Froome19 said:
A write up I did on Velorooms, based on an article in Procyling and other info..
Do you think it's reasonable for SKY to allow an - up until then in cycling (
Kerrison was hired to be Wiggins' man late 2010) - unknown sports scientist [in cycling] to coordinate the training of their highest paid and most valuable asset, based on zero evidence that "his" training program actually works for cyclists? And then he started and it just happened to work?
That sounds quite radical, as opposed to revolutionary, at least from a business perspective. In a sense, it's almost as if they were really lucky it "just happened to work."
I mean, if your factory's machines are not performing well, and everyone recommends some well known mechanics to fix it, but the CEO allows some random plumber [not meant pejoratively; merely trying to indicate he is not from the same industry] to have a look at the problem, and this CEO has so much faith [you can't really call it otherwise, since he'd never shown to be a capable cycling coach] in him that he allows him to work on the most high end machine in his most important factory that produces 50% of his output... I think people would have advised the CEO to have the plumber work on a smaller piece of equipment first somewhere, to see if this new guy actually knew what he was doing...
I guess some cycling coaches have been designing training programs, and tweaking them, for decades, to squeeze every last % of performance out of a body, and this "plumber" swoops in and within a year, it "just all comes together." Remarkable.
Secondly, has he ever released (any of) his training methods, so that other scientists could actually replicate his methods and evaluate performance?
Didn't you write something about signing for a cricket team? Is there a lot of money in cricket (for staffing?) Does anyone know how much he was, was about to be, and is paid? So in this context, and given his tremendous ability to increase performance and create superstars, did all other branches of sports, from NFL, to soccer, to tennis, to curling and chess, just happen to miss his genius? He was 'just' destined for cricket?
You also mentioned he left (Australian?) swimming in 2008, but it appears he started working for Wiggins late 2010. What did he do in between? Did he then worm for UK swimming?