Surely its not just about how big they are, its power to weight. If he has less baggage to cart around then he wont have to be so extremely powerful. Triathlon competitors dont tend to be big bastards, just incredibly fit, and they have to use a varying amount of mucsles. Fair play to Froome, and for what its worth, i think he is clean. The step change in mentality, and the huge policing in the sport now is the evidence I would quote.
Well Sky have provided all the training data for all of their riders to the UCI to show how they are achieving the results they are getting so if there's anything untoward it should come out.Some people are never going to be convinced that a TDF winner can be clean, that's the legacy Armstrong et al have left the sport to carry I suppose.
Quote from: MoetVillan on August 05, 2013, 05:39:12 PMSurely its not just about how big they are, its power to weight. If he has less baggage to cart around then he wont have to be so extremely powerful. Triathlon competitors dont tend to be big bastards, just incredibly fit, and they have to use a varying amount of mucsles. Fair play to Froome, and for what its worth, i think he is clean. The step change in mentality, and the huge policing in the sport now is the evidence I would quote.Power to weight doesn't matter in flat time trials, it's only pure power output. Weight comes into it uphill with gravity playing the major factor.
Quote from: Plumbutt Cooper on August 05, 2013, 05:52:24 PMWell Sky have provided all the training data for all of their riders to the UCI to show how they are achieving the results they are getting so if there's anything untoward it should come out.Some people are never going to be convinced that a TDF winner can be clean, that's the legacy Armstrong et al have left the sport to carry I suppose.I just don't believe anything to do with Froome. Backstory, blood data, the lot. It's extremely rare for a 27 year old to appear out of nowhere and be a world beater, there's normally some kind of talent and progression from a young age. I've only been following cycling since 93 and the times when someone has appeared with no track record and tore it up they've been doped to the eyeballs.Don't get me wrong, I would love to be wrong but I've ended up so cynical with the sport.
I just don't believe anything to do with Froome. Backstory, blood data, the lot. It's extremely rare for a 27 year old to appear out of nowhere and be a world beater, there's normally some kind of talent and progression from a young age. I've only been following cycling since 93 and the times when someone has appeared with no track record and tore it up they've been doped to the eyeballs.Don't get me wrong, I would love to be wrong but I've ended up so cynical with the sport.
Quote from: aj2k77 on August 05, 2013, 09:42:20 PMI just don't believe anything to do with Froome. Backstory, blood data, the lot. It's extremely rare for a 27 year old to appear out of nowhere and be a world beater, there's normally some kind of talent and progression from a young age. I've only been following cycling since 93 and the times when someone has appeared with no track record and tore it up they've been doped to the eyeballs.Don't get me wrong, I would love to be wrong but I've ended up so cynical with the sport.Just because you hadn't heard of him until last year doesn't mean he just appeared out of nowhere!He's been a professional for six years and spent his youth cycling up and down mountains in southern Africa.A lot of the reason he didn't get too many wins in his early professional career is he suffered from Bilharzia, a parasitic blood disease contracted in Kenya, look it up. *EDIT* as Hipkiss said already!
How do Froome and Wiggins put out monstrous power outputs at those weights?
Quote from: aj2k77 on August 05, 2013, 09:30:47 PMQuote from: MoetVillan on August 05, 2013, 05:39:12 PMSurely its not just about how big they are, its power to weight. If he has less baggage to cart around then he wont have to be so extremely powerful. Triathlon competitors dont tend to be big bastards, just incredibly fit, and they have to use a varying amount of mucsles. Fair play to Froome, and for what its worth, i think he is clean. The step change in mentality, and the huge policing in the sport now is the evidence I would quote.Power to weight doesn't matter in flat time trials, it's only pure power output. Weight comes into it uphill with gravity playing the major factor.Weight always matters, it just matters more when you're climbing, it's fairly basic physics, the energy required to move object x from a to b changes based on the weight of the object, being on a bike doesn't alter that, climbing a mountain just means you add a multiplier for gravity.Efficiency is the key to success in cycling, getting the maximum speed for the least possible effort. Team Sky and the UK athletics Cycling teams have based their entire training regime around minor changes for maximum reward with their entire lifestyle in the buildup to and during major events. They've got set sleeping patterns and diets (including water intake), they have every second of their training monitored to pick out technical inefficiencies and they 'share the load' in the peloton better than any other team in the tour. The team leader has a 'mate' (Froome was Wiggo's) whose job is to help him up the hills and lead the charge to close down breakaways.
There's no point discussing this, you've clearly decided that both of them must be on drugs and will forever view them in that light. That's a pretty sad state of affairs given there is no evidence to suggest either has ever done anything wrong (lance had rumours for years, as did mostof the other high profile dopers).If you don't think small changes can make a big difference then you don't believe it, doesn't stop it being true.