The Case Against TT Bikes
#1
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The Case Against TT Bikes
I suspect this topic has been discussed before on here, but I couldn't find it. Either way, many of you are probably aware of the various folks associated with pro racing questioning the wisdom of TT bikes, especially following some high profile training accidents. (See, e.g. https://pezcyclingnews.com/features/...inst-tt-bikes/.) I've never ridden a TT bike so can't speak to how dangerous they are. My bigger concern is that I think they exclude a lot of folks from an important aspect of bike racing, which is the time trials themselves.
We all know that performance bikes are expensive and a top-end road bike isn't much less so than a top-end TT bike. But a top end road bike is less of a differential in mass start races than a top end TT bike can be in TTs, or at least that seems to me to be the case based on working some local TTs. Although my evidence is anecdotal, I rarely see the top of the podium in our amateur road races occupied by people with the most expensive bikes. I haven't noticed an equipment advantage when I race, unless it's some extreme difference in equipment. As we've discussed on here ad nauseam, bike handling and tactics overcome minor advantages in bike weight and aero.
At TTs, by contrast, the best performers in many of the races I've worked often have the highest or nearly the highest end bikes. One friend who was middle of the chart in TTs improved his placing significantly after upgrading to a 14K TT bike from his older (but still TT-specific) bike. Those super expensive, diminishing returns actually make a difference, which pressures people into paying for those returns and pressures others out of TTs entirely. I'm glad that some organizers are now offering non-TT bike categories, which are becoming very popular but are also slated as lower-tier categories. It begs the question of why, at least at the amateur level, we continue to hold races that reward the most expensive equipment. Even in other expensive sports like sailboat racing, design standards tend to be very strict so that the differences in equipment are minimal. TT races, as currently organized, offer a wide latitude for folks to spend a ton of money to achieve small but meaningful advantages. Given that road racing is already suffering from loss of participation, this seems like an area to reconsider in order to attract more riders -- particularly riders who might be uncomfortable with the risks of mass start racing but who otherwise want to try something competitive.
As I said, I don't normally do TTs and the few I've done have been Eddy Merx style, so I'm curious what others think.
We all know that performance bikes are expensive and a top-end road bike isn't much less so than a top-end TT bike. But a top end road bike is less of a differential in mass start races than a top end TT bike can be in TTs, or at least that seems to me to be the case based on working some local TTs. Although my evidence is anecdotal, I rarely see the top of the podium in our amateur road races occupied by people with the most expensive bikes. I haven't noticed an equipment advantage when I race, unless it's some extreme difference in equipment. As we've discussed on here ad nauseam, bike handling and tactics overcome minor advantages in bike weight and aero.
At TTs, by contrast, the best performers in many of the races I've worked often have the highest or nearly the highest end bikes. One friend who was middle of the chart in TTs improved his placing significantly after upgrading to a 14K TT bike from his older (but still TT-specific) bike. Those super expensive, diminishing returns actually make a difference, which pressures people into paying for those returns and pressures others out of TTs entirely. I'm glad that some organizers are now offering non-TT bike categories, which are becoming very popular but are also slated as lower-tier categories. It begs the question of why, at least at the amateur level, we continue to hold races that reward the most expensive equipment. Even in other expensive sports like sailboat racing, design standards tend to be very strict so that the differences in equipment are minimal. TT races, as currently organized, offer a wide latitude for folks to spend a ton of money to achieve small but meaningful advantages. Given that road racing is already suffering from loss of participation, this seems like an area to reconsider in order to attract more riders -- particularly riders who might be uncomfortable with the risks of mass start racing but who otherwise want to try something competitive.
As I said, I don't normally do TTs and the few I've done have been Eddy Merx style, so I'm curious what others think.
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For a weekend warrior at the lower levels I would suggest either learning how to ride a TT bike and only do that or to learn how to ride a road bike either for crits or road races. Riding a TT bike is very different from riding a road bike. It isn't like as a road racer you jump on a TT bike and you are faster. It is more like you jump on a TT bike and you the same speed at best. It is a different thing. It takes lots of training time.
