* Dan Martin
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4REDeSh5LoU
From minute 24 onwards, just sickening to see, EPO sprinting uphill. Rogers freewheeling past Scarponi after pulling for 3k's on the front. Laughable stuff.
Wallace and Gromit said:Sorry. I'd missed Frank, Sammy and Dan winning GTs. Basso was kaput from the Giro and realistically is past it anyway.
That's a very good point because everyone who is the same age reacts in exactly the same way to getting older.Benotti69 said:Basso and Evans are the same age!
Wiggo Warrior said:I am not hugely familiar with Quintana but he can certainly climb very well, as can Uran and Henao who I am more familiar with thanks to seeing this years Vuelta and Lombardia from a Sky focussed perspective and I would be pleased to see any of them develop into a true GT prospect.
I would like to know though if you credit Chris Froome with the same perfectly explainable natural advantages as the Colombians after being born and raised at altitude in Kenya and spending his childhood riding around the Great Rift Valley (also known as the cradle of Kenyan distance running)?
I'm not actually asking you to say anything about whether you think he's doping here, I'm just interested in your viewpoint in his case on potential natural adaptations.
You Sky boys make me laugh, thanks for that. Climber Sammy being dropped like a skoolboy doesn't say anything to guys like u? Please, do me a favour and come back when you watch cycling for more than 3 years.Wallace and Gromit said:Sorry. I'd missed Frank, Sammy and Dan winning GTs. Basso was kaput from the Giro and realistically is past it anyway.
Didn't know Johannesburg was at high altitude, thanks for the lesson.I would like to know though if you credit Chris Froome with the same perfectly explainable natural advantages as the Colombians after being born and raised at altitude in Kenya and spending his childhood riding around the Great Rift Valley (also known as the cradle of Kenyan distance running)?
Don't be late Pedro said:That's a very good point because everyone who is the same age reacts in exactly the same way to getting older.
Fearless Greg Lemond said:Climber Sammy being dropped like a skoolboy doesn't say anything to guys like u?
Fearless Greg Lemond said:Please, do me a favour and come back when you watch cycling for more than 3 years.
Wiggo Warrior said:I would like to know though if you credit Chris Froome with the same perfectly explainable natural advantages as the Colombians after being born and raised at altitude in Kenya and spending his childhood riding around the Great Rift Valley (also known as the cradle of Kenyan distance running)?
I'm not actually asking you to say anything about whether you think he's doping here, I'm just interested in your viewpoint in his case on potential natural adaptations.
The Hitch said:I think that its possible to win the TDF clean. Ironically id look to some of the guys who have doped as the best able to do it. I think Contador could win the Tour clean if the Tour is cleaner. I think Basso could have done it. but these are once in a generation talents who achieved amazing results when doped (so even if you took away a big layer for doping you might - and i use the word might, be left with something)
Then there are people who were fighting for previous Tours, so Sastre or Evans, who in theory stay the same while others decline, due to doping becoming less of a force. But that is of course making the assumption that they are clean (and i dont think either Evans nor Sastre were).
Its a bit harder to make a case for someone who struggled greatly with climbing and stage races, that they could accomplish the astonishing achievement of not just winning the Tour but winning it clean.
So if Wiggins is clean, then what do you think would one get if one added the doping layer to Wiggins? Hed be winning the 40k tts by the same margins Indurain was winning the 60k ones, and thats assuming hes a poor responder. Wortking off the fact that he was a minute behind Contador on Verbier then if you add a(/another) doping layer to Wiggins thered be no climb in the Tour de France he couldnt challenge the record for. In short if you assume Wiggins 2012 isnt on a doping programme and you put him on one, he would be better than any doper ever (indurain lance pantani contador basso ullrich vino, none of them could touch him)
If you want to play wordgames you are on the wrong adress. Do explain to me why known climbers are suddenly outclimbed by former grupetto Englishmen. That's no marginail gain, that is 10 maybe 20 percent gain. How do whe get a 20% performance gain?Wallace and Gromit said:I says to me that you haven't actually read what I've posted. Libertine's comment was about GT winners trailing the Sky guys. Sanchez is not a GT winner and is therefore irrelevant to my point. (My point was the rigor - or lack thereof - of Libertine's original claim that I quoted in bold.)
"By training hardert than the rest" /Lance Armstrong/Bradley WigginsFearless Greg Lemond said:If you want to play wordgames you are on the wrong adress. Do explain to me why known climbers are suddenly outclimbed by former grupetto Englishmen. That's no marginail gain, that is 10 maybe 20 percent gain. How do whe get a 20% performance gain?
Dekker_Tifosi said:"By training hardert than the rest" /Lance Armstrong/Bradley Wiggins
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Dekker_Tifosi said:"By training hardert than the rest" /Lance Armstrong/Bradley Wiggins
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Dear Wiggo said:And training harder than you race, then focusing only on racing to win, not racing for training. - Wiggins and Sky's PR, 2012.
Id agree that menchovs past it and basso can't be counted because.he did the giro ( same for.scarponi)Wallace and Gromit said:Vino's past it and Valverde was saving himself for the Vuelta. When he did go for it in the Tour, he won a mountain stage without appearing unduly distressed.
s.
Wiggo Warrior said:I am not hugely familiar with Quintana but he can certainly climb very well, as can Uran and Henao who I am more familiar with thanks to seeing this years Vuelta and Lombardia from a Sky focussed perspective and I would be pleased to see any of them develop into a true GT prospect.
I would like to know though if you credit Chris Froome with the same perfectly explainable natural advantages as the Colombians after being born and raised at altitude in Kenya and spending his childhood riding around the Great Rift Valley (also known as the cradle of Kenyan distance running)?
I'm not actually asking you to say anything about whether you think he's doping here, I'm just interested in your viewpoint in his case on potential natural adaptations.
Sorry, I forgot about that, my badDekker_Tifosi said:"By training hardert than the rest" /Lance Armstrong/Bradley Wiggins
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Dear Wiggo said:And training harder than you race, then focusing only on racing to win, not racing for training. - Wiggins and Sky's PR, 2012.
