what is more important in downhill, leg strength or aerobic capacity?
I say aerobic capacity.
Why? Well, you need leg strength to make turns, but you need aerobic capacity to breathe, right? If you don't have leg strength, then you can't turn at high speeds, but if you can't breathe, then you'd be dead. Dead people are definitely slower than people who lack leg strength. Therefore, I submit that aerobic capacity is more important in the downhill. Aaron Daniel Gringioni ps. I used to hang out with some skiers once, therefore I know what I'm talking about |
what is more important in downhill, leg strength or aerobic capacity?
In news:Kurgan Gringioni
typed: I say aerobic capacity. Why? Well, you need leg strength to make turns, but you need aerobic capacity to breathe, right? If you don't have leg strength, then you can't turn at high speeds, but if you can't breathe, then you'd be dead. Dead people are definitely slower than people who lack leg strength. Therefore, I submit that aerobic capacity is more important in the downhill. Aaron Daniel Gringioni ps. I used to hang out with some skiers once, therefore I know what I'm talking about Looks like this could make the summer quite amusing. ;-) -- Mike __________________________________________________ ______ "Colorado Ski Country, USA" Come often, Ski hard, Spend *lots* of money, Then leave as quickly as you can. Rec.Skiing.Alpine.Moderated is up and working! Join in! |
what is more important in downhill, leg strength or aerobic capacity?
"Kurgan Gringioni" wrote in
et: I say aerobic capacity. Why? Well, you need leg strength to make turns, but you need aerobic capacity to breathe, right? If you don't have leg strength, then you can't turn at high speeds, but if you can't breathe, then you'd be dead. Dead people are definitely slower than people who lack leg strength. Therefore, I submit that aerobic capacity is more important in the downhill. Aaron Daniel Gringioni ps. I used to hang out with some skiers once, therefore I know what I'm talking about Troll-O-Meter 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 ^ | |
what is more important in downhill, leg strength or aerobic capacity?
your theory is flawed somewhat, dead people in the right vehicle and terrain
are faster than alive in the same terrain. example, dead person inside a box off Yosemite is faster than one alive. the alive person would fight for the first few seconds before being thrown off. the dead person is already traveling at 32.2ft/s /s thus has a 60-90 ft advantage the alive person would never regain. then once they reach their destination the aerobic wouldn't matter due to the longs being collapsed..... "Kurgan Gringioni" wrote in message et... Dead people are definitely slower than people who lack leg strength. Therefore, I submit that aerobic capacity is more important in the downhill. Aaron Daniel Gringioni ps. I used to hang out with some skiers once, therefore I know what I'm talking about |
what is more important in downhill, leg strength or aerobic capacity?
In article , Kurgan
Gringioni wrote: I say aerobic capacity. Why? Well, you need leg strength to make turns, but you need aerobic capacity to breathe, right? If you don't have leg strength, then you can't turn at high speeds, but if you can't breathe, then you'd be dead. Dead people are definitely slower than people who lack leg strength. Therefore, I submit that aerobic capacity is more important in the downhill. Downhill requires strong legs to maintain a tuck, do the pre-jumps, and absorb the bumps. Lots of squats done by the best. In a tight tuck there isn't much room to breathe anyway. Alpine skiing is a sport where one can be a fattie before they are a master. -WG Real skiers don't ride chairlifts. |
what is more important in downhill, leg strength or aerobic capacity?
"Kurgan Gringioni" wrote in message et... I say aerobic capacity. Why? Well, you need leg strength to make turns, but you need aerobic capacity to breathe, right? If you don't have leg strength, then you can't turn at high speeds, but if you can't breathe, then you'd be dead. Dead people are definitely slower than people who lack leg strength. Therefore, I submit that aerobic capacity is more important in the downhill. Well, you're very close, but the actual answer is *anaerobic* capacity. You see at the speeds most downhillers are moving, when they open their mouth to breathe, the venturi effect draws all the air out of their pleural cavity. The better ones use this little known fact to their advantage by collapsing their rib cages, and thus decreasing their cross-sectional area, enabling them to go faster due to the drag reduction. As you might imagine, not breathing at all during two minutes of very high exertion puts quite a strain on the old bloodstream so most downhiller take Geritol every day. ps. I used to hang out with some skiers once, therefore I know what I'm talking about You are clearly a very knowledgable person with a PhD. What do your do your dissertation on? I did mine on Biomechanical Implications of Camel Toe. -P |
what is more important in downhill, leg strength or aerobiccapacity?