The bad thing about training on a TT bike is that it is lonely. You will not be welcome on a fast group ride. And it is not because you are fast. It is because you are squirrelly.
The bad thing about training on a TT bike is that it is lonely. You will not be welcome on a fast group ride. And it is not because you are fast. It is because you are squirrelly.
#3
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We've had some "Merckx style" time trial events around here that require a traditional drop bar road bike with no aero bars of any kind.
Maybe those events will gain traction. I hope they do -- for all the points you mentioned. And it's sort of like Zwift with pavement and air resistance, so it may be a natural extension for a growing pool of riders.
But I don't think you'll have much luck banning TT or Tri bikes. The Tri industry is too big; too many people have worked too hard creating a market to sell $14,000 bikes and $600 rear derailleur pulleys.
Maybe those events will gain traction. I hope they do -- for all the points you mentioned. And it's sort of like Zwift with pavement and air resistance, so it may be a natural extension for a growing pool of riders.
But I don't think you'll have much luck banning TT or Tri bikes. The Tri industry is too big; too many people have worked too hard creating a market to sell $14,000 bikes and $600 rear derailleur pulleys.
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TT's are a bit niche. Like most USAC road events aren't stage races featuring flat TT's, so I don't think they are prohibitive for many riders. For club's that hold a local series, like the Fiesta Island TT series put on by my club (San Diego Bicycle Club), riders can (and should IMO) ride whatever they want as long as it doesn't have an attached motor. There is a Merckx category for those so inclined.
Secondly, I don't think that *just* buying a superbike TT is going to make someone from a mid-pack to a top level performer. Like the frame alone might be worth a handful of seconds or even 10 seconds in a 20k, but 30 - 60 seconds or more? No way. If you can get your hands on a used disc wheel, match tire and rim widths, use fast tubes etc and most importantly - get in a good position, that is how you are going to get to high speeds. The helmet is also very important, but if you can borrow helmets from friends and test them yourself (Chung method), you can find one that is fast for your position.
There are plenty of examples on the web (including our own burnthesheep ) who have experience scraping together pretty darn fast setups with cheap/used/second hand parts and by doing their own aero testing. I'm currently on a 2014 Felt DA2 and ebay wheels, but I've managed to get myself decently fast over a few years of trial and error. I did splurge on some etap 11 speed and a dedicated 1x aerocoach ring, but otherwise I'm on basic stuff. Eventually I would like to upgrade to a modern rig (maybe a Trinity) with a cleaner front end, but I don't expect it to be a night and day difference.
So I'm going to offer an unpopular counter opinion (in this country) in that I think there should be more TT opportunities, not less. It's a really neat discipline that rewards attention to detail, experimentation and a spirit of continual improvement. I wish we had a thriving TT scene like they do in the UK. TT is a totally different discipline than road and really neat IMO.
Secondly, I don't think that *just* buying a superbike TT is going to make someone from a mid-pack to a top level performer. Like the frame alone might be worth a handful of seconds or even 10 seconds in a 20k, but 30 - 60 seconds or more? No way. If you can get your hands on a used disc wheel, match tire and rim widths, use fast tubes etc and most importantly - get in a good position, that is how you are going to get to high speeds. The helmet is also very important, but if you can borrow helmets from friends and test them yourself (Chung method), you can find one that is fast for your position.
There are plenty of examples on the web (including our own burnthesheep ) who have experience scraping together pretty darn fast setups with cheap/used/second hand parts and by doing their own aero testing. I'm currently on a 2014 Felt DA2 and ebay wheels, but I've managed to get myself decently fast over a few years of trial and error. I did splurge on some etap 11 speed and a dedicated 1x aerocoach ring, but otherwise I'm on basic stuff. Eventually I would like to upgrade to a modern rig (maybe a Trinity) with a cleaner front end, but I don't expect it to be a night and day difference.
So I'm going to offer an unpopular counter opinion (in this country) in that I think there should be more TT opportunities, not less. It's a really neat discipline that rewards attention to detail, experimentation and a spirit of continual improvement. I wish we had a thriving TT scene like they do in the UK. TT is a totally different discipline than road and really neat IMO.
