- May 26, 2010
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DirtyWorks said:A number of us can remember elite riders hitting the inhaler while warming up on the turbo trainer before bigger national-level events. Many of those riders were cured later on. Cured! Not kidding.
Find a doctor willing to make the diagnosis and get your asthma meds. It's as old as the discovery asthma meds improve performance for endurance athletics.
Even Froome when talking to Kimmage was not sure about which docs he was talking too, Cound had to correct him!
PK: Who was the doctor?
CF: Richard.. . . .
MC: Freeman.
CF: Sorry, Freeman. He saw me and said, 'Chris, you're not riding with the way you are at the moment, you're just going to aggravate it. Give it 48 hours and you should be good to start in Romandie'. So I ended up just riding on the indoor trainer for a couple of hours in the hotel, watching the guys race Liege. And then I went on to Romandie. I felt good. The chest infection was pretty much finished. I did the prologue and my chest closed up completely and that's when (the team doctor) said: 'Okay, listen, we know you're fit to race but you're coughing like a dog. You need to take this (prednisone) to clear your chest'.