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#211 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: London
Posts: 78
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Quote:
I seem to think that you said in an earlier submission that the speed of the winner had increased because the speed of the peloton (flat stages particualrly) had gone up? |
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#212 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: London
Posts: 78
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Quote:
This is complete nonsense. A doped rider is guilty of doping whether he is caught or not. Don't you think that if a whole team got caught (ie 100%) that your 1% figure is obviously wrong and that your assertions are also wrong. You seem to misunderstand the percentages caught with the underlying doping problem. Answer me this. If you are the team leader and you are doping. If I am your domestique, how am I supposed to keep up with you if I am clean? If all the Phonak team is doping to keep up with their leader, how do the other teams keep up with Phonak? This is oversimplified I know but I think it illustrates my argument. |
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#213 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Anchorage, Alaska, USA
Posts: 1,672
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Quote:
I'm not at all an expert with testicular cancer. But I do know that testosterone level in the body is regulated not by the testicles but by a gland in the brain, I believe in the pituitary gland or the hypothalamus. Therefore, if a guy loses one, the other one works more to make up for it. If one starts to generate more, and the level increases, the level is picked up by the brain gland, and it slows down the production from the healthy one. If a guy does steroids, then the brain senses that the testosterone is too high. It sends a message to the testicals to slow down. Over time, they shrivel up. Long term abuse of steroids might lead to failure or to permanent impairment of the testicles and to resultant rebound effects after stopping their use, among other things to include more body fat and less muscle than he had to begin with. |
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#214 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Anchorage, Alaska, USA
Posts: 1,672
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Quote:
What I am saying is that one team represents only a very small teeny tiny fraction of the entire number of pro riders. |
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#215 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Anchorage, Alaska, USA
Posts: 1,672
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Quote:
The speed of the winner is influenced greatly by the peloton. This doesn't mean that the average speed of the peloton went up. I know this is pretty hard to conceptualize, but it is not a given that because the peloton influences the lead rider to greater advantage one year as compared to the other, that that results in a faster peloton. That's not necessarily the case. That's why I brought up the fact that the speed of the peloton can be increased if the average speed of the peloton were the objective. It is not. Placing riders on the podium is what teams try to do, not to increase the average speed of the peloton. Do we know what the average speed of the peloton is? NO! So we cannot compare the speeds of the lead riders and conclude that the peloton rode faster. Even if it did ride faster, unless you have rules whereby the peloton is actually a race unit (ie, is measured against a standard for a prize), then it is not really even in a race. If it goes faster one year and not the next, then you don't know what the motives were for the faster speed unless you analyze all the elements. And then it becomes very complicated. First you have to have a race where the average speed of the peloton is the objective. We don't have that. Therefore analyzing it's constituents to determine the whole makes no sense. The Tour is much more complex than that. If they had another element like I suggested, like a prize for the average speed of the peloton with appropriate penalties for riders DNFing beating a certain standard, then you might be able to see changes year to year in peloton speed. But we are not analyzing a RACING peloton. It doesn't race, only it's individual riders--not the group as a whole. |
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#216 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 111
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Quote:
Thanks. I never thought of the other one regulating the level. But then why would the guy on the interview say that the other reason his level may be high is cos of a medical condidtion and he said that it could be testicular cancer. Oh well you have given me a fair reason as to why LA wasn't picked up so I wont make you talk about shriveling manly bits anymore cos you might not sleep tonight!! ![]() |
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#217 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: London
Posts: 78
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Quote:
This is a simple issue which is being over complicated. If, as you acknowledge, that the speed of the winner is influenced by the speed of the peloton, then if the average speed of the winner is increasing (which it has beyond all doubt, i provided the data for this yesterday) the peloton must be getting faster. Or are you saying that the increase of the average speed of the winner is attributable to speeds in the mountains? If so, then this is an even more questionable performance. If you look at average speeds of flat stages (partculalrly in the first week) they are faster. I can show the data on this but it will take some time and will involve a large spreadsheet. As for the structure of the peloton and moving riders within it as a reason for increased pace. The pattern of racing in the peloton has been pretty much unchanged for the last 15 years. The average speed of the winner has undoubtedly benefitted from the pace of the flat stages and also increased speed in the mountains. Just having watched the pattern of the racing over the years and the average speed of the winner demonstrates this beyond doubt. You do not need to over complicate this. |
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#218 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Anchorage, Alaska, USA
Posts: 1,672
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Quote:
Lance Armstrong's team in 1999 was said to be very weak, and yet that tour was the fastest ever up to that point, I believe. Now his team is very strong. Wouldn't we expect his time to have improved as his teammates have gradually been improving due to having better riders in the mix? This can happen even though the peloton's average speed stays roughly the same. It sure blew away the other teams in the mountains this year. The "peloton", if you want to call it that, was pretty withered and fragmented through the Pyrenees and Alps. I'm not so sure it was going faster. |
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#219 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: London
Posts: 78
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Quote:
