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- 1. Most people who made it to 5 in "ye olde days" made it into their 70s. 2. "Working out" (what we used to call "working") is good for you, makes you stronger, and makes you live longer.
- Simple solutions exist, no need to toy around with gearing or protection, just ban Tadej and Mathieu and everyone will go back to previous speeds ;-)
- I like how that do it but that's still not necessarily true. A rolling, technical race could let sprinters or climbers win. A race with a long flat after a very difficult climb could allow sprinters or classics specialists to claw climbers back. A race with a relatively long uphill finish after a lot of flat can let a climbers beat out sprinters.
- Well now the UCI wants to treat all riders as juniors and regulate them as far as gears go? Stop interfering with the actual races and do your job which is to officiate and do the results. So much hated intrusion in track cycling now they want to do same to road?
- One benefit of not subscribing to TNT Discovery + for my cycling coverage is not having to listen to Adam Blythe twittering on.
- Both can be if the average went up. As implied, Wout is up against an MVDP, Pedersen and Tadej who improved and had no issues and a Remco who is still on a steeper progression curve
- That’s why they changed it :-)
You forget that amongst many problems (created in our naïve youth) that we only discover in old age, very few were relevant 150 years ago when most hardly got to 50 and then usually in very bad shape. As for the weight carrying, maybe under strict guidance and observation it will be positive BUT left unattended or under pressure to perform, even older kids are likely to overdo anything, it is not for nothing that most people who do hard physical labour usually destroy some part of their body, strength doesn’t protect you from everything.
- Well, you’re better iff these days than a small decade ago then, aren’t you?
- I thought this was about Remco, one of the current greatest cyclists? In that respect, if we’re going to analyse what makes them tick or better than others, I don’t mind hearing what they have to say is helping them get through what must be tough circumstances, you’d probably not have said a thing if he’d said he decided to look for strength in church and that used to be pretty common amongst athletes from our part of the world (who often still cross their hearts before an event or e.g. taking a penalty). We discuss the gas they breathe, the cocktails they swallow, the painkillers they use, the therapies they need, what’s wrong with where they look to for mental strength, be that religion, hypnosis, their partner, meditation, hormone stimulation or whatever works for them?
- Cyclinguptodate staff, are you there? I thought this was meant to be a site about cycling and cyclists. It's straying far frim that now.