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Sleutelbeenoperatie Armstrong moet hem tevens aerodynamischer maken (mag dat?)

  • Andere Peter

    Geplukt van het altijd betrouwbare Cyclingnews. Samengevat: uit windtunneltests was reeds bekend dat Armstrongs schouders door de breedte minder aerodynamisch waren dan de schouders van de meeste concurrenten. Nu dat sleutelbeen toch in duigen lag, heeft men meteeen maar de gelegenheid genomen om de vorm van Armstrongs schouders te verbeteren.

    Armstrong perfects aero position with surgery

    By Lorne Wisely

    During the height of his career Lance Armstrong was famous for taking every possible step to perfect his aerodynamic position on the bike because, during the Tour de France, “every second counts”. Since his return to the sport, he has yet to dominate in the race against the clock. Insider sources have revealed to Cyclingnews that the American recently underwent a radical, secret surgery to alter his physique to help cheat the wind.

    Following his crash in the Vuelta a Castilla y Leon, where Armstrong fractured his right collarbone, he flew back to his Austin, Texas home. Once back in Texas he had surgery - supposedly to repair the clavicle which, doctors insisted, was broken into four pieces.

    Sources within the Armstrong camp explained that initial reports that the break was a single, clean fracture were true. But the seven-time Tour winner had been told he could shave seconds per kilometre off of his time trials if only his shoulders weren't so broad. The American decided that, since he faced several weeks of recovery from the broken bone anyhow, he might as well go through with a plan which would shorten both clavicles and narrow the width of his upper body.

    Doctors cut out a section of the right clavicle before putting the bone back together with a plate and screws, then moved over to the previously intact left collarbone to duplicate the procedure. The surgery marks the first time an athlete has undergone such a radical surgery to gain a performance boost.

    The extreme measure was taken with a view toward the Giro d'Italia's stage 12 time trial from Sestri Levante to Riomaggiore which, at 61.2km, is the longest individual test of Armstrong's career and could well be the decisive stage of the tour.

    “We did everything we could in the wind tunnel to shave fractions of seconds off of Lance's times - Trek invented new technology to cheat the wind on the bike, Nike used space-age technology to create the world's most aerodynamic skinsuit… but there was no getting around the fact that Lance's frontal area was just bigger than other riders,” a spokesman said.

    “The surgeons took two centimeters off of both collarbones and then screwed the bones back together,” he added. “With the titanium plates holding the bones in place, Lance is already cleared to get back on the trainer. He was so eager to find out how much more aerodynamic he is that we flew straight away to San Diego to do some tests in the wind tunnel. And boy, oh boy, all I can say is watch out!”

    http://www.cyclingnews.com/news.php?id=news/2009/apr09/apr01newsspecial

    Het moet wel kloppen, want het bericht is geplaatst onder redactie van de gerenommeerde journalist Avril Imbécile. Die weet meteen ook te melden dat het Vélodrome van Roubaix niet beschikbaar is voor Parijs-Roubaix en dat het team van Rock Racing bij wijze van teambuilding een tijdje wordt opgesloten in California's San Quentin staatsgevangenis (bekend van Johnny Cash).

  • Der Jan

    De gerenommeerde journalist Avril Imbecile….hahaha leuk gevonden hoor.

  • Herogewier

    :)

  • datum

    Zou dit bericht iets met de datum van vandaag te maken hebben :-)

  • Tombola

    (1) April @!#$…

  • JW

    Altijd jammer met zo'n verhaal als de eerste prikkers meteen laten merken dat ze er niet in tuinen. Mooier was het geweest met een felle reactie de zaak aan de kaak te stellen.

    Misschien lag het er net iets te dik bovenop. Maar toch leuk geprobeerd.

  • Sloper

    Wel goed dat ‘datum’ en ‘Tombola’ even melden dat het 1 april is!

  • zabirskie

    Jammer dat ze de UCI niet om een reactie hebben gevraagd :(

  • Berend Botje

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    Home > Road > Armstrong Comeback

    Lance Armstrong: top sprinter?

    Armstrong's new strategy: garner time bonuses and stage wins.

    By Nigel Fotheringhamington

    Posted Apr. 1, 2009

    Article Extras

    * Photos

    * Race Index

    Built like a sprinter. Armstrong puts the hurt on some Astana teammates as he eyes a town-line sprint in California.

    Built like a sprinter. Armstrong puts the hurt on some Astana teammates as he eyes a town-line sprint in California.

    Photo: Graham Watson

    Lance Armstrong’s coach says the seven-time Tour de France winner is paying extra attention to his sprint as he prepares for his return to top-level racing following his broken collarbone.

    Armstrong is working on his top-end speed with weights in the gym and on the stationary trainer, coach Chris Carmichael told LanceNews.com, a new Competitor Group Web site launched Wednesday, April 1.

    Short, intense sprint workouts on the trainer should pay dividends later in the season, he said.

    “We all know that as we get older, the top-end speed is the first thing to go,” Carmichael said. “To be honest we haven’t seen much decline in Lance’s top-end wattage numbers, probably because of the significant amount of time he spent in the gym during his retirement.”

    Nevertheless, Armstrong is determined to increase his top end in an effort to gain an edge on his young competitors. He also has noted that a wicked sprint can translate into GC wins at major stage races.

    “Look at Ina Yoko Teutenberg,” Carmichael told LanceNews. “She won Redlands and the San Dimas stage race by winning field sprints and taking mid-race time bonus sprints. Clearly she is on to something there, and we think if Lance can increase his top end, he can snag time bonuses at the Giro and the Tour that can make the difference between first and second at the end.”

    Armstrong is consulting with German cycling's strength coach to build legs like these in time for the Tour.

    Armstrong is consulting with German cycling's strength coach to build legs like these in time for the Tour.

    Photo: Casey B. Gibson

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    “It's simple bang for the buck,” Carmichael said. “We could train him for 38 hours a week to improve his climbing by 5 seconds, or we could train in the gym for five hours a week and win time bonuses worth 15 seconds.”

    And, Carmichael mentioned, while there are only a handful of mountain top finishes in the Tour and Giro, time bonuses are on offer several times in every stage.

    Carmichael revealed that Armstrong’s mysterious visit to a California velodrome in February was not preparation for a possible hour-record attempt, as many speculated.

    “Actually, if Lance hadn’t broken his collarbone at Castilla, he was planning on going straight from Spain to the world track championships in Poland,” Carmichael said.

    Armstrong had planned to enter the match sprint competition at worlds, he said.

    “Lance is great sprinter; he kills us on the training rides all the time, it’s just been one of the strengths he hasn’t emphasized in his preparation or in competition. I think he could have medaled at worlds, and all that speed work on the track would have improved his road sprint at the grand tours. Look what it's done for Cavendish," Carmichael said, referring to Columbia's Mark Cavendish.

    Carmichael was questioned about Cavendish's ability to make it over the hills of Milan-San Remo to compete in and win that race, while Armstrong was dropped on the Cipressa and finished more than 8 minutes down.

    “Um,” Carmichael said. “We may, in fact, need to dial back the gym work just a tad. We'll get the mix right in time for July. We always do.”

  • tukje

    Het is dat het 1 April is maar het zou wel typisch iets voor hem zijn.