Rate 20 spm is the task, not rate 18 spm.NavigationHazard wrote:6:38.9 2k r18
ranger
Rate 20 spm is the task, not rate 18 spm.NavigationHazard wrote:6:38.9 2k r18
Did you look up the research?snowleopard wrote:You are so full of crap. Highly sophisticated blood-doping programs only improve endurance performance by single digit %ages. Why don't you call up UCI and recommend that everyone just goes over to Starbucks for a double expresso instead of a blood transfusionranger wrote:It has been demonstrated scientifically (by my brother, no less) that caffeine enhances athletic performance by as much as 20%, especially when the effort exceeds a couple of hours.
(Any yes, it's up to you to cite the reference. If you are having trouble finding it just ask your brother.)
Int J Sport Nutr Exerc Metab. 2007 Feb;17(1):35-55.snowleopard wrote:You are so full of crap. Highly sophisticated blood-doping programs only improve endurance performance by single digit %ages. Why don't you call up UCI and recommend that everyone just goes over to Starbucks for a double expresso instead of a blood transfusionranger wrote:It has been demonstrated scientifically (by my brother, no less) that caffeine enhances athletic performance by as much as 20%, especially when the effort exceeds a couple of hours.
(Any yes, it's up to you to cite the reference. If you are having trouble finding it just ask your brother.)
Thanks for the reference.ranger wrote:Int J Sport Nutr Exerc Metab. 2007 Feb;17(1):35-55.snowleopard wrote:You are so full of crap. Highly sophisticated blood-doping programs only improve endurance performance by single digit %ages. Why don't you call up UCI and recommend that everyone just goes over to Starbucks for a double expresso instead of a blood transfusionranger wrote:It has been demonstrated scientifically (by my brother, no less) that caffeine enhances athletic performance by as much as 20%, especially when the effort exceeds a couple of hours.
(Any yes, it's up to you to cite the reference. If you are having trouble finding it just ask your brother.)
Caffeinated sports drink: ergogenic effects and possible mechanisms.
Cureton KJ, Warren GL, Millard-Stafford ML, Wingo JE, Trilk J, Buyckx M.
Department of Kinesiology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602-6554, USA.
Abstract
This double-blind experiment examined the effects of a caffeinated sports drink during prolonged cycling in a warm environment. Sixteen highly trained cyclists completed 3 trials: placebo, carbohydrate-electrolyte sports drink (CES), and caffeinated sports drink (CES+CAF). Subjects cycled for 135 min, alternating between 60% and 75% VO2max every 15 min for the first 120 min, followed by a 15-min performance ride. Maximal voluntary (MVC) and electrically evoked contractile properties of the knee extensors were measured before and after cycling. Work completed during the performance ride was 15-23% greater for CES+CAF than for the other beverages. Ratings of perceived exertion were lower with CES+CAF than with placebo and CES. After cycling, the MVC strength loss was two-thirds less for CES+CAF than for the other beverages (5% vs. 15%). Data from the interpolated-twitch technique indicated that attenuated strength loss with CES+CAF was explained by reduced intrinsic muscle fatigue.
Kirk found that this difference in performance had nothing to do with anything physiological that he could detect (and he tracked everything he could). The effect was psychological.
And it was a 20% better, if was 17/23% better after 120 minutes cycling first. So first in totale not 20 % better, but looking at the overall a lot less and second, this shows a better fat burner and less use of glycogeen. That is not a better performance but a different full source. A better performance on caffeine would have been, one group on and one group off but both unlimited drinking and eating during the ride, just like it is when you cycle.snowleopard wrote: If I read that correctly the trials were: placebo; sports drink CES; and caffeinated sports drink (CES+CAF). There was no caffeine only trial, i.e., it was caffeine plus electrolyte that produced the effect.
It is also probably worth distinguishing between "work" and "performance"ranger wrote: Int J Sport Nutr Exerc Metab. 2007 Feb;17(1):35-55.
Caffeinated sports drink: ergogenic effects and possible mechanisms.
Cureton KJ, Warren GL, Millard-Stafford ML, Wingo JE, Trilk J, Buyckx M.
Department of Kinesiology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602-6554, USA.
Work completed during the performance ride was 15-23% greater for CES+CAF than for the other beverages.
ranger's conclusion remains anecdotal at best.October 7th, 2010, 3:18 am
It has been demonstrated scientifically (by my brother, no less) that caffeine enhances athletic performance by as much as 20%, especially when the effort exceeds a couple of hours.
The effect is not physiological, but psychological.
Who said anything about tasks? 19.6 spi was the accomplishment. At 20 spm, 19.6 spi is 392w = 1:35.25 pace, the same as the 55-59 MHW hammer-winning time in 2010.ranger wrote:Rate 20 spm is the task, not rate 18 spm.NavigationHazard wrote:6:38.9 2k r18
ranger
No, as I said, my brother tracked as many physiological factors as he could, and he could not find any physiological source for the increased performance.mikvan52 wrote:The statement by ranger also was not talking about physiological response (as, I surmise, his brother was) but psychological.
NavigationHazard wrote:Who said anything about tasks? 19.6 spi was the accomplishment. At 20 spm, 19.6 spi is 392w = 1:35.25 pace, the same as the 55-59 MHW hammer-winning time in 2010.ranger wrote:Rate 20 spm is the task, not rate 18 spm.NavigationHazard wrote:6:38.9 2k r18
ranger