Wigans goes there. Cadence!

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daveyt

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Bronstein said:
Look at the women's world records in athetics (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_world_records_in_athletics). Why haven't the records for 100m-400m been broken in over 25 years? All but one of middle distance records are still from the mid 90s.

If 'the history of all sport is continuous improvement', please explain why any of these records haven't been broken? Do current athletes lack the necessary talent? Don't train as hard as the East Germans did?

That's a pretty narrow sample, better to look at trends across all athletics no? Small samples can look all sorts or weird and there is plenty more data out there. If you have to Cherry pick the data to support your view, you are probably wrong.
 
May 26, 2010
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Fearless Greg Lemond said:
Beno, you also have the option not to respond to the 'newest' influx....

I know, shooting fish in a barrel.......

Fearless Greg Lemond said:
On topic; wouldnt it be cool if Wiggo took a dig at the hour record with Gert Lienders as his performance director? A la Rominger et ya know.

Cant see Wiggo working with anyone less than Ferrari, meself.
 
Apr 20, 2012
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daveyt said:
That's a pretty narrow sample, better to look at trends across all athletics no? Small samples can look all sorts or weird and there is plenty more data out there. If you have to Cherry pick the data to support your view, you are probably wrong.
Please desist your poor trolling effort. Grazie mille.
 

daveyt

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Oct 23, 2014
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Fearless Greg Lemond said:
Please desist your poor trolling effort. Grazie mille.

Please stop trolling me. That was a valid point, across all the Olympic events that data is available for to say "oh look, here are 3 or 4 that buck the trend I have a great point" is BS. Even if you don't agree with anything else I say you have to admit this is true? Surely? Nobody could have any credibility supporting that no matter how much it supported their ideas?
 
thehog said:
Mentioned just before the Vuleta TT:

2v92lwm.jpg

So according to Sky propaganda they were so focused on science they did **** like watching videos, thats how pro science they were.

Wouldn't take him into a windtunnel though. Too expensive
 
Benotti69 said:
Why are sky fans being permitted to rehash the same BS again and again in the sky threads?

Why are they not being told to read the threads before rehashing arguments that have been dismissed countless times already?

The only answer is trolling.

LOL
This thread had been dormant for 3 months until somebody dug up an old article, so he could threw out his usual sarcastic bait.
Guess who it was?

Your summation is correct though.

The only answer is trolling.
 
Mellow Velo said:
LOL
This thread had been dormant for 3 months until somebody dug up an old article, so he could threw out his usual sarcastic bait.
Guess who it was?

Your summation is correct though.

The only answer is trolling.

Why shouldn't posters dig up old threads?

Though I agree, this particular article that resurrected it didn't seem to me to have much of interest. Ive seen far more damning quotes from pre transformation wiggo.
 
May 26, 2010
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the sceptic said:
This old article is full of comedy cold.

http://www.cyclingweekly.co.uk/news/latest-news/bradley-wiggins-the-transformation-64032

This is the best part. Hog could not have written this better.

Mellow Velo said:
LOL
This thread had been dormant for 3 months until somebody dug up an old article, so he could threw out his usual sarcastic bait.
Guess who it was?

Your summation is correct though.

The only answer is trolling.

Amazingly he did start his post with "this old...."

Wiggo is comedy gold though.
 
daveyt said:
That's a pretty narrow sample, better to look at trends across all athletics no? Small samples can look all sorts or weird and there is plenty more data out there. If you have to Cherry pick the data to support your view, you are probably wrong.

What am I wrong about?

By the way, can you explain why none of the records I mentioned have been broken since the 80s and mid-90s? There are also other women's records still standing since the 80s (long jump, shot put and discus). That's at least 7 records that haven't been broken in over 25 years. Doesn't sound like continuous improvement to me.
 
Jul 21, 2012
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The Hitch said:
Why shouldn't posters dig up old threads?

Though I agree, this particular article that resurrected it didn't seem to me to have much of interest. Ive seen far more damning quotes from pre transformation wiggo.

The stuff about french riders in the gruppetto thinking Wiggins might be a doper was comedy gold to me..

But I obviously wouldn't have bumped the thread if I knew it would lead to this bot trolling everyone.
 
The Hitch said:
Why shouldn't posters dig up old threads?

