What’s Good for You and What’s Not

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Yesterday at PT I started “lifting weights”. I was doing bicep curls with a 3 lb weight. Yep, that is right, a 3 pound weight. If you would have told me 2 months ago I would be struggling to do 10 reps with 3 pounds I would have told you that you are crazy. This whole thing has got me thinking about what really works for athletes and what is just a fad.

It is so weird how names go around. You used to do circuit training for weights. The reps would change and the actual exercises never seemed to be constant either. Then it turned into strength training and then training for your core. People never seem to be happy with the name of exercise, so it is always changing, but doing pretty much the same thing.

The same with stretching. No one wants to just stretch, but Pilates was great, then yoga took over from that. Everyone is looking for the new and greatest. Can you imagine doing a jazzercise class now to compliment your cycling?

I’ve taken a ton of vitamins and supplements during my lifetime. I never really could tell exactly what actually “worked” and what was placebo.

When I first started racing, I became a complete vegetarian, mainly because the best rider I knew, Bill Nicholson, was a vegetarian. I didn’t eat any meat for years. But, I took a handful of vitamins that Bill was taking. I can’t remember them all, but some were-vitamin E, vitamin C, pantothenic acid, calcium-magnesium-zinc, lethicin, plus others. I can’t really tell you what most of them were for now, but I swore by them back then.

One year I rode the Tour of Baja and got a bad case of Montezuma’s Revenge. I flew to the East coast with Andy Hampsten. Andy was heading back to Europe and I was going to Columbia to do the RCN. Andy told me that if I only ate garlic and blue cheese for a couple days, nothing else, my stomach problems would be over. So, I was holed up in a hotel room in Atlanta, waiting to flew to Bogata, and eating only those two things. Whenever I left the room and then came back, like after a ride, I couldn’t believe how terrible the room smelled. I was so embarrassed thinking what the house keepers must be thinking when they came in to clean. The strange thing is that after I was in the room a few minutes, it just smelled normal. And the funny thing is that it worked. I felt great afterwards.

I take a couple things now. Fish oil and D3. I’ve been taking the baby aspirin once a day ever since I got that blood clot from crashing last year. Other than that nothing.

One thing I do now that contradicts all this is colostrum. (It’s bovine colostrum, not human.) Catherine got me into using it when I just start to feel sick. Her mother had been diagnosed with a rare cancer and has been fighting it only with colostrum. She is super healthy and vibrant when the prognosis for her situation is less than desirable. I have to admit that I have been ill much less than normal.

I guess we’re all looking for the edge as athletes. We go through fads and try new things to try to improve our health and physical abilities to ride our bikes faster. One thing that I know works is riding your bike a bunch. And riding bikes fast, like race fast seems to make me a faster bike racer. I’m glad that works for me and I don’t have to travel to Tenerife to train and do climbing intervals for months.

Nearly a meal in itself.

Nearly a meal in itself.

Yummy.

Yummy.

I'd rather just eat stuff like this.

I’d rather just eat stuff like this.

I've been taking this anytime I start to feel sick and it seems to work.

I’ve been taking this anytime I start to feel sick and it seems to work.

Lance – Mountain Climber?

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I saw this article at Cyclingnews saying that Lance had entered a Region Masters Swim Championship in Austin this weekend. It irked me that the executive director of USMS, Rob Butcher, issued this statement – “Our mission, dating back to the 60s, is we encourage adults to swim. Lance is a member of USMS so he is eligible to swim.”

It irked me enough that I decided to send an email off to Rob to tell him how short sighted and ignorant that statement was. And how bad a message their decision on this was on so many levels.

Rob was kind enough to send me back this statement, which is the official statement of United States Masters Swimming –

Lance Armstrong Eligibility

Sarasota, Fla. April 4, 2013—Lance Armstrong is not eligible to race in U.S. Masters Swimming competitions.

The former competitive cyclist has been a member of U.S. Masters Swimming for several years. The spirit and purpose of USMS is to encourage adults to swim.

USMS is affiliated with FINA (Federation Internationale de Natacion) through United States Aquatic Sports.

When we became aware that Mr. Armstrong entered the 2013 South Central Zone Championship in Austin, Texas, April 5–7, a local event sanctioned by USMS, we contacted United States Aquatic Sports and FINA to clarify our responsibilities in this case. The event in question is conducted in a 25-yard pool, a non-Olympic course not contested on the international stage.

After discussion with United States Aquatic Sports and FINA, it was agreed that although Mr. Armstrong is eligible for membership in U.S. Masters Swimming, he is not currently eligible to compete in sanctioned swimming competitions, regardless of the type of course.

The World Anti-Doping Agency has banned Mr. Armstrong from competition. FINA accepts the WADA Code and USMS, as a member of United States Aquatic Sports, recognizes and respects adjudications under the Code.

… Rob

I’m glad that they came to their senses and made the right decision.

It’s not like I have any sort of grudge towards Lance. If anything, I feel pretty bad for him. Man, his desire to compete competitively in virtually any endurance race or sport, seems unreal. But, he does have a lifetime ban by a sporting body and when that is in place, then the rest of sport needs to hold united and honor that sanction.

I have to admit, it seems sort of unfair that some of these other guys that testified “against” Lance, did their 6 month chair-in-the-corner stint, and are racing in Europe on Pro Tour Teams. As Lance said in his Oprah deal, he made an error on when and how to “come clean” and now it is costing him big time.

I think that Lance either needs to figure out a way to make a deal with USADA and reduce his suspension time or figure out a way personally deal with not being able to test himself through athletic competition.

Lance needs to take up a sport that he doesn’t need a license or permission to compete. Something that is challenging and hard, on an endurance level, but is more man against himself and nature. I’m sure there are other things that fit these parameters, but mountain climbing comes to mind here. I mean sans bike here, like walking up mountains. It might be something that Lance could do to rid himself of some of his competitive desires. But, it’s just a suggestion. I do know that he needs to stay away from pretty much all sports where people compete against other people. Those are the ones he has a lifetime ban.

I wonder if Lance ever told Dave Weins he was sorry for beating him by 25 minutes at Leadville?

I wonder if Lance ever told Dave Weins he was sorry for beating him by 25 minutes at Leadville?

If he really got into the sport of mountain climbing and wanted to write a book, this title is already taken.

If he really got into the sport of mountain climbing and wanted to write a book, this title is already taken.