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Who's racing Keirin with Cervelo?
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Heard that the 2019 World M45-49 Women's winner (in 500m?) has tested positive. It promotes the US rider into Gold, if the rumor is true. I can't find anything in English that confirms this.
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Originally Posted by brawlo
(Post 21226831)
Throwing a cat among the pigeons - plus a nice close up view of the bars :thumb:
https://cimg3.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...3b87b07b26.jpg |
Originally Posted by carpediemracing
(Post 21234186)
Heard that the 2019 World M45-49 Women's winner (in 500m?) has tested positive. It promotes the US rider into Gold, if the rumor is true. I can't find anything in English that confirms this.
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Originally Posted by Dfarlow
(Post 21235529)
First one on the list: https://www.uci.org/docs/default-sou...AXCzAepPxiZKHg
Two cyclists were found positive to anti-doping at the World Masters Championships on track in Manchester on October 16th: the Argentine Adriana Perino, gold in the 500m, and the Australian Julie Barnett, world champion in pursuit and holder of the speed record in the age group 55-59 years. The thing could be archived as the usual sad positivity of two over-fifties, but it is curious how both have been found positive to LGD-4033, a forbidden anabolic that serves to increase muscle mass (or recover the one that is lost with age) . At the same time, LGD-4033, also known as Ligandrol, is considered by USADA, the US anti-doping agency, a steroid commonly inserted illegally in some food supplements to make them effective, already found in the samples of several athletes in the last year. On the other hand, Perino was also found positive at Meldonium, which rose to prominence three years ago thanks to the positive nature of tennis player Maria Sharapova. At the moment the two athletes are temporarily suspended. |
Originally Posted by Poppit
(Post 21235643)
Translation of a story in the Italian press
Two cyclists were found positive to anti-doping at the World Masters Championships on track in Manchester on October 16th: the Argentine Adriana Perino, gold in the 500m, and the Australian Julie Barnett, world champion in pursuit and holder of the speed record in the age group 55-59 years. The thing could be archived as the usual sad positivity of two over-fifties, but it is curious how both have been found positive to LGD-4033, a forbidden anabolic that serves to increase muscle mass (or recover the one that is lost with age) . At the same time, LGD-4033, also known as Ligandrol, is considered by USADA, the US anti-doping agency, a steroid commonly inserted illegally in some food supplements to make them effective, already found in the samples of several athletes in the last year. On the other hand, Perino was also found positive at Meldonium, which rose to prominence three years ago thanks to the positive nature of tennis player Maria Sharapova. At the moment the two athletes are temporarily suspended. Eventual champ, Cami Kornely, suffered broken ribs and collapsed lung, spending a few weeks in a British hospital. But ultimately she ended up taking gold in all 3 events entered. |
New Aus sprint bars should be on show today, "they're pretty weird" -the engineer
Odd sizes, big reach numbers |
Originally Posted by pierrej
(Post 21236191)
New Aus sprint bars should be on show today, "they're pretty weird" -the engineer
Odd sizes, big reach numbers https://cimg7.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...864ab42914.png |
World Cup in New Zealand
What happened to the US Women team pursuit? Both the US and Japan teams did not finish while competing with each other in the first round. https://www.tissottiming.com/File/00...FFFFFFFFFFFF03 |
Originally Posted by 700wheel
(Post 21236940)
World Cup in New Zealand
What happened to the US Women team pursuit? Both the US and Japan teams did not finish while competing with each other in the first round. https://www.tissottiming.com/File/00...FFFFFFFFFFFF03 |
Originally Posted by brawlo
(Post 21226831)
Throwing a cat among the pigeons - plus a nice close up view of the bars :thumb:
https://cimg3.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...3b87b07b26.jpg |
Originally Posted by 700wheel
(Post 21237299)
I saw a Corima X wheel in use at the NZ World Cup.
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I watched the 2019 Masters stuff while I was on the trainer last night. Some of those 50-54 guys are really fast. 34.5s 500m.
One thing I noticed is that almost none of them used aero bars. They used drop bars instead. This was indoors, so front disc, and presumably less wind. I wonder if outdoors, with wind, maybe a multispoke front wheel?, if more racers would use aero bars. |
Originally Posted by carpediemracing
(Post 21237865)
I watched the 2019 Masters stuff while I was on the trainer last night. Some of those 50-54 guys are really fast. 34.5s 500m.