Though I agree, this particular article that resurrected it didn't seem to me to have much of interest. Ive seen far more damning quotes from pre transformation wiggo.

Sure. Threads should reappear whenever necessary.
Just making the point that you can't really criticise Sky fans for rehashing "BS" in Sky threads, given the thread was resurrected with and old article and now everybody is basically saying what they have said many times before.
 
I love this:

“A couple of years ago, I’d have thought the same thing,” he says a couple of days later when we meet. “You see a guy come from nowhere. It’s easier to think he’s on something than think ‘well, that guy may have worked bloody hard’.

Because, you know, other pro cyclists have never tried training hard. No, really hard. No...seriously...really, really hard training.
 
Sep 29, 2012
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The Hitch said:
Why shouldn't posters dig up old threads?

Though I agree, this particular article that resurrected it didn't seem to me to have much of interest. Ive seen far more damning quotes from pre transformation wiggo.

I'm sorry that adding a new article - despite its age - is not interesting to you, or that you agree it was for the purpose of trolling - that is what you are agreeing to.

Next time I should ask Mellow Vello and your permission if I can post something noone has posted.
 
Mar 13, 2009
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daveyt said:
That's a very strong statement, what is it based on?
a priori, self-evident.

the salient term in the response was the qualifier/adjective "material".

A material difference. They are marginal improvements, because all of these techniques have been mined so close to an exhaustion status.
 
Sep 29, 2012
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blackcat said:
a priori, self-evident.

the salient term in the response was the qualifier/adjective "material".

A material difference. They are marginal improvements, because all of these techniques have been mined so close to an exhaustion status.

It's been banned, just FYI.
 
blackcat said:
no one has contested an improvement. But the human evolution has hit an apogee in the previous decades, evolution has been over multitude millennia, million years,

nutrition, training, etc, these are diminishing marginal returns, that had been exhausted on a material measure, a decade back.

as D-Queued's pithy epigram goes, marginal gains aint even a rounding error on a comprehensive doping program.

when good doping gets a FSP improvement of 20%, you are telling us, that without this 20% from the hight of the EPO era, that cycling is now recruiting from a different base of talented athletes, and those like Hinault and Lemond in the previous era, were naturally genetics-wise, mediocre athletes, and the sport drew from a very narrow and small pool of potential athletes?

yeah, sounds legit

good grief

I'm not telling you anything. I am questioning whether or not using individual performance benchmarked against previous 'doping era' performance as some kind of proof of guilt is legitimate. And the good grief seems somewhat unnecessary.

From what you've written it seems that it is not the fact that there has been an improvement that you question, per se, but the rate of improvement which is really suspect. The issue becomes, then, what ‘rate of transformation’ is inherently suspect? Where is the ‘normal/abnormal’ threshold, and what rate does this threshold change due to (let’s call it) ‘natural progress’.

Human performance moves forward. It does not leap forward from doping as it didn't the 90's and then stay at the same level, perfectly because of one team that had no results figuring out all of a sudden how to eclipse all previous clean human performance in one year.

You are asserting this as fact, but is it?

Human evolution offers an interesting comparator actually. For the most part, it does not progress by slow, small steady shifts but by sudden shifts prompted by increased stresses. Does progress in sport operate in the same way – i.e. by sudden ‘great leaps forward’ by freakishly talented individuals and/or during periods of intense competition when people are pushing the (let’s say Natural) boundaries / methods? I don’t know what the evidence is but is there actual evidence – as opposed to opinion on offer here? If it did progress in the ‘leaps and bounds’ model, like evolution, surely outlying performances should be expected as part of the way change happens, even if they appear to be outlandish and invite suspicion? Isn't it worth contemplating the possibility at least rather than dismissing it?

Look at the women's world records in athetics (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of...s_in_athletics). Why haven't the records for 100m-400m been broken in over 25 years? All but one of middle distance records are still from the mid 90s.

If 'the history of all sport is continuous improvement', please explain why any of these records haven't been broken? Do current athletes lack the necessary talent? Don't train as hard as the East Germans did?

Im sorry, but that is ‘cherry-picking data’ as previously stated and though your example may be right it does not in and of itself offer much insight into the history of progress in sport as a whole. I’m sure I could find a period in, say, under 23 men’s butterfly swim when records were changing every weekend. And likewise find a sport which no change had happened for decades.

