Quote from: aj2k77 on July 14, 2015, 06:27:24 PMSky we're ridiculous today.Richie Porte setting tempo for Froome, dropping most of the best climbers on the planet and then catching and passing Quintana whilst grinning. ......Geraint Thomas, 30 yrs old and suddenly able to climb with the best, believe me he had a lot in his locker left, he even said he just sat on for half the mountain after setting pace for Froome. Not looking to start and argument but todays stage was a joke and I'm a bit annoyed.You clearly are trying to start an argument.
Sky we're ridiculous today.Richie Porte setting tempo for Froome, dropping most of the best climbers on the planet and then catching and passing Quintana whilst grinning. ......Geraint Thomas, 30 yrs old and suddenly able to climb with the best, believe me he had a lot in his locker left, he even said he just sat on for half the mountain after setting pace for Froome. Not looking to start and argument but todays stage was a joke and I'm a bit annoyed.
It wasn't Froome's perfromance which was so surprising, he only won by a minute, it was the fact that Porte and Thomas could stick with known climbers when they themselves are not usually at that level. For their performances to be credible you need to believe that all of Contador, Nibali, Quintana, TJvG, Pinot, Bardet, Uran had a bad day. It's too much.
Well I'm going with Oleg Tinkov who states that rather than doping, Sky simply are better than anyone else.And Froome is putting himself forward for physiological tests once the tour is finished.
I'm going with Sky being better than anyone else as well.As for the age thing and not finding form/strength until later in your career, there are other sports where strength and endurance are needed and unlike say football, you get stronger as you hit your late 20's and 30's.
Quote from: usav on July 15, 2015, 01:33:34 PMI'm going with Sky being better than anyone else as well.As for the age thing and not finding form/strength until later in your career, there are other sports where strength and endurance are needed and unlike say football, you get stronger as you hit your late 20's and 30's. Sounds so familiar to what was repeated when US Postal would dominate, with riders that suddenly found their true potential at later ages.It's one thing for a decent one dayer like Thomas to become a good mountain lieutenant at the age of 30, not common but I guess not out of this world. It's another for him to become a top 5 HC capable mountain goat, patting a doper with a pedigree like Valverde on the back like a training ride, saying he could have gone much harder... Not normal.Put it this way. If Froome repeats what he did yesterday later in the tour on the Alpe D'huez, then statistically it will be a ride unmatched by anything done before by anyone on that mountain that wasn't doped. In other words, Froome physiologically will be one of if not the strongest clean rider ever. Who was terrible until he was 26/27......That's the kind of numbers he put out yesterday, for 40 minutes. It's been said before, I Think by former sky coach and admitted doper Bobby Julich that Froome has test results from 2007. If there is nothing to hide, why not release them alongside test results from this year and let people decide for themselves. Instead of hiding behind secrecy and the Sky publicity machine.
Quote from: aj2k77 on July 15, 2015, 03:18:56 PMQuote from: usav on July 15, 2015, 01:33:34 PMI'm going with Sky being better than anyone else as well.As for the age thing and not finding form/strength until later in your career, there are other sports where strength and endurance are needed and unlike say football, you get stronger as you hit your late 20's and 30's. Sounds so familiar to what was repeated when US Postal would dominate, with riders that suddenly found their true potential at later ages.It's one thing for a decent one dayer like Thomas to become a good mountain lieutenant at the age of 30, not common but I guess not out of this world. It's another for him to become a top 5 HC capable mountain goat, patting a doper with a pedigree like Valverde on the back like a training ride, saying he could have gone much harder... Not normal.Put it this way. If Froome repeats what he did yesterday later in the tour on the Alpe D'huez, then statistically it will be a ride unmatched by anything done before by anyone on that mountain that wasn't doped. In other words, Froome physiologically will be one of if not the strongest clean rider ever. Who was terrible until he was 26/27......That's the kind of numbers he put out yesterday, for 40 minutes. It's been said before, I Think by former sky coach and admitted doper Bobby Julich that Froome has test results from 2007. If there is nothing to hide, why not release them alongside test results from this year and let people decide for themselves. Instead of hiding behind secrecy and the Sky publicity machine.What about Wiggins? Average to good cyclist most of his career, only won The Tour when he was 32. Another example of what I said or what you are implying?
LEquipe, who have always been leading voices against doping in cycling were sent Froomes perfomance data from 2011 to 2013 (just after his tour win) by Sky.The expert L'Euipe used to analyse the data said it was entirely possible for Froome to have achieved his no's without doping.
You see, everything said on this thread about Froome, implies an incredible amount of prior knowledge of how the tour and cycling's governing bodies try to combat drug cheats in this day and age. If Froome and Sky are doping, then that means that cycling is doing virtually nothing in order to stop them doping or retrospectively catch them.After the Armstrong era and all that's come to light (much of which paints the governing bodies of the time terribly), I just could not see the UCI having such a blaise attitude to tour winners cheating, when they know that it will come out eventually anyway.