Human Performance SECRETS Behind Norwegian World Champions: Olav Aleksander Bu

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  • Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024

Комментарии • 121

  • @Timr3
    @Timr3 Год назад +75

    My 14 key takaways:
    -Culture
    Culture is the fundament of the Norwegian team. Culture comes with work ethic, habits and passion for each other.
    -Personal values
    Being a good human has inherent value. A gold medal is something we give value to. Surround yourself with people that consciously and subconsciously make you a better person.
    -Transparency
    Transparency creates a work environment for growth. Being transparent about yourself as a person builds trusts. Being transparent about ones advantages builds a stronger training environment.
    -Evaluating
    A race analysis needs some time to mature. There is less emphasize on data and more on the evaluation of the performance by the athlete.
    -Curiosity
    Olav has been curious since he was a kid. The drive to learn and understand separates him.
    -Competitive
    Being competitive does not only apply to sports. Olav wants to become the best in the things he does and expect nothing less from the people he is working with.
    -Physiological
    The physiological systems operate like a black box between input and output. Physiological numbers don’t explain the whole picture and there are still a lot of concepts that are not understand fully, such as: maximal lactate steady state and glycogen uptake.
    -Performance and technology
    Today much more of the research can be done in Vivo. This creates holistic training programs and stops obsessing over details.
    -Quality work
    If you work toward a specific goal, every session should be separated by quality instead of intensity. You should always be able to answer the question: what is the purpose of this session.
    Don’t be a workout hero and race day zero.
    -Lactate production
    Lactate is produced in the muscles and released in the bloodstream. The amount of lactate that is produced gets influenced by a lot of factors such as: blood volume, blood plasma and hydration. The body can use lactate as fuel.
    -Core body temperature
    The body turns around 20% of the energy uptake into mechanical power. The rest is turned into heat. When the body overheats, blood flow will be directed towards the skin instead of muscles which will reduce performance.
    -Heart rate variability
    HRV can be influenced by activities such as breathing techniques or a warming up routine. Readiness for training should therefore not be determined by the HRV but rather the perceived fatigue of the athlete.
    -Recovery
    Doing a hard session when not fully recovered will have a negative impact on future performance instead of a positive one. Listening to your body is important.
    -Nutrition
    Eating a variety of foods with enough calories is important for performance. Supplements can be used to fill gaps that require some additional attention.

    • @lps2564
      @lps2564 Год назад +3

      Thank you for taking the time to put this together 🤘

    • @alicequayle4625
      @alicequayle4625 Год назад +1

      Thanks for this.

    • @1Timatin
      @1Timatin 3 месяца назад

      Tanks.

    • @adrianm5147
      @adrianm5147 Месяц назад

      Awesome! I do find it super interesting that the scientist is telling us, hey, you gotta go by feel too guys. Haha

  • @jessepratt6525
    @jessepratt6525 Год назад +43

    Awesome episode it was worth the wait. This is a man that is just bursting with knowledge in endurance training and articulates highly technical principles in a understandable way. I enjoyed how you got into his past before this career path and this has major replay value. It’s not a surprise his athletes are dominating especially when he touches on the human element as the most important aspect before the science.

  • @nelson_alexander
    @nelson_alexander Год назад +34

    One if the most innovative minds in sport right now. Hopefully Kristian and Gustav can continue to elevate and dominate.

  • @johnnyhanel
    @johnnyhanel Год назад +5

    my guy shared a ton.. but also nothing at the same time lol. i wanted to hear training details, i guess i shouldn’t have expected him to share training secrets… the title just got me thinking he was going to.

  • @glywnniswells9480
    @glywnniswells9480 Год назад +10

    Why ignore Norways epic 400m hurdler and their 1500m runner plus these two untoucheable triathletes.
    Thats 4 athletes suddenly out of Norway smashing the world to bits.
    What Iden and Blumi are to triathlon their 400m hurdler is even more insane.

    • @oliverreithsrensen7062
      @oliverreithsrensen7062 Год назад +9

      And you dont even know how dominating they are in biathlon and cross-country skiing

  • @CoolInOlympia
    @CoolInOlympia Год назад +8

    I love that his philosophy is that what is important is to be a good PERSON!!!!