JTN wrote:
your theory is flawed somewhat, dead people in the right vehicle and terrain are faster than alive in the same terrain. example, dead person inside a box off Yosemite is faster than one alive. the alive person would fight for the first few seconds before being thrown off. the dead person is already traveling at 32.2ft/s /s thus has a 60-90 ft advantage the alive person would never regain. then once they reach their destination the aerobic wouldn't matter due to the longs being collapsed..... But you forget aerodynamic considerations. The dead person could not tuck into an efficient shape (which a box certainly is not) and wind resistance would slow him down. If the distance to drop is short, this probably wouldn't matter much. "Kurgan Gringioni" wrote: Dead people are definitely slower than people who lack leg strength. Therefore, I submit that aerobic capacity is more important in the downhill. Aaron Daniel Gringioni ps. I used to hang out with some skiers once, therefore I know what I'm talking about It is good that you are willing to learn, grasshopper, but one must travel the path to knowledge one step at a time. -- Cheers, Bev ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "I never understood why anyone would go to the trouble to write a novel when you can just go out and buy one for a few bucks." -- lpogoda |
what is more important in downhill, leg strength or aerobic capacity?
On Wed, 02 Jul 2003 18:54:07 GMT, "Kurgan Gringioni"
wrote: "The Real Bev" wrote in message ... JTN wrote: your theory is flawed somewhat, dead people in the right vehicle and terrain are faster than alive in the same terrain. example, dead person inside a box off Yosemite is faster than one alive. the alive person would fight for the first few seconds before being thrown off. the dead person is already traveling at 32.2ft/s /s thus has a 60-90 ft advantage the alive person would never regain. then once they reach their destination the aerobic wouldn't matter due to the longs being collapsed..... But you forget aerodynamic considerations. The dead person could not tuck into an efficient shape (which a box certainly is not) and wind resistance would slow him down. If the distance to drop is short, this probably wouldn't matter much. "Kurgan Gringioni" wrote: Dead people are definitely slower than people who lack leg strength. Therefore, I submit that aerobic capacity is more important in the downhill. Aaron Daniel Gringioni ps. I used to hang out with some skiers once, therefore I know what I'm talking about It is good that you are willing to learn, grasshopper, but one must travel the path to knowledge one step at a time. Uhh . . . the skiers I used to hang with were really, really good. They were about equivalent to Cat 3 bike racers and triathletes and stuff. Therefore, I know what I'm talking about. Bully for you. Now you should try hanging out with some really, really good (and heavily credentialed) Usenet posters. bw |
what is more important in downhill, leg strength or aerobic capacity?
I say the most important thing in a downhill is a really low IQ.
"Mike Speegle" wrote in message ... In news:Kurgan Gringioni typed: I say aerobic capacity. Why? Well, you need leg strength to make turns, but you need aerobic capacity to breathe, right? If you don't have leg strength, then you can't turn at high speeds, but if you can't breathe, then you'd be dead. Dead people are definitely slower than people who lack leg strength. Therefore, I submit that aerobic capacity is more important in the downhill. Aaron Daniel Gringioni ps. I used to hang out with some skiers once, therefore I know what I'm talking about Looks like this could make the summer quite amusing. ;-) -- Mike __________________________________________________ ______ "Colorado Ski Country, USA" Come often, Ski hard, Spend *lots* of money, Then leave as quickly as you can. Rec.Skiing.Alpine.Moderated is up and working! Join in! |
what is more important in downhill, leg strength or aerobic capacity?
In news:Tom Kunich typed:
I say the most important thing in a downhill is a really low IQ. *BIG* balls. Tiny brain also helps. ;-) -- Mike __________________________________________________ ______ "Colorado Ski Country, USA" Come often, Ski hard, Spend *lots* of money, Then leave as quickly as you can. Rec.Skiing.Alpine.Moderated is up and working! Join in! |
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