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Thanks, appreciate the counter-perspective.
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I will say that riding a real, aggressive TT position (not a tri position) can be quite dangerous on the open road. Like that is a legit downside. If I didn't have Fiesta Island a 20-30 min spin away, I wouldn't likely get much real-world extended time in position. I basically only ride in position (for more than a min or two) on Fiesta Island or on the trainer. Visibility is too low. And the brakes on mine suck pretty bad.
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I also wonder, how many of those guys who buy the super nice TT bikes choose to specialize in TTs?
I have a super sweet track bike and set up. It's quite high end. But I focus all my time and energy on track racing. (Also, I chose the frame I did because my fitter said it is what I needed for optimal performance. I'd have gone cheaper if there were a better option.)
My road bike is now 10-11 years old. My gravel and mountain bikes are newer - last 3-4 years - but are all spec'd at the lower end because I ride them for fun and variety.
I have a super sweet track bike and set up. It's quite high end. But I focus all my time and energy on track racing. (Also, I chose the frame I did because my fitter said it is what I needed for optimal performance. I'd have gone cheaper if there were a better option.)
My road bike is now 10-11 years old. My gravel and mountain bikes are newer - last 3-4 years - but are all spec'd at the lower end because I ride them for fun and variety.
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TT is def. something that rewards dedication. Like, an athlete with mediocre fitness can get pretty fast on a TT bike if they focus on position, race-specific training efforts, aero optimization and of course, equipment. But goose70 regarding equipment, there is plenty of low-hanging fruit equipment wise that will make a bigger difference than going from an outdated/cheap/used frame+wheel setup to a new superbike setup. Like the right helmet, socks/shoecovers, skinsuit, extensions etc. OK helmet and extensions can be spendy, but we're talking hundreds here, not thousands.
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Dropping some resources on a professional/coach fit can also expedite your journey into a fast position as well. That can also get spendy. I'm fortunate enough to be close to a local coach who set me up in his garage after work for free, and since then I've made only minor adjustments. My position is "UCI light" (by my preference), in that I am slightly more stretched out than what would be UCI legal, but pretty close in the event that I eventually wanna do like master's nats or something.
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I suspect this topic has been discussed before on here, but I couldn't find it. Either way, many of you are probably aware of the various folks associated with pro racing questioning the wisdom of TT bikes, especially following some high profile training accidents. (See, e.g. https://pezcyclingnews.com/features/...inst-tt-bikes/.) I've never ridden a TT bike so can't speak to how dangerous they are. My bigger concern is that I think they exclude a lot of folks from an important aspect of bike racing, which is the time trials themselves.
We all know that performance bikes are expensive and a top-end road bike isn't much less so than a top-end TT bike. But a top end road bike is less of a differential in mass start races than a top end TT bike can be in TTs, or at least that seems to me to be the case based on working some local TTs. Although my evidence is anecdotal, I rarely see the top of the podium in our amateur road races occupied by people with the most expensive bikes. I haven't noticed an equipment advantage when I race, unless it's some extreme difference in equipment. As we've discussed on here ad nauseam, bike handling and tactics overcome minor advantages in bike weight and aero.
At TTs, by contrast, the best performers in many of the races I've worked often have the highest or nearly the highest end bikes. One friend who was middle of the chart in TTs improved his placing significantly after upgrading to a 14K TT bike from his older (but still TT-specific) bike. Those super expensive, diminishing returns actually make a difference, which pressures people into paying for those returns and pressures others out of TTs entirely. I'm glad that some organizers are now offering non-TT bike categories, which are becoming very popular but are also slated as lower-tier categories. It begs the question of why, at least at the amateur level, we continue to hold races that reward the most expensive equipment. Even in other expensive sports like sailboat racing, design standards tend to be very strict so that the differences in equipment are minimal. TT races, as currently organized, offer a wide latitude for folks to spend a ton of money to achieve small but meaningful advantages. Given that road racing is already suffering from loss of participation, this seems like an area to reconsider in order to attract more riders -- particularly riders who might be uncomfortable with the risks of mass start racing but who otherwise want to try something competitive.