  • @BentoBensin
    @BentoBensin Год назад +8

    Just wow, incredibly fascinating conversation! Soo much to take in. This is one of those pods that needs to be consumed to multiple times. Can't wait for part two ;)

  • @CAIrondad
    @CAIrondad Год назад +7

    Love it…. This is one interview I have looked forward to so thank you so much! But Rich, this reminds me once again of the interview with Lance a few years back. The table you used then was way, way better. More personal. This one now is insanely long. Why??? Please go back. 😬😳😎

  • @lizzobeach5179
    @lizzobeach5179 Год назад +9

    Great conversation! Thanks to both of you for letting us watch. And I cannot agree more about ignoring the Whoop before heading out for a big training day and definitely before races. So many times I’ve also gone out and then dumped out only to find I was high green or to have an amazing day and find out I was red. Great to hear that perhaps it is perhaps not the clear marker of what is to come as much as it is something to look at over time.

  • @andrewaposhian264
    @andrewaposhian264 Год назад +6

    Thank you so much for this podcast! Thank you, Olav for your openness, and thank you, Rich, for letting him go into details! Yes, please do a part 2, and part 3, and part 4 etc! As an age grouper triathlete, this is so fascinating and helpful.

  • @jmm0935
    @jmm0935 Год назад +3

    There is not one interview I have watched with Olav where I don't come away a smarter human being.

  • @FitterHealthierDad
    @FitterHealthierDad Год назад +7

    Such a fantastic interview you can really see how he applies his engineers mind to his coaching, it’s almost like he’s taking a lot of approaches from Formula 1

  • @paulboston6820
    @paulboston6820 Год назад +5

    Great episode...always love when you have endurance athletes and coaching sharing how they are elevating human performance. When is Goggins coming back on?

  • @LikeKoby
    @LikeKoby Год назад +2

    How much do Gustav and Christian stretch or work directly on body mobility? Day, week, month? Do they test and compare results from their past in this regard? These are some questions I have never heard talked about for these two athletes.

  • @user-gw1pf8kx1c
    @user-gw1pf8kx1c Год назад +5

    please tell this guy to write a book with all this content!

  • @Bicyclechris
    @Bicyclechris Год назад +3

    Put his training formula and all the variables that are being considered into ChatGPT and see if it tailors an app or training plan.😊

  • @arturoarino
    @arturoarino 7 месяцев назад +3

    Wow, one of the best conversations I’ve heard, Thank you so much Rich for always bringing such great energy and insight into your podcasts

  • @danellis9385
    @danellis9385 Год назад +2

    It'd be interesting to see how morning light affects performance, or music or sound.

  • @Seby-biketrial
    @Seby-biketrial Год назад +2

    thank you so much !! Very interesting information, perspectives. It is like opening a hood of a revolutionary supercar and trying to understand how it actually works. Human body & human consciousness is a miracle. and a miracle is a miracle until you understand the science behind it. We are diving deeper into the mind of God - simple & complex at same time.

  • @FreshwaterManlyBeach
    @FreshwaterManlyBeach Год назад +1

    Love Triathlon and the athletes. This interviewer Rich Roll wants big money rolls in his pocket and bank account. All theatre. Olav is great. Learn heaps from him.

  • @locorunner
    @locorunner Год назад +3

    One of your best episodes. Learned so much from this. Thanks Rich.

  • @markphilpottultra
    @markphilpottultra Год назад +8

    Next level endurance conversation, without a shred of ego in sight. A fascinating insight to what it takes to take the sport of triathlon by the scruff of the neck, shake it up, and spit it out, creating the new baseline for everyone to copy or build upon.