Originally Posted by carpediemracing
(Post 21237865)
One thing I noticed is that almost none of them used aero bars. They used drop bars instead. This was indoors, so front disc, and presumably less wind. I wonder if outdoors, with wind, maybe a multispoke front wheel?, if more racers would use aero bars.
I think the benefits of using narrow drops even extends to the 750M...and maybe even Kilo for some riders. |
In that pic it looks as if the spokes aren't perfectly perpendicular to each other. Almost as if the intention was to make a 6 spoke wheel, but 2 opposing spokes were eliminated.
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Originally Posted by carpediemracing
(Post 21237865)
I watched the 2019 Masters stuff while I was on the trainer last night. Some of those 50-54 guys are really fast. 34.5s 500m.
One thing I noticed is that almost none of them used aero bars. They used drop bars instead. This was indoors, so front disc, and presumably less wind. I wonder if outdoors, with wind, maybe a multispoke front wheel?, if more racers would use aero bars. |
Originally Posted by Dfarlow
(Post 21238216)
At Worlds, the next two age groups up were actually even faster. Aussies Geoff Stoker (34.046) winning gold in the 55-59 while Gary Mandy (33.942) took the top step in the 60-64 ranks. I believe Stoker ages up next year so both will be battling it out in the 60-64's.
I wish the 500M were still run as an Elite Men's event. Even as an optional event. It's not about male or female. It really is a different event from the Kilo. |
Originally Posted by carpediemracing
(Post 21237865)
I watched the 2019 Masters stuff while I was on the trainer last night. Some of those 50-54 guys are really fast. 34.5s 500m.
One thing I noticed is that almost none of them used aero bars. They used drop bars instead. This was indoors, so front disc, and presumably less wind. I wonder if outdoors, with wind, maybe a multispoke front wheel?, if more racers would use aero bars. Double disc would be standard for all timed sprint events unless it was outside and real windy. |
Originally Posted by pierrej
(Post 21238276)
Aerobars only really help in the kilo to hold speed and not drop off too much. 500 isn't really long enough for aerobars to help, they probably are more of a hindrance with the compromised start position and swapping to the skis. Pretty sure most of the elite women are using drops for the time trial.
Double disc would be standard for all timed sprint events unless it was outside and real windy. It takes A LOT of training at speed to be very comfortable in aerobars at near 60kph/35mph. Including training on them behind a motor. Very few people train like that in aerobars. Even though aerobars are theoretically faster, it takes a lot to avoid the downsides of using them when compared to narrow drops. Those downsides are: - Letting off the gas when transitioning from bullhorns to skis - Not being comfortable at high speeds in them, thus subconsciously holding back some. - Not holding a great line due to bumps in the track and/or lack of nerve getting close to the transition to the apron while in aerobars. I'd imagine that Elite and Elite-fast Masters Kilo riders will have all of the above figured out. |
"Russia banned from Olympics, world champs for 4 years; athletes could compete as neutrals"
Russia is banned from the next two Olympics and other major sports events for four years, though its athletes could still compete without representing the country if cleared by anti-doping authorities. Russia’s hosting of world championships in Olympic sports also face being stripped after the World Anti-Doping Agency executive committee approved a full slate of recommended sanctions for tampering with a Moscow laboratory database. Russian athletes will be allowed to compete in major events — including world championships — only if they are not implicated in positive doping tests or their data was not manipulated, according to the WADA ruling. “In this circumstance, they may not represent the Russian Federation,” according to a WADA release. |
Originally Posted by carleton
(Post 21239495)
This is no deterrent to the corruption. It just puts it on hold for 4 years. In the meantime it allows the state to hone it's doping program on athletes who aren't allowed to compete. In 5 years it will be business as usual for them. You stop this by making it so the clean athletes see it as too risky to compete for dirty federations. Barr them as well and they will seek other federations to compete for. |
Anyone ever see these before in the wild? Flexible valve stem/extender for disc wheels. Anyone know who makes it?
https://cimg4.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...635beb9cd4.jpg |
If that can take 200 psi that's a ridiculously obvious yet awesome idea
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Originally Posted by taras0000
(Post 21239895)
Anyone ever see these before in the wild? Flexible valve stem/extender for disc wheels. Anyone know who makes it?
https://cimg4.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...635beb9cd4.jpg |
3 up sprint tactics
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