As I said, I don't normally do TTs and the few I've done have been Eddy Merx style, so I'm curious what others think.
We all know that performance bikes are expensive and a top-end road bike isn't much less so than a top-end TT bike. But a top end road bike is less of a differential in mass start races than a top end TT bike can be in TTs, or at least that seems to me to be the case based on working some local TTs. Although my evidence is anecdotal, I rarely see the top of the podium in our amateur road races occupied by people with the most expensive bikes. I haven't noticed an equipment advantage when I race, unless it's some extreme difference in equipment. As we've discussed on here ad nauseam, bike handling and tactics overcome minor advantages in bike weight and aero.
At TTs, by contrast, the best performers in many of the races I've worked often have the highest or nearly the highest end bikes. One friend who was middle of the chart in TTs improved his placing significantly after upgrading to a 14K TT bike from his older (but still TT-specific) bike. Those super expensive, diminishing returns actually make a difference, which pressures people into paying for those returns and pressures others out of TTs entirely. I'm glad that some organizers are now offering non-TT bike categories, which are becoming very popular but are also slated as lower-tier categories. It begs the question of why, at least at the amateur level, we continue to hold races that reward the most expensive equipment. Even in other expensive sports like sailboat racing, design standards tend to be very strict so that the differences in equipment are minimal. TT races, as currently organized, offer a wide latitude for folks to spend a ton of money to achieve small but meaningful advantages. Given that road racing is already suffering from loss of participation, this seems like an area to reconsider in order to attract more riders -- particularly riders who might be uncomfortable with the risks of mass start racing but who otherwise want to try something competitive.
As I said, I don't normally do TTs and the few I've done have been Eddy Merx style, so I'm curious what others think.
It's not the raw cost, because there are a lot of money rich brains poor folks with very nice TT bikes with setups nearly as slow as well setup road bikes because they only really understand "mash harder to go faster".
I agree for lots of racing in the sense that teams travelling then need to deal with multiple bike types where one of them gets ridden for maybe 30min for a couple weeks of racing. And the complexity/cost/logistics there of that.
For amateur racing, it's largely not what you'd think. It's often a lot of folks crossing over from triathlon to get in some training races who already have the bike. Not the relative few who travel with pro teams around the country or the world. Also, since amateurs aren't tip of the spear pros, they aren't scratching the surface of their efficiency and bike position even opening their wallets wide open. They probably don't know enough about aero to use the expensive gear correctly.
I think for "hobbyist" amateur TT racing, it's fine as its own category. For domestic and travelling pros, I can definitely see some pain there and cost. It's the defacto weapon of choice for triathlon, so you'll always have plenty of hobbyists that own them.
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We've had some "Merckx style" time trial events around here that require a traditional drop bar road bike with no aero bars of any kind.
Maybe those events will gain traction. I hope they do -- for all the points you mentioned. And it's sort of like Zwift with pavement and air resistance, so it may be a natural extension for a growing pool of riders.
But I don't think you'll have much luck banning TT or Tri bikes. The Tri industry is too big; too many people have worked too hard creating a market to sell $14,000 bikes and $600 rear derailleur pulleys.
Maybe those events will gain traction. I hope they do -- for all the points you mentioned. And it's sort of like Zwift with pavement and air resistance, so it may be a natural extension for a growing pool of riders.
But I don't think you'll have much luck banning TT or Tri bikes. The Tri industry is too big; too many people have worked too hard creating a market to sell $14,000 bikes and $600 rear derailleur pulleys.
I smoked them all.
In a ten mile TT I won by about two minutes.
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For amateur racing, it's largely not what you'd think. It's often a lot of folks crossing over from triathlon to get in some training races who already have the bike. Not the relative few who travel with pro teams around the country or the world. Also, since amateurs aren't tip of the spear pros, they aren't scratching the surface of their efficiency and bike position even opening their wallets wide open. They probably don't know enough about aero to use the expensive gear correctly.
