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Tour de France Breaking Away As he rolls for number seven, wrap your mind around the life and legacy and farewell Tour de France of Lance Armstronghero, dad, six-time King of the World, rock-star arm candy, and (sometime after '06) the next! governor! of Texas! By Hal Espen
"This individual was born on September 18, 1971. He engaged in competitive swimming at ages 1215 y and competitive running and triathlon racing at ages 1418 y. Thereafter, he competed in and trained primarily for bicycle road racing.... Before turning 22 years old in 1993, he became the youngest winner of the World Championships in Bicycle Road Racing, a one-day road race. At age 25 y, this individual was diagnosed with testicular cancer. Thereafter and during the period of October through December of 1996, he underwent surgeries to remove the involved testicle and then to remove cancerous brain tumors and he received chemotherapy... During the 3rd and 4th mo. following chemotherapy, he cycled approximately 5 d/wk for 25 h/d at moderate intensity. During the 5th and 6th mo., training intensity was increased.... He resumed international bicycle racing in 1998, and... went on to become
WE ALREADY KNEW Lance Armstrong was a unique physical specimen, a paragon of human self-propulsion. But a just-published paper by Edward Coylethe result of a seven-year study he conducted at the University of Texas's Human Performance Laboratory,
Earlier this year, as Armstrong commenced training for the race, my Outside colleague John Bradley and I caught up with him for two remarkable conversations. The first took place in February on Armstrong's ranch, 30 minutes west of Austin, as his serious training was just getting under way and his personal calculations about his fitness level were still in flux. Outside: You're getting a late start this year. How's the schedule? Armstrong: You know, I don't know where I am. I'll find out in a week, when I go to Europe. But I'm not very good. But you've got the data on your training. Yeah, that's why I say I'm not very good. Because it doesn't lie. It's funny, for about a week my SRM [a device that measures a cyclist's pedaling power in watts] wasn't calibrated right. I was like, God, I'mdamn, I'm crankin', I'm doin' good. And then I realized: I don't know. And so I went and looked at it and realized it wasn't set up right, and then I recalibrated it, and the truth hurts. Literally. So much of it is power to weight, so I've got to increase the power and lower the weight and, you know, you can lower the weight anywhere, but you can't increase the power just anywhere. To increase the power, you have to have great training.
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TODAY'S NEWS UPDATE!
The Gear Junkie: Ski and Snowboard Gear... By Stephen Regenold Winter is upon us, and with it ski areas across the country are ... ![]()
The Spoke Word: Armstrong to do Tour
Lance Armstrong has accounced that he will race in the 2009 Tour de France, according to a brief ... ![]() advertisement
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