no it is not
have you ever been that high
I have it sucks
Denver shot 30 free throws to San Antonio's 14.
No crying, no excuses, so if George Karl is basically himself tonight and points fingers at anyone but himself and his players, then click "mute" on your remote. San Antonio showed some championship poise and meant business.
This series is not over yet, I am well aware of that fact.
Al ude is overrated.
no it is not
have you ever been that high
I have it sucks
it sucks if you exert yourself that first time and aren't acclimated. basically triggered a migraine for me last time.
Damm again ... only 30 shots ... :![]()
I've run a couple of 5Ks at al ude.
They suck.
I recently did a 10K run near Puebla, Mexico, which is almost two miles high. I did feel the al ude, but again, thought it was overrated. Now, I'm not getting into the long term physiological effects.
The Spurs have won their last three playoff games in Denver, so that is why I say that "al ude is overrated".
Denver is good enough to take a game from the Spurs in this series, maybe 2, but tonight's game exposed them. When it was winning time the Spurs stepped up and grabbed the game by its throat. Denver wasn't able to regroup and mount a serious run at the lead. Their D sucks too. I love the playoffs.
Only time I've ever been to Denver I had a hangover and tried to go for a walk in a park in Boulder, in the hills. Lasted about 500m then decided to sit on a rock and just enjoy the view.
Al ude does suck.
We're at 600m here, so I guess I'm a little acclimatised to it, but not to mile-high!
I live a mile high. There is an advantage though, when I do down to sea level, I feel like a super ahthlete.
When I go hiking up in Yosemite, at 6,000 feet or so, I actually breathe way better. Tells you all you need to know about the air quality in my usual home of LA.![]()
My M-I-L lives east of LA. She lives in a nasty town that I thought was pretty flat. Then one visit the smog cleared and I couldn't believe it. She lives next to a mountain that I never saw before.
East of LA is pretty disgusting. It literally looks like a perpetual -cloud over the area east of LA, whose air quality makes LA itself look like ing Greenland or something.
Alright then, you guys win! Al ude can be harsh, but for the Spurs it evidently is NOT. They've won three straight playoff games in Denver, and let's hope it'll be 4 by late Monday.
manu has said when he talks that he has a hard time there
he has to get his second wind alot in denver due to the high at ude
That would be due to all the meth labs in the 909/951/760!
![]()
The al ude works both ways. The team's deeper bench is the key. With Iverson and Anthony pulling 40 plus every night, it has got to affect them. Look for the same Monday.
I dunno man but I was pretty baked on Friday.
you could tell both teams were tired azz at the end
Last edited by AnkleBreaker21; 04-29-2007 at 02:52 AM.
They make drugs now that help you acclimate faster to al ude... im Sure opposing teams take them...
It's not the advantage now that it used to be..
Which makes you wonder how Manu almost always plays his best games there, because it's such the opposite of the al ude and climate his hometown has.
I'm wondering if the al ude played a part in why the Spurs kept the tempo so slow. It allowed them to play their game without getting winded. AI and Carmelo were noticebly winded by the middle of the 4th quarter. I mean, did you ever see Tony run the ball up the floor to set up the offense? He walked it up almost every time!
Tony had very little zip, no legs, seemed to be sick or in a fog.
It was amazing he was effective at all. As timvp said, a weird game from Tony.
http://www.madsci.org/posts/archives...1538.Me.r.html
Professional cyclists in Europe train in special tents to match high-al ude conditions. The objective is a thickening of the blood and increase in oxygen carrying capacity due to the lack of oxygen in the air. They also have total blood transfusions to try to increase the oxygen capacity.
Lots of cyclist achieve the same with EPO, and not a few have died from it.
"EPO, a synthetic and stealthy version of a hormone that spurs red-blood-cell production and thus boosts endurance.
"A body of literature shows that EPO conveys a five- to 15-percent advantage," says Charles Yesalis, an epidemiologist at Penn State University and an expert on drugs in sports. Translated into minutes, a five-percent boost would have been the difference between first and 143rd in last year's Tour (de France). But EPO can also be lethal. The drug's most immediate threat is "hyperviscosity," or thickened blood, which can cause a heart attack. Studies about permanent health effects from EPO use are inconclusive, but the sludge-like blood can linger for up to 120 days."
http://outside.away.com/outside/news...ing_epo_1.html
what i was talking about is a prescription drug,,
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)