The breakthrough was not with the climber beating what doctors told him. The breakthrough is finding out doctors are not the gods we once thought, but human entirely and utterly. No better or smarter than you or I.

Your example is also very useful. As a climber looking to climb oxygen poor altitudes, EPO and the like would have helped tremendously. Just as we believe it has helped Froome, climb and time trial.

If your climber had failed to ascend Mt Fuji, for example, sans oxygen, and then succeeded to ascend Everest et all unaided, we would be approaching an analogy that matches Froome's pre and post-2011 Vuelta change in performance.

If your climber then came out and said, "I had bilharzia" or any other excuse... well.. I hope you see what I am getting at.

I understand completely – what you are saying is that it is the transformation – the rate of change – which is questionable, and I don’t necessarily disagree with either the viewpoint or your particular example. And I also agree that justifying said change with apparently inconsistent statements which don’t appear to bear a great deal of scrutiny makes these transformations even more suspect.

I just offer up the above as another perspective.

What saddens me, I suppose, is that there is an assumption of guilt inherent in the position of ‘anyone climbing faster than in the past must be a doper’. And that starts out with a blanket questioning of every rider’s integrity without knowing anything about them. It is generally much harder for a rider to prove himself innocent than to be proven guilty, especially if one’s world view is ‘that there is stuff out there which we don’t know about and that cannot be tested for at the moment’ By those terms, no test will ever be good enough and therefore no rider will ever be able to demonstrate their innocence by not testing positive. (The fact that they need to 'demonstrate their innocence is pretty sad, if inevitable, considering the sports history). it seems to me that the only way not to be suspect is to be rubbish compared to your peers. That doesn’t seem very fair to me. Indeed, why bother even trying either to ride clean or to even engage in a debate on the subject with doubters?

I don’t say this with any personal axe to grind about Sky or Froome or in reference to any particular rider. I personally would not be at all surprised to find they were doped to the gunnels. But I also believe that performance alone is insufficient ‘evidence’ in and of itself, and that though it might raise suspicions transformation isn’t actually proof of anything.
 
Dec 7, 2010
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Electress said:
Human evolution offers an interesting comparator actually. It does not progress by slow, small steady shifts but by sudden shifts prompted by increased stresses.
In the same person? Are you suggesting that an individual could "evolve" in sudden shifts from their previous selves?


Electress said:
It is generally much harder for a rider to prove himself innocent than to be proven guilty, especially if one’s world view is ‘that there is stuff out there which we don’t know about and that cannot be tested for at the moment
Hold on. There are substances and methods out there currently which can not be tested for. Fact. That is not anyone's "world view." It is a fact.


Electress said:
But I also believe that performance alone is insufficient ‘evidence’ in and of itself, and that though it might raise suspicions transformation isn’t actually proof of anything.
And this isn't a court of law, so it really doesn't matter. The history of the sport as we know it, combined with observations of performances and transformations, has allowed many people to form conclusions that they are quite comfortable with. That's all it really comes down to.
 
Nov 14, 2013
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Electress said:
But I also believe that performance alone is insufficient ‘evidence’ in and of itself, and that though it might raise suspicions transformation isn’t actually proof of anything.

Most fair minded people believe the same, its not proof but it is a piece of the puzzle.

When you have class leading performance coupled with previous performances class tailing, and sport with a long history of great performances directly linked to doping then the onus of proof of being cleans is squarely placed at the feet of the athletes.

When they then have numerous inconsistent of tales of illness, non VO2 max testing, non wind tunnel testing, super scientific training which boils down to switching off the power meter and doing another 3 hrs. Things that make you go hmmmmmm.
 
ralphbert said:
Most fair minded people believe the same, its not proof but it is a piece of the puzzle.

When you have class leading performance coupled with previous performances class tailing, and sport with a long history of great performances directly linked to doping then the onus of proof of being cleans is squarely placed at the feet of the athletes.

When they then have numerous inconsistent of tales of illness, non VO2 max testing, non wind tunnel testing, super scientific training which boils down to switching off the power meter and doing another 3 hrs. Things that make you go hmmmmmm.

