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Every Athlete is Unique
By: Michele Ferrari
Published: 26 Mar 2004

Observations on the reality and uniqueness of riders and their performances...

Scientific studies of athletes’ physiology tend to establish the average metabolic behavior of athletes undergoing a specific exercise.

But each athlete’s reality always varies from that of the others, with a subjective metabolic profile.

Confronted by the same physical activity, each cyclist uses his own ‘motor’ in a different way.

Over the years, I have checked this reality by collecting data on cyclists of every level attacking different grades, putting out maximum effort, as in uphill time trials.

Limiting participation in my tests to professional riders, I usually use three climbs, of varying lengths.

On Italy’s Monzuno climb (4.2 km with a vertical gain of 390 m), with timed output from 12 to 15 minutes and a VAM of 1950 to 1560 m/h, the concentration of lactic acid in the blood immediately after the test is on average 9.7 mM/l. But there are athletes with 6 mM, others with 14 mM and yet others with intermediate levels.

The same thing happens on the Col de S. Agnes, in France (6.7 km, vertical gain of 540 m) with an average lactic concentration of 6.7 mM, but with individual variants from 4.8 to 11.3 mM/l. Or on the Vilaflor climb in Spain (10 km, vertical gain of 750 m), with average levels of 7.2 mM/l and individual variants of 5.3 to 11.7 mM/l.

There is no relationship between performance and lactic acid concentration. That is, it cannot be said that the rider with the lowest lactic acid level (or the highest) will obtain the best times.

Every athlete always behaves in the same way, i.e. he will accumulate very similar quantities of lactic acid each time he faces the uphill time trial even as years go by or after modifying training regimens. Thus there are riders who put out effort in a more aerobic manner (those that display lower lactic acid levels), and others with more anaerobic metabolism (higher lactic acid levels). Usually, the “aerobic” riders are better suited to stage races, while the “anaerobic” riders are more competitive in one-day races.

But this is not always the case. In my case studies, among the “anaerobics” there are two cyclists who won the Giro d’Italia, and another two who reached the podium.


In fact, even if it is true that lactic acid is poorly tolerated in the muscles, and if the speed of its elimination is high, between periods of effort it is re-utilized as an energy source by the heart, liver and the muscles themselves.

The half-life of lactic acid (that is the time it takes for its concentration level to be reduced by half) is on average 12 to 15 minutes. But I have seen this time span cut to 6 minutes in high level cyclists.

That means that only a few minutes of descent after a climb can be sufficient to eliminate a large part of accumulated lactic acid, rendering it utilizable as fuel during successive periods of effort output.


More from Other :
Hematocrit in Athletes - State Of The Art 24 Apr 2003
Altitude Training 28 Apr 2003
The Peripheral Pump 30 Jul 2003
Rominger's Hour 17 Oct 2003
Every Athlete is Unique 26 Mar 2004
My Own Records 12 Sep 2004
Training & Hormones 20 Sep 2004
VO2max - Useful? 12 Nov 2004
Lactic Acid: Good or Bad? 22 Dec 2004
Running for the Cyclist 31 Dec 2004
The Anaerobic Threshold 13 Jan 2005
Pulmonary Breathing 6 Sep 2005
More on Altitude and Hypoxia 3 Nov 2006
Fatigue: peripheral or central? 16 Nov 2006
Measuring the anaerobic threshold 2 Dec 2006
Iron Metabolism 13 Sep 2007
Variability of Hematic Parameters 8 Nov 2007
More on Hematic Parameters and Altitude 17 Nov 2007
Biological Passport & Other 2 Dec 2008
Where are the Stage Races going? 13 Dec 2008
More on the Biologic Passport 23 Jun 2009
WADA and Biologic Passport 31 Dec 2009
The Pechstein Case 17 Apr 2010
The Biologic Passport - UCI version 30 Jul 2010
Hb and OFFs: individual variance 26 Oct 2010
Specialization in cycling and complete riders 21 Nov 2010
Thoughts and Words 30 Nov 2010
Graphic Representations 3 Dec 2010
Good Ones and Bad Ones 3 Dec 2010
True or False, pt. 2 4 Dec 2010
Independent Experts: reliable? 7 Dec 2010
Something to Say 15 Dec 2010
Three Questions, Three Answers 24 Dec 2010
Interesting Reading 2 Feb 2011
UCI's Mess 18 Feb 2011
UCI's Ambush Complacency 23 Mar 2011
UCI and Rules 7 Apr 2011
HGH: Myth and Reality 14 Apr 2011
Doping Trials: the Facts 2 May 2011
Doping Trials: the Facts - Pt. 2 8 May 2011
Suspicious Test & Test Suspicions 5 Jun 2011
Castles Made of Sand 22 Sep 2011
Mentheour: a Concert of Lies 5 Oct 2011
Climbs and Time Trials 13 Oct 2011
Measuring the Hb Mass 10 Nov 2011
Can Lance win in Kona? 21 Feb 2012
Giving Blood Is Good For The Brain 21 Jun 2012
Incredible Biological Passport 28 Jun 2012
USADA: Arrogant Execution 12 Jul 2012
USADA: the Farce Continues 13 Jul 2012
The Schwazer Case 8 Aug 2012
The Bad Science 22 Sep 2012
Reply to Parisotto's Rebuttal 27 Sep 2012
Parisotto - Part III 29 Sep 2012
Parisotto - Final Response 10 Oct 2012
USADA Conspiracy? 16 Oct 2012
Sex and Aging 9 Dec 2012
A bit of History 22 Jan 2013
Osymetric Chainrings 6 Apr 2013


 
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