Originally Posted by
Trakhak
I've been following pro bike racing for 60 years and remember a quote from Jacques Anquetil, who said, in response to a question, "You can't ride the Tour de France on mineral water. You'd have to be an imbecile or hypocrite to imagine that a professional cyclist who rides 235 days a year can hold himself together without stimulants."
He also said that he believed that, having trained and raced as hard as he did, he wouldn't live into old age. He died at age 53.
But, as 63rickert very intelligently noted in a recent thread (maybe this one), most current pros race about a third as much as the pros did in past decades.
We all know how the state of the art has changed in tech, training, nutrition, etc. But my guess is that cutting back on race days and increasing the time spent resting and recuperating have made, if anything, more of a difference than any or maybe all of the other changes.
To me, what beggars belief is the suggestion that doping is responsible for the average speed of entire pelotons increasing as much as it has, despite the fact that almost no one has tested positive.
Point to consider:
The doping generation also raced less. Some of them only peaked for on race, like the tour.
Post doping, we had 10 years of doldrums- no records broken, meh racing.
Past 5 years we’ve all the sudden seen every record smashed. And not just by the top guys. The 2nd and third group are often beating climb records.
Bike advancements - sure.
But - pure power numbers and W/kg are at levels never seen.
-It’s not all about sugar. Because we see these levels in short TT’s.
-It happened seemingly overnight. They couldn’t, then they could.
—and here is the biggie
They come into the racing season at levels higher than the dopers peaked at- and maintain those numbers thru the entire season.
Pogi breaks records that were set in races/at peak form time, while he is in training camp.
The ability to be faster/stronger out of the gate and all year long is nuts.
And if they are flat for the most part all year, what could they actually do if they trained solely for a peak/one race?