  • @GrThDo
    @GrThDo 3 месяца назад

    Oof, I think these books that Olav is talking about about hunting animals through heat management are written by non-skeptics and people who have never tried persistence hunting themselves.
    You can read scholarly texts on anthropology to get a more circumspect view. Hunter-gathers like the Hadza who live on hot climates hunt as a leisure and prestige activity. They use weapons like bows and arrows and they hunt primarily through ambush hunting, not persistence hunting. The most common game is birds and ground animals. Big game scores are much celebrated because they don't happen every day or every week.
    For a guy like Olav who is so concerned with calorie economics, it should be trivial for him to prove to himself that persistence hunting provided little if any evolutionary impulse. Persistence hunts have a low success rate, and when they succeed, it costs the group of hunters something like 20,000 calories to bring down an animal that provides all of about maybe 50,000, maybe 60,000 calories to feed the whole tribe.
    There's also an inexplicable origin story for people who believe that humans evolved to hunt this way. In remote areas where animals have not been hunted by bipeds, they tend to not be afraid of us. So the very first humans who decided to start hunting presumably had no edged weapons to use and were facing animals who were not running away, who were prepared to stand and fight and have a much greater physical capacity to do so compared to humans. Just for an example, I was watering my garden yesterday and a two-year-old whitetail buck came into my yard waiting for me to finish up so that it could eat some produce. In the area the housing is too dense to allow hunting and has been that way for many years. I walked over to try to get the deer to leave the yard, but it stood its ground and stamped its foot at me. It wasn't leaving, it was threatening me. Who is going to win that fight? Empty-handed me? Or a wild animal? I had to back off.
    It seems like the development of weapons must have predated the onset of big game hunting as a mode of life, which means that this mode of life probably arrived later than many people think and accounted for less of early human food than many people think. The only hunter-gatherers I'm aware of who RELY on hunting for sustenance are far-northern tribes, like the Inuits, who live in lands where the growing season is so short that there's simply not enough plant matter to live on. Everyone else uses plants as the caloric basis of the diet and supplements it with meat when available. Which makes you wonder how much we really made physical adaptations to hunting at all, when so many of our "persistence hunting" adaptations are more easy to explain as adaptations to bipedal nomadic living in hot grasslands, from our upright gait to our large lungs to our thin body proportions to our naked skin with hair only on the head.

  • @Upsidestrength
    @Upsidestrength Год назад +2

    Amazing interview 💪💪 well done guys

  • @dailydoseofmedicinee
    @dailydoseofmedicinee Год назад +3

    wow👏

  • @Ehsender
    @Ehsender 8 дней назад

    Great look into how HARD it is to compete at the top. How much thought, effort and work goes into being the best. Happy to be an amateur 😂

  • @brijnich
    @brijnich Год назад +2

    Only 10 mins into this and the pod is next level culture values and data. Brilliant listen

  • @tomaszjankowiak3777
    @tomaszjankowiak3777 Год назад +1

    I have questions:
    1. How has increased the aerobic and anaerobic performance (vo2max etc) of Blu and Iden since 2015?
    2. What is the intensity of the race on olympic distance, half ironman or full ironman?
    3. Is it possible that during next olimpic race Norwegian will have 0 medals?

  • @nooahchannel
    @nooahchannel Год назад +2

    I am loving this talks with Olav Aleksander Bu. He is awesome.

  • @banjannaparota
    @banjannaparota 2 месяца назад

    1:20:03 I thought he would say that he wants to create a supercharger for the human body lol

  • @letsrelaxwithtexts2114
    @letsrelaxwithtexts2114 Год назад +1

    not a single takeway on this conversation

  • @CoolInOlympia
    @CoolInOlympia Год назад +2

    This was a great interview about coaching and training!

  • @paubalart1657
    @paubalart1657 Год назад +1

    Wow! What a guy! Definately a new huge approach to everything in sport. Looking forward part two

  •  8 месяцев назад

    1:31 is the most important section to me. How you feel is the most significant Predictor. No need to micro manage I think

  • @RXP91
    @RXP91 Год назад +1

    Excellent stuff! If Blood lactate tests are in mmol so a volume measure but since HR drifts up during dehydration as blood volume decreases - blood lactate is still a good measure of training zone as you're having to work harder for the same power output.
    The more I read and watch on devices to train - the more I realise the talk test and heart rate is superior to any power measurement. It's a real physiological measurement that responds to the internal state. A watt simply isn't a watt in physiology
    I've started to use HRV overnight to make sure I don't cross into the threshold for my long activities. Seiler states that crossing into Z3 is almost like a binary switch for the autonomic nervous system. If my HRV stays constant or increases I know I didn't cross the threshold.

    • @PhiyackYuh
      @PhiyackYuh Год назад +2

      You need to marry external and internal load. Thats where aerobic coupling comes into play. Seilers polarised wont work to your average punter who are time crunched. Those polarised work if you have 20+ hours a week training.

  • @sefintri
    @sefintri Год назад +1

    Lo esperaba hace meses, Thanks you Nice job and interview

  • @fmcdomer
    @fmcdomer Год назад +31

    Is it me? I couldn’t learn a single thing in the first hour

    • @zikaperic2133
      @zikaperic2133 Год назад +4

      Yeah it sounds very generic

    • @VogtJurgen
      @VogtJurgen Год назад +10

      I learned that teamwork, culture, discipline etc are often more important than the science. The culture forms the foundation that you build the crafted training plans on.