Trust me, I go hmmmmmm an awful lot too. And in all probability about exactly the same riders and teams as you do…not helped by the holier than thou PR, frankly.

But I also want to question my own suspicions some times - and ask myself (and others) whether the degree of scepticism is really valid, and indeed, is at such a point that there is simply nothing a team or rider could do to allay it. That is not a good position to be in about a sport I enjoy, in my book.

Once you question everything and suspect everyone of being a cheat, completely non-objective stuff, like gut feeling about a rider being a 'decent bloke' begins to weigh more than it should in opinions on their 'purity' or otherwise. That aint great either.
 
Granville57 said:
In the same person? Are you suggesting that an individual could "evolve" in sudden shifts from their previous selves?

I'm offering it as a comparative model into how change can happen and suggesting that maybe that model could apply to improvement in the sport as a whole. For example, that an individual may benefit from a revolution in technique or training that causes a sudden improvement in performance and that this improvement eventually results in the level of the whole field getting better not 'gradually' but in a sudden spurt of improvement that has nothing to do with drugs. Or that huge leaps forward in performance in relation to previous records are made by a naturally talented individual pushing the boundaries. When looked at over time, these performances seem outlandish in the context of the times, but don't necessitate cheating.

But - whilst I do harbour suspicions about sudden individual transformations (as opposed to in the sport over time) - I don't dismiss all and any such transformations as being impossible. Are 'break-throughs' so very uncommon? (I would agree, however, that even if there is a step-change, there is usually some 'knocking at the door' period or hints of prodigal talents before breaking through, as oppose to just appearing out of nowhere.)

Hold on. There are substances and methods out there currently which can not be tested for. Fact. That is not anyone's "world view." It is a fact.

Okay. But isn't there also an inherent assumption which is not fact (however well-founded in sport history) that no matter what is done in regards to doping and testing that there will always be substances and methods that cannot be tested for, and that the dopers will always be ahead of the testing. Ergo, no rider will ever be able to demonstrate their innocence by not testing positive.

And this isn't a court of law, so it really doesn't matter. The history of the sport as we know it, combined with observations of performances and transformations, has allowed many people to form conclusions that they are quite comfortable with. That's all it really comes down to.

For a forum and with people's whose opinions don't count towards a rider's future or the future of the sport's management, it matters not one jot. But if you're interested in how the sport deals with doping or not, builds trust with the fans / sponsors etc. again, surely questioning how (or indeed, whether) it could clean up its act and what the burden of proof might be, and the basic principle underlying that (ie. guilty until innocent or innocent until guilty) is of interest? Maybe not for a Wiggo thread, I accept.
 
Electress said:
I'm not telling you anything. I am questioning whether or not using individual performance benchmarked against previous 'doping era' performance as some kind of proof of guilt is legitimate. And the good grief seems somewhat unnecessary.

From what you've written it seems that it is not the fact that there has been an improvement that you question, per se, but the rate of improvement which is really suspect. The issue becomes, then, what ‘rate of transformation’ is inherently suspect? Where is the ‘normal/abnormal’ threshold, and what rate does this threshold change due to (let’s call it) ‘natural progress’.



You are asserting this as fact, but is it?

Human evolution offers an interesting comparator actually. For the most part, it does not progress by slow, small steady shifts but by sudden shifts prompted by increased stresses. Does progress in sport operate in the same way – i.e. by sudden ‘great leaps forward’ by freakishly talented individuals and/or during periods of intense competition when people are pushing the (let’s say Natural) boundaries / methods? I don’t know what the evidence is but is there actual evidence – as opposed to opinion on offer here? If it did progress in the ‘leaps and bounds’ model, like evolution, surely outlying performances should be expected as part of the way change happens, even if they appear to be outlandish and invite suspicion? Isn't it worth contemplating the possibility at least rather than dismissing it?



Im sorry, but that is ‘cherry-picking data’ as previously stated and though your example may be right it does not in and of itself offer much insight into the history of progress in sport as a whole. I’m sure I could find a period in, say, under 23 men’s butterfly swim when records were changing every weekend. And likewise find a sport which no change had happened for decades.