Here's the average speed for the main stages in the Alps and Pyrenees in the 2004 Tour: La Mongie (197.5 km) 39 kmh Plateau de Beille (205.5km) 33.8kmh Villard de Lans (180.5km) 38.61 kmh Grand Bornand (204.5km) 33.0 kmh 33.8 kmh for the Plateau de Beille stage is very fast. I made the point yesterday that the pace of the big mountain stages has increased by around 1kmh since the early 1990's. I think the front of the bunch was going very fast in the 2004 Tour. In 2002 , the Palteau de Beille stage was 199.5 km won at an average speed of 33.3kmh. In 1998, 170 km at 32.3kmh (won by Pantani) |
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#220 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Anchorage, Alaska, USA
Posts: 1,672
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Quote:
That can be explained by the attitude of the peloton. When it decides to react is not a function so much of how much energy it has as how it fits with the tactics of the race. This means, as I said earlier, that it is not the limitation of the peloton's long distance capability that dictates the race but how it decides to ride. Now if each stage every day were a time trial over the entire course of the race, every stage included, then it would be easy to compare differences year by year. But with the peloton and the fact that its objective is not to race but to influence the placing's of the top gc contenders or to reel in daily stages to allow other riders besides breakaways to sprint for the stage win, the comparison is meaningless. |
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#221 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 121
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Quote:
However, these cases are extremely rare. And yes further investigatin would be able to ascertain if this is case without significant problem. That said, I will repeat these are extremely rare cases, and despite wanting to believe in Tyler, you have to also look at this logicaly.. What is more likely- a cyclist extremely rare blood profile or a cyclist has been blood doping? Last edited by Perro Loco : 24-09.-2004 at 11:53 PM. |
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#222 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: London
Posts: 78
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Quote:
You are having a laugh now surely? You can't be serious. This is not a question of mindset but about the physical abilities of the riders. The speed is detrmined by the physical capabilities of the riders such as oxygen uptake, power and recovery. It is not as easy as saying I am right on my limit here at 50 kmh but my mind wants to do 52 kmh so i will. You don't seem to understand that the racing style of the peloton has changed over the last ten years because riders are recovering better. The riders have always wanted to go faster that why they race so mindset has nothing to do with speed in my view. However, if you can recover faster (perhaps because you dope) your body will follow what your mind wants to do more easily than before. |
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#223 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 111
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It's like the arms race. The governing bodies increase their detection efforts; the riders increase their efforts to avoid detection. The problem is that the organisers like the money that increased performance and competition bring to the sport and so do the riders, so it's not clear that the organisers have as strong an incentive to rid the sport of doping as the riders do to use dope. That is why the national authorities (i.e., police) have stepped in.
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#224 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2003
Posts: 214
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Quote:
Bizarre. You're suggesting 2 things: 1. TdF average speed can only improve by using drugs 2. The effectiveness/prevelance of drugs has increased since 1989 To address the 1st: In 1989 Lemond, Fignon, Delgado were racing a whole season, from Etoilles des Besseges to the Tour of Lombardy. The TdF was one (albeit important) rendezvous along the way. No-one used HRMs, SRM cranks hadn't been invented, there was no facility to download data for later analysis and the coaches were ex-cyclists. These days Armstrong, Ullrich, Hamilton show up for one race all year, having trained specifically and without fatigue. They have all the advantages of modern training technology and methodology and their coaches are sports scientists. Might speed things up a little. Secondly: If anything drug use has moved from the proven effective (amphetamines and the like) to the less effective but less detectable as the authorities have at least started to catch up. Witness Hamilton's (alledged) use of blood doping - much more primitive than EPO but (until now) undetectable. Laurent Fignon has all but admitted using drugs in the 1980's; the PDM team famously all had the stomach flu in 1991; Dr Ferrari's case book goes back to the early 90's and beyond; as many riders had one-off incredible improvements back then as they do now... should I continue? |
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#225 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Paris, France
Posts: 91
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Quote:
Sorry, I have been busy but the Dr is now in... 1) So I have searched for use of this procedure in paternity testing on the web and have found one reference to it and that was a cost-effectiveness analysis by a company trying to sell the equipment to hospitals. That means it is not an established technique for paternity testing. This claim appears to be incorrect or overstated. 2) I cannot believe that a technique that was published for the first time in a peer reviewed journal in November of 2003 can be a well established technique 6 months later. There would have to be a greater consensus in the scientific community. My wife works with this technique and she tells me constantly that it is very tricky and you can see whatever you want to in the results. The article on cyclingnews indicates that they are looking for an absence of signal on some blood cells as a positive indicator. There could be a number of reasons that some cells do not light up. 3) "Length of time until a transfusion is undetectable? Up to 120 days; for athletes, probably less than 90 days because red cells have shorter lives in highly active individuals". If he tested positive a couple of weeks ago then they can do another blood test and have different labs analyse the blood and see if a consensus can be arrived at because apparently the first test was considered questionable by the lab that performed it until "outside experts were brought in to confirm it" (who were they I wonder?). It appears that the experts on this topic are the people that developed and published the test in the first place. I am not saying these are dishonest scientists but it may be that they unconsciously are aware that catching a high profile athlete with their new test could lead to a great deal of publicity and liscencing fees for their university... Also these people are extremely adamant that their test is basically foolproof and I would not trust any scientist that talks this way about their results. NOTHING IS FOOLPROOF! There are always exceptions and different interpretations of results. Especially with these sorts of biological reagents. For these and other reasons I would recommend an independant scientific study a decision that Phonak has taken already. 4) So what do you do over there at Velonews AntoineG? ![]()
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The early bird may get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese. |
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