    • @markolim8938
      @markolim8938 Год назад +5

      Yes. And basically from 1:00 to 1:05:30 all he said was keep your easy days easy. Most coaches would say the same. Kinda confirms that 80-90% easy- principle still holds

    • @markolim8938
      @markolim8938 Год назад +1

      Yes. And basically from 1:00:00 to 1:05:30 all he said was keep your easy days easy. Most coaches would say the same. Just confirms that 80-90% easy -principle still holds?

    • @jensonvaughan
      @jensonvaughan Год назад +3

      Not just you at all. Long winded and meandering.

  • @VogtJurgen
    @VogtJurgen Год назад +1

    Fantastically interesting discussion. Thank you.

  • @MrMattMcC
    @MrMattMcC Год назад +2

    Can't wait for this!!

  • @andreaskvrner4508
    @andreaskvrner4508 Год назад +5

    Olav is on another level of smartness

  • @matthewfoote12
    @matthewfoote12 Год назад +1

    Waited 728 episodes for this

  • @PatrickDelorenzi
    @PatrickDelorenzi Год назад

    Another banger RRP episode 👌👌Thank you 🙏

  • @Dmcsquared68
    @Dmcsquared68 Год назад +1

    Q1: what were some of your biggest mistakes and how did that affect your training plan going forward?
    Q2: talk about blood sugar levels during training using the meters and how that affects the performance in real time.
    Q3: is there any future in lactate meters during performance, like the blood sugar meters that currently in vogue?

    • @uroldrberry
      @uroldrberry Год назад

      So. Blood sugar during training shown to be pretty irrelevant.
      Yes Abbot has a working version of a combo blood sugar/lactate continuous meter. Sane issues as blood sugar. Lag exists so not great for rapid changes and more accurate than base testing protocols.

  • @Rob.Kisiel
    @Rob.Kisiel 8 месяцев назад

    Norwegians are great at Nordic skiing...Highest Vo2max athletes in the world...Carry that down to triathlons and bang.....

  • @Balkac
    @Balkac Год назад

    Because I don't have a girlfriend and I consider my chances a tiny bit higher when I don't look like complete crap. Easy as that.

  • @KlemenSuligojTri
    @KlemenSuligojTri Год назад +1

    Oh man, this is gonna be awesome!!

  • @wowser44
    @wowser44 Год назад

    Everything is Fine, Death is Callin'
    some see it as a blessing,
    others as a warning
    Don't cheat yaself this time Homie
    without the moon
    there ain't no sunshine, Darling
    explore the journey
    you've been living in a castle
    yet stuck in the same territory
    what is eternity without a new discovery?
    HOLD hands with destiny
    imagination is flying without a fee
    but the earthly ride ain't free
    sad but true
    you can't learn what you can't teach
    and you can't go where you can't reach
    no way to translate what we haven't lived
    The price we pay is in direct proportion
    to the prize we might receive
    new experiences create new emotions
    healing words are shared by preachers
    pain and suffering are the teachers
    floating like a butterfly
    will get ya stung by a beast
    "It's not a virtue to be naive"
    Keep an eye for the bird with the key
    it has a childhood memory
    filled with harmony
    collaborating and cooperating
    provides self relief
    giving and taking without expectation
    call it perpetual meditation
    self reflection, subtle elebaration
    can't cut corners
    there's no small time dealers,
    just small performers
    serpent bites don't kill, venom does
    Choose your poison
    what's the word of the day daddy?
    "Poise" son
    Maintain your composure
    Here comes the shocker
    Death is a metaphor for mystical,
    not physical
    Let go and surrender
    "If we don't trust ourselves,
    we can't betray ourselves"
    Use logic and reason
    somebody said:
    "Where there's trust there's treason"
    6 million ways to die
    choose looking at the mirror, that mask
    what the hero does at once,
    the joker does at last
    Ready to take a gamble
    to get ahead in the game of life?
    then go right ahead, shine forth
    Being real is the best deal
    can't fake courage nor patience
    what silence is to the meek and ancients
    self created sickness is to pity patients
    Nothing new under the sun
    "What has to be done will be done"
    The more we get betrayed,
    the better writer we become
    No need to start a senseless war
    we can always raise the bar
    a new star will continue to get eclipsed
    by a bigger star
    Yet there's enough darkness
    for all of us to shine
    No Time, No Space, No Pressure
    Who knows how to measure and
    mix pain with pleasure?
    The best courage arrives while crying
    We can start willingly by walking or crawling
    Whenever we're ready to accept the calling
    Death to an Old Self to create New Cells,
    New Mind, New energy and strength
    to feel more clever
    to feel Death at a deeper level
    until we meet the Devil, that Fool
    the ego caught up in the high-achieving,
    oriented society and sometimes
    feeling above it
    and other times were so driven
    by selfish impulsivity, we can't stop it
    social media is the platform
    for any prophet, poet and puppet
    Stubborn to feel authentic
    by dominating others
    compelling urge to attain mighty powers
    yet afraid to demonstrate their true self
    no confidence, no self control and
    no patience to deal with others
    Wherever you go, there you are
    you still gotta face it
    by yourself with no confidence,
    no self control and no patience
    it's those thoughts running around
    like mentally ill patients
    aggressions and pretensions
    Relentless
    Screaming Set Me Free
    There's no escape
    It all comes down to choice
    and responsibility
    Individuality and maturity
    Self interests vs Ethics
    sexual deviance vs morality
    humanity will never eliminate the necessity
    to crave more, to do more
    that disease called "more"
    more of this, more of that
    Always wishing for something else
    A wish come true - is when we don't desire
    to be at some place else
    Right here, right now
    we create our woe and our wow
    The time is now
    and Perhaps we ought to know
    we have the freedom to say "No"
    Is everything fine? It's only Freedom calling
    but to experience true liberation
    we gotta be filled with
    new found hope and inspiration
    and like William Blake said:
    "Nothing Outshines Imagination"
    How would it feel to be the engager to a
    numinous nature? Yet we cling to our
    Boldness and stubbornness
    What's an empress to a high priestess?
    "vanities of vanities, it's all vanity"
    craving sophistication and worldliness
    while the boneless pray for a bonus
    the boundless mind appreciates life and death
    because it's endless
    They say the truth hurts
    I'll never forget Mircea Eliade's quote:
    "The opposite of life is not death, it's rebirth."
    FGirius flowin

