Cycle Chic said:Good article in Le Monde
http://mobile.lemonde.fr/tour-de-fr...tana-l-astre-noir-double_4462715_1616918.html
So they're taking issue with the fact that they can't wiretap
Lol. NSA ftw.
Cycle Chic said:Good article in Le Monde
http://mobile.lemonde.fr/tour-de-fr...tana-l-astre-noir-double_4462715_1616918.html
red_flanders said:Don't know, why don't you pull up both measurements and we can discuss?
"hey Alex, this is the French police speaking, can we place some wiretaps in your bus?"Arnout said:So they're taking issue with the fact that they can't wiretap
Lol. NSA ftw.
bigcog said:Here you go:
"With 417 watts of average Italian is stronger than Christopher Froome had yet crushed the Tour in 2013 with its 412 watts."
http://translate.google.com/transla...umain-avec-ses-417-watts_4462718_1616918.html
djpbaltimore said:Those are interesting numbers, but without a rough estimate on the uncertainty of the calculations, it is hard to say 5 watts is actually significant. And it appeared that the heat played a really big role at Chamrousse as everybody was much lower on that climb.
bigcog said:Are you saying the he's artificially "inflated" Nibali's numbers because of the heat so they are higher or that some of Nibali's numbers are lower than they would have been but for the heat ?
"it is hard to say 5 watts is actually significant." - my point was that Froome got hung drawn and quartered based on "analysis" like this, whereas as Nibali is seen as clean, what a joke.
djpbaltimore said:I mostly agree with your latter point. But, I actually was surprised to see his numbers so close to Froome.
As for the heat, those numbers are bringing down his aggregate figure, so the calculations might actually be an underestimate of his true wattage. However, I imagine most tours have one climb under poor conditions so it will tend to even out in the long run. Add the fact that Nibali seems to be toying with the field at times, his level might indeed have been higher than Froome if pressed. Interesting article.
bigcog said:Here you go:
"With 417 watts of average Italian is stronger than Christopher Froome had yet crushed the Tour in 2013 with its 412 watts."
http://translate.google.com/transla...umain-avec-ses-417-watts_4462718_1616918.html
Rollthedice said:
good stuff.Rollthedice said:
that cannot be stressed enough. the battle would have been legendary.What a shame that we were denied the opportunity to see Nibali challenged by Froome and also Contador, who did more than enough in the lead up to the race, and its first small climb, to suggest he was at the same level.
red_flanders said:That covers it well enough, thanks.
So to the question, do we only discuss when it applies to Froome, the answer is no. Looks like the power outputs are roughly the same. You're asking the question on a Nibali thread where it's actively being discussed. Seems like a weird question. There is also the climbing performance thread.
Here's the difference. I have not seen one single post by anyone claiming Nibali is clean.
That is all.
Cycle Chic said:Good article in Le Monde
http://mobile.lemonde.fr/tour-de-fr...tana-l-astre-noir-double_4462715_1616918.html
Nibali was asked by France Télévisions if his victory could be viewed as proof that it was possible to win clean. "I think so but not only because of my victory," he said. "In recent years there have been some nice, important and clean victories. Cycling has changed in recent years and we can be proud of it."
A total of 730g of glycogen assume a supersaturation of muscle and liver deposits that is difficult to achieve for an athlete of 63kg, within the few hours between two stages of the TdF.
Hence the hypothesis that Nibali actually expressed an incredibly high LIPID POWER that has allowed him to consume less glycogen than calculated above.
An average power of 355W requires an expenditure of 1280 Kcal/h; therefore in those 115min of 4 KOM alone, the caloric request is 2450 Kcal.
Considering the expressed intensities, normally this energy demand could be met only by CHO: it would require about 612g.
If we imagine the rest of the stage, about 1h40', to be done at an average of 220 watts, it required approximately an additional 1400 kcal, of which at least 50% were provided by another 175g of CHO...
Almost 800g of CHO is an amount that far exceeds the maximum capacity of saturation of glycogen stores and therefore confirms the extraordinary ability of Nibali to use fat as fuel, saving the CHO for the final stage, where he made the difference over the rivals.
Escarabajo said:Ferrari's opinion:
http://www.53x12.com/do/show?page=indepth.view&id=148
Nibali 6.3 Watts/Kg in Hautacam.
He forgot Andysniper said:good stuff.
that cannot be stressed enough. the battle would have been legendary.What a shame that we were denied the opportunity to see Nibali challenged by Froome and also Contador, who did more than enough in the lead up to the race, and its first small climb, to suggest he was at the same level.