I understand completely – what you are saying is that it is the transformation – the rate of change – which is questionable, and I don’t necessarily disagree with either the viewpoint or your particular example. And I also agree that justifying said change with apparently inconsistent statements which don’t appear to bear a great deal of scrutiny makes these transformations even more suspect.

I just offer up the above as another perspective.

What saddens me, I suppose, is that there is an assumption of guilt inherent in the position of ‘anyone climbing faster than in the past must be a doper’. And that starts out with a blanket questioning of every rider’s integrity without knowing anything about them. It is generally much harder for a rider to prove himself innocent than to be proven guilty, especially if one’s world view is ‘that there is stuff out there which we don’t know about and that cannot be tested for at the moment’ By those terms, no test will ever be good enough and therefore no rider will ever be able to demonstrate their innocence by not testing positive. (The fact that they need to 'demonstrate their innocence is pretty sad, if inevitable, considering the sports history). it seems to me that the only way not to be suspect is to be rubbish compared to your peers. That doesn’t seem very fair to me. Indeed, why bother even trying either to ride clean or to even engage in a debate on the subject with doubters?

I don’t say this with any personal axe to grind about Sky or Froome or in reference to any particular rider. I personally would not be at all surprised to find they were doped to the gunnels. But I also believe that performance alone is insufficient ‘evidence’ in and of itself, and that though it might raise suspicions transformation isn’t actually proof of anything.

Look thanks for the long reply and all the thoughts. I don't have the energy to rehash it all.

It's all been pulled apart a hundred times on here. If you want to believe in this stuff, have at it. I'll never convince you if what's out there already hasn't.
 
Dec 7, 2010
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Electress said:
Okay. But isn't there also an inherent assumption which is not fact (however well-founded in sport history) that no matter what is done in regards to doping and testing that there will always be substances and methods that cannot be tested for, and that the dopers will always be ahead of the testing. Ergo, no rider will ever be able to demonstrate their innocence by not testing positive.
Yes. :)

As has been well established, "not testing positive" is meaningless. As far as how a rider might "demonstrate" their cleanliness, some important elements (in terms of believability) would be to have a career trajectory that makes sense to a reasonable person; not be closely associated with others who have proven to be untrustworthy in the past; generally conduct oneself in a manner that appears to be credible.

Those are just for starters given the history of sport in general. Not an enviable position to find oneself in, but it is what it is.
 
red_flanders said:
Look thanks for the long reply and all the thoughts. I don't have the energy to rehash it all.

It's all been pulled apart a hundred times on here. If you want to believe in this stuff, have at it. I'll never convince you if what's out there already hasn't.

You are assuming I don't actually have exactly the same suspicions as you do. I guess I just want to question them and have them questioned. But perhaps this is not the place to do so, after all.

Yes.

As has been well established, "not testing positive" is meaningless. As far as how a rider might "demonstrate" their cleanliness, some important elements (in terms of believability) would be to have a career trajectory that makes sense to a reasonable person; not be closely associated with others who have proven to be untrustworthy in the past; generally conduct oneself in a manner that appears to be credible.

Those are just for starters given the history of sport in general. Not an enviable position to find oneself in, but it is what it is.

Thanks Granville, for bothering. Seems like that consistency is an important element - not only in terms of performance (=sensible rates of change etc.) but also in character, behaviour etc. There is a kind of 'weight of evidence' equation which I operates in lieu of having anything more substantive.

Cheerio.
 
Dec 7, 2010
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Electress said:
You are assuming I don't actually have exactly the same suspicions as you do. I guess I just want to question them and have them questioned. But perhaps this is not the place to do so, after all.
You seem to be (deliberately?) ignoring the very point that red_flanders is making: These very things are questioned, day-in and day-out within the walls of The Clinic, and always have been. Many people, many times, have offered up suggestions for making the sport more credible.


Electress said:
There is a kind of 'weight of evidence' equation which I operates in lieu of having anything more substantive.
Such as? As been covered exhaustively in the past, even with all the "weight of evidence" against Armstrong, some people still demanded video evidence right up to the bitter end—even Chris Horner. :rolleyes:

How many times did Hincapie, Vande Velde, Zabriskie, Vaugthers, Hesjedal or Danielson (among countless others) actually fail a doping test when they were doping? They didn't. So I'm not sure how one would define "substantive" in any meaningful way.