  • @jeandupont8145
    @jeandupont8145 Год назад

    awesome video ! Can i ask you if Gustav or Kris takes any suplemment like probiotic, omega3, vitaminD, creatine ? Or its just caffeine and carbs ? :p

  • @bmp713
    @bmp713 Год назад

    Anyone have any links to the research he is referring to regarding heart size and stroke volume changing much more quickly than originally thought?

  • @ericjou094
    @ericjou094 5 месяцев назад

    Do you have a video about the tool needed for amateur and sports endurance athletes, thanks again

  • @buckmanriver
    @buckmanriver Год назад

    I wonder what the best way to optimize velocity in trail running. Specifically, ultra trail running in ranges greater than 50km?

  • @annac3514
    @annac3514 Год назад

    Another fantastic interview sans silly questions. I reckon, there will some day be a book or perhaps a data-driven app with biofeedback loops.

  • @ericjou094
    @ericjou094 5 месяцев назад

    I never saw something so empowering for me and so human and technical at the same time, thanks so much.

  • @Mg67890BFF
    @Mg67890BFF Год назад

    Didn’t know Juergen Klop was into triathlons

  • @cicaizrogace8054
    @cicaizrogace8054 Год назад

    Vredi slušati ljude koji imaju vrhunske rezultate.

  • @gjgferreira
    @gjgferreira Год назад

    fantastic thanks for sharing knowledge greetings from Portugal

  • @garretbrentDG
    @garretbrentDG Год назад

    Finally!!! Been waiting for this interview to drop. 😊

  • @xcskiing_universe
    @xcskiing_universe Год назад

    Olav takes good English to a new level

  • @CiPoMaXa
    @CiPoMaXa Год назад

    very interesting. Thank you

  • @licencetostay007
    @licencetostay007 8 месяцев назад

    I could listen to these two talk for hours

  • @brianm3924
    @brianm3924 Год назад

    Fantastic episode Rich Roll.

  • @Nrk4u
    @Nrk4u Год назад

    That’s what’s up. Love this stuff

  • @nicolasbarbalan8759
    @nicolasbarbalan8759 Год назад

    this is an amazing interview!! thanks so much

  • @TracKnGravelDeWd
    @TracKnGravelDeWd 8 месяцев назад

    Is there an episode 2?

  • @christoph_wattever
    @christoph_wattever Год назад

    Awesome, thank you!

  • @charliesmusic270
    @charliesmusic270 Год назад

    The hits keep coming!😊

  • @Nrk4u
    @Nrk4u Год назад

    Definitely not pathetic 😅

  • @letsrelaxwithtexts2114
    @letsrelaxwithtexts2114 Год назад

    coach kavanagh all over again

  • @letransformateur6477
    @letransformateur6477 Год назад

    Greetings from Bergen!