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I will say that riding a real, aggressive TT position (not a tri position) can be quite dangerous on the open road. Like that is a legit downside. If I didn't have Fiesta Island a 20-30 min spin away, I wouldn't likely get much real-world extended time in position. I basically only ride in position (for more than a min or two) on Fiesta Island or on the trainer. Visibility is too low. And the brakes on mine suck pretty bad.
And yes, there is precedent. Anyone recall the now defunct "puppy paws"? The crazy TT bikes of the 90s? Those all got banned and to my knowledge, all lived through the deprivation.
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I have this really nice TT bike hanging next to me.
Bars are not what we see now in WT events, but the rest is.
It has never been ridden by a family member.
Why?
I just like the stuff.
Bars are not what we see now in WT events, but the rest is.
It has never been ridden by a family member.
Why?
I just like the stuff.
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So I'm going to offer an unpopular counter opinion (in this country) in that I think there should be more TT opportunities, not less. It's a really neat discipline that rewards attention to detail, experimentation and a spirit of continual improvement. I wish we had a thriving TT scene like they do in the UK. TT is a totally different discipline than road and really neat IMO.
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TT for weekend warriors is mostly the tri-guys that will all be Cat 5 because they have ZERO road race or crit starts and can never be Cat 4 or higher. Some of these guys are very strong and will eat the lunch of a new racer attempting to add TT to their race schedule. The best way for a new racer to get their feet wet in TT is to enter an omnium where there is also a road race and a crit to keep the tri-guys out.
Valley of the Sun is an example of a TT specialist stage race, in southern AZ. Attracts talent from all of the western US. I got third overall in the 35+ this year, top two guys were from Michigan of all places (go figure) and were seriously fast time trialists. Its a TT well and hold it type race.
I just noticed that they score all cat 5 categories as omnium - not stage race. I wonder if it's for the reason you just mentioned, so some elite triathletes don't register and wipe the floor with everyone in the TT.
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I suspect this topic has been discussed before on here, but I couldn't find it. Either way, many of you are probably aware of the various folks associated with pro racing questioning the wisdom of TT bikes, especially following some high profile training accidents. (See, e.g. https://pezcyclingnews.com/features/...inst-tt-bikes/.) I've never ridden a TT bike so can't speak to how dangerous they are. My bigger concern is that I think they exclude a lot of folks from an important aspect of bike racing, which is the time trials themselves.
We all know that performance bikes are expensive and a top-end road bike isn't much less so than a top-end TT bike. But a top end road bike is less of a differential in mass start races than a top end TT bike can be in TTs, or at least that seems to me to be the case based on working some local TTs. Although my evidence is anecdotal, I rarely see the top of the podium in our amateur road races occupied by people with the most expensive bikes. I haven't noticed an equipment advantage when I race, unless it's some extreme difference in equipment. As we've discussed on here ad nauseam, bike handling and tactics overcome minor advantages in bike weight and aero.
At TTs, by contrast, the best performers in many of the races I've worked often have the highest or nearly the highest end bikes. One friend who was middle of the chart in TTs improved his placing significantly after upgrading to a 14K TT bike from his older (but still TT-specific) bike. Those super expensive, diminishing returns actually make a difference, which pressures people into paying for those returns and pressures others out of TTs entirely. I'm glad that some organizers are now offering non-TT bike categories, which are becoming very popular but are also slated as lower-tier categories. It begs the question of why, at least at the amateur level, we continue to hold races that reward the most expensive equipment. Even in other expensive sports like sailboat racing, design standards tend to be very strict so that the differences in equipment are minimal. TT races, as currently organized, offer a wide latitude for folks to spend a ton of money to achieve small but meaningful advantages. Given that road racing is already suffering from loss of participation, this seems like an area to reconsider in order to attract more riders -- particularly riders who might be uncomfortable with the risks of mass start racing but who otherwise want to try something competitive.
As I said, I don't normally do TTs and the few I've done have been Eddy Merx style, so I'm curious what others think.
We all know that performance bikes are expensive and a top-end road bike isn't much less so than a top-end TT bike. But a top end road bike is less of a differential in mass start races than a top end TT bike can be in TTs, or at least that seems to me to be the case based on working some local TTs. Although my evidence is anecdotal, I rarely see the top of the podium in our amateur road races occupied by people with the most expensive bikes. I haven't noticed an equipment advantage when I race, unless it's some extreme difference in equipment. As we've discussed on here ad nauseam, bike handling and tactics overcome minor advantages in bike weight and aero.
At TTs, by contrast, the best performers in many of the races I've worked often have the highest or nearly the highest end bikes. One friend who was middle of the chart in TTs improved his placing significantly after upgrading to a 14K TT bike from his older (but still TT-specific) bike. Those super expensive, diminishing returns actually make a difference, which pressures people into paying for those returns and pressures others out of TTs entirely. I'm glad that some organizers are now offering non-TT bike categories, which are becoming very popular but are also slated as lower-tier categories. It begs the question of why, at least at the amateur level, we continue to hold races that reward the most expensive equipment. Even in other expensive sports like sailboat racing, design standards tend to be very strict so that the differences in equipment are minimal. TT races, as currently organized, offer a wide latitude for folks to spend a ton of money to achieve small but meaningful advantages. Given that road racing is already suffering from loss of participation, this seems like an area to reconsider in order to attract more riders -- particularly riders who might be uncomfortable with the risks of mass start racing but who otherwise want to try something competitive.
As I said, I don't normally do TTs and the few I've done have been Eddy Merx style, so I'm curious what others think.
Interesting observation from the UK TT forums I'm on when they posted back some updates to some local groups going to road-bike only or working to expand their road bike only groups............hint hint.......the equipment war continued and just went there instead.
Short of Japanese track cycling with sports betting on "we hand you a bike", you're going to have money and tech wars.
Next up, it's the perception of the losers that winners always have better things. Yeah, I have a freaking nice TT bike. Nicer than probably lots of domestic pros. It's my hobby. Then again, I have TT extensions on my gravel bike also. And my road bike fit is really really freaking aggressive. So I ride in an aggressive bike fit.........a lot. Either way, the road bike is slower.....but it isn't so much slower someone can be like "you won because of your bike". Nah, winning is a combo of many things. You can have an aero bike fit without an $11k bike, and you can make gobs of power for free.
When I won the TT regional for my category the two years I was making for a 40km more power in the TT position than anyone on my race group could do for 20min sitting upright on a road bike.
Practically speaking for real racers and not hobbyists, it would help race teams to NOT have TT bikes and have an extra expense/transport nightmare for their races.
For the hobbyists and triathlon folks, is what it is. Man up and don't whine about losing to a "nicer bike". Shoot, lots of the fastest of the fast UK riders are on older Trinity frames or Chinese open mold framesets and Chinese wheelsets.
TT and triathlon frankly has a lot of mentally lazy folks unwilling to do the aero homework that doesn't cost $$$, but time. It's why I can't podium at cyclocross. I'm strong, but do not invest the "free" skills based homework others do. In that way I'm "lazy" at cyclocross.
Personally, I also laugh at the cost aspect when at some events and group rides you see all manner of $40000 and more cars in the parking lot. Or folks on $5k+ road bikes. Or folks with several cyclocross bikes. It's what they like. Instead, one a $2k road bike and a $2k TT bike versus one $5k road bike.
I'm not a UCI racer, but guarantee I could build an open-mold Chinese TT bike for $2k that would aero test better than a mentally lazy person buying an $11k s-works Shiv.
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I assume you thought I meant the random folks showing up to the race. My race group as in my team-mate's power and the few guys not on the team I'm in a local TT 'beer run' club with. Not other folks in that category that I've never met. We talk in our Slack chat about all manner of stuff just like here amongst the race team members. Of course I know nothing about the other people. Nobody could determine that.
The comment is largely meant to convey that people who can win a TT or a multisport event including a TT bike can still put out power. There is no free lunch.
The comment is largely meant to convey that people who can win a TT or a multisport event including a TT bike can still put out power. There is no free lunch.
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