  • @spencemaddy
    @spencemaddy Год назад

    This episode is Gold!

  • @Nrk4u
    @Nrk4u Год назад

    Take note 📝 kids

  • @abegoldberg4030
    @abegoldberg4030 Год назад

    Awesome!!

  • @beepbeepnj2658
    @beepbeepnj2658 Год назад +1

    A few weeks ago I was at the gym with my friend Jim Nasium, I had a 10 pound dumbbell near the front door and the manager asked if I was taking it home. I said the sign on the wall said free weights.

  • @Menstral
    @Menstral Год назад +4

    I was shocked to hear such a backward opinion on supplements, especially after the analogy of the electric car not charging completely. Micronutrients are often depleted over time.

    • @tiki-turin
      @tiki-turin Год назад +4

      I was fascinated to see Gustav Iden just downing food he liked (e.g. salami on bread etc) rather than adhering to some scientifically thought out next level nutritional program when he had his breakfast at his training camp (on RUclips) ...I also remember a great Norwegian (World Champ) Nordic ctoss country skier in the late 90s early 2000s (Thomas Alsgaard) who also loved downing pizza during his training..makes me.wonder, is diet and nutrition still overlooked by these guys or is it looked at by others too much?...surely if you add scientifically proven methods on diet for recovery and diet to fuel yourself there is another level these guys can go to?...or maybe the athlete can underperform if he/she doesnt like those kind of diets ..let the athelete eat what they want and be satisfied rather than a one size fits all approach to sports diets .. horses for courses etc? Just thinking 🤔

  • @dailydata903
    @dailydata903 Год назад +5

    Questions to long and complicated.

  • @brunospasta
    @brunospasta Год назад +4

    So, I might be pre-judding here. But I am 5 min in the video and instead of letting the guest and expert speak I mostly hear the host trying to showcase his opinons on a topic and proceeding without even asking a real question... I hate this if podcast hosts do that :(

  • @battshytkrazy156
    @battshytkrazy156 Год назад

    🤯👊🔥💥💢🥵

  • @gestell
    @gestell Год назад +3

    Hopefully clean... seriously doubt it!

    • @manextube
      @manextube Год назад +1

      I wouldn't put a dime on them being clean

  • @V0skAnian
    @V0skAnian Год назад +1

    To be honest, let Kristian and Gustav train with Dan Lorang, or other good coaches, they would still be the best and maybe even perform better. Sam Laidlow was faster than Kristian....
    I think it's more the work ethic, atmosphere they are training in that are making them so good than the training method. #SORRYNOTSORRY

  • @ivanjeremija9180
    @ivanjeremija9180 Год назад +2

    Don't ask them about blood doping- that's considered impolite in the world of pro endurance athletes!😂

  • @lisawade8544
    @lisawade8544 Год назад +2

    I love the explanation of Vo2 max. As a nonathlete but a health nut, it's good to know I can focus on improving my 5-minute stamina.

  • @Samuel-bu7xr
    @Samuel-bu7xr Год назад +29

    He didn't mention the drugs part though...

    • @bartez2366
      @bartez2366 Год назад +6

      Exactly they are all doing it. Why lying 🤥 all the time.

    • @vnys
      @vnys Год назад

      Because everyone who excel at something must be cheating

    • @joeromano507
      @joeromano507 Год назад +1

      F*ck I hadn’t even thought about it! LOL 💯

    • @alicequayle4625
      @alicequayle4625 Год назад +4

      If they are all doing then it won't be giving them an advantage.

    • @Samuel-bu7xr
      @Samuel-bu7xr Год назад +5

      @@alicequayle4625 ahh, you my friend have found a way to enjoy professional sport despite it's shortcomings. I congratulate you.
      Individual response is variable. Access to new compounds often defines success in endurance sports. Doping isn't an even playing field, just like training developments, drugs get better too, or at least, less detectable.

  • @concretejungle9608
    @concretejungle9608 Год назад

    Genetics - that’s “what’s going on” in Norway 😅 It’s hilarious to observe non- north Europeans try to figure out how those natural for that genetic group results can be artificially manufactured outside of it.

  • @gordonkocher5872
    @gordonkocher5872 Год назад

    None of this counts all his athletes are on EPO… these guys are all liars

  • @fernandog.aguirre2791
    @fernandog.aguirre2791 Год назад

    Be awarded that such a big performance and the effort it could end up with the life of this young talented human beings.
    This is getting OUT of normal human physiology!,