Are MotoGP riders fit?

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Joined
Dec 30, 2006
Messages
518
Location
Orlando, Florida
MotoGP Rider's Fitness Measured
2/19/2008
Courtesy of Balls & All Media

"The results are very impressive."

That was the feedback from Meegan Walker, Lab Coordinator at the University of the Sunshine Coast, when MotoGP pilot Chris Vermeulen subjected himself to the ultimate pre-season work out.

Walker added, "We work closely with the Australian Institute of Sport and have access to a lot of high level athlete results, but we've never been sure where a motorcyclist fits in and Chris has now shown us that he is on par with and elite rower when it comes to fitness."

The 25 year old has just completed his most impressive and dedicated off season ever. To find out just how hard he'd worked, the Rizla Suzuki rider was invited to the University to undergo a Vo2 Max test.

"Basically we just wanted to see if what we are doing is working and the treadmill test was perfect to check his Vo2 Max just to see how efficiently his body is working and it all worked out very well." Said Chris's personal trainer for some 12 years, Rob Crick.

"We get about 8 weeks off a year when we are not riding the bike. That's when we can get our base right to attack the season. It's a perfect chance at the Sunshine Coast University to see how I am going." Chris commented.

"I'm working pretty hard on that bike. You get a lot of G Forces. It's very hot inside the suit and we're on the bike for 45-50 minutes at a time, so it's quiet hard work and it's very important to be fit."

The test is gut busting! The athlete is forced to run at an increasing pace and incline until the body simply can't take anymore.

"We ran a Vo2 Max test today, so Chris was breathing in room air and we were catching all the air he was expelling so we could measure how efficiently he uses oxygen to make energy to do exercise, so we were looking at muscle efficiency.

"Chris is a fit looking guy but we were unsure what the demands of motorcycle riding were. So the results tell us the demands are very high." Walker said.

In a first for places like the University of the Sunshine Coast and the Australian Institute of Sport, now sports scientists have a base reading for professional motorcyclists.

"It gives us a base for where motorcyclists sit with other elite athletes."

Crick added, "It is very physically demanding and it's fairly stressful and the G-Forces. Going from over 300kmh to about 60 in the space of one and half seconds it's very demanding."

The test and the stunning results, which put Vermeulen on par with some of the world's fittest Olympic athletes, just confirming how important physical fitness has become to the rising Aussie star.

"In the first few years when he was a young fella he struggled a bit. He's now a very motivated athlete and very keen to do everything he possibly can to get better. He's a joy to work with and I had a gut feeling over this off season that he's the fittest and healthiest he's been for a number of years and this test confirms this." said a proud Crick.

"Every off season when I come home I try and work as hard as I can to get a good base. I've got to be fit and I can't afford to get sick. I feel very fit right now. The season is about to start and the attention turns from getting me right to getting the bike right."

Chris Vermeulen will begin his bid to win the 2008 World MotoGP Championship on March 9 when the series kicks off in Qatar.
 
What this test shows, at least what was reported, is this riders ablity to use O2 and convert it to ATP, allowing his muscles to continue aerobic respiration, which is more efficent and less demanding on the body then anaerobic respiration. In anyone that relies on muscle power, the efficency in this area is very important since anaerobic respiration causes the build of lactic acid, a substance that can be toxic for cells and hard to remove. So this doesn't really surprise me, what I would like to know is how other aspects of this riders 'fitness' hold up. There seems to be a real need for these guys to be very light and muscle weighs much more then fat, so I would like to see some data on that ratio and how some of the leanest riders deal with that. I doesn't really matter how efficent you are in the conversion of the energy if your muscle mass isn't enough your body will suffer long term and harmful effects.

Of course we all know that athletes push their bodies to the very edge of what is in real terms healthy, so I'm not sure this article is actually commenting on that.
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Dylan @ Feb 23 2008, 04:38 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>Im not suprised, this is another reason motorcycles > Cars
I would let this uninformed ........ go normally, but top-level racing drivers are just as fit as top-level bike racers. So isn't a 'reason'.
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Dylan @ Feb 23 2008, 04:38 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>Im not suprised, this is another reason motorcycles > Cars

Car drivers are just as fit
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And can i ask what reasons you have to think bikes are actually better than cars, or did you mean to say that you simply prefer bikes?
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Tom @ Feb 23 2008, 11:23 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>Car drivers are just as fit
<


And can i ask what reasons you have to think bikes are actually better than cars, or did you mean to say that you simply prefer bikes?

Obviously, you don't watch NASCAR.

I love those crazy rednecks, but "fit" is not how I would describe many of them.
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (mylexicon @ Feb 23 2008, 05:05 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>Obviously, you don't watch NASCAR.

I love those crazy rednecks, but "fit" is not how I would describe many of them.
EXACTLY!
Tony Stewert couldnt run 100 m without having a haert attack
 
If your racer in todays commercial racing scene, you have to be fit, not just to race, but for the TV and advertisment.
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Orrmate @ Feb 23 2008, 06:37 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>I'm talking about F1, and other single seater series.

Well, I run Skip Barber cars. I run about 2-3 miles per day or cycle 10 miles. I lift weights. Nothing to make me big, as in single seaters you want to be slim and lean. Less weight you are the better. You just want strength. I eat proberly. 2500-3000 calories per day. No sweets, no soda's or other sugary drinks. No fast food. You want to be healthy. Nothing special.
 
I'm hoping to do Skip Barber in 2010
<


Theres a couple of big differences from SB level to say F1 or Champ Car level, however. They're running races that last around 90 minutes or more, and the G-Forces are much more punishing. Thats not to say you don't have to be fit to run in the junior formulas, like FF1600 and such, but there is a big difference.
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (mylexicon @ Feb 23 2008, 09:05 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>Obviously, you don't watch NASCAR.

NASCAR isn't really a level comparible to motogp. F1 drivers are in fairly good shape
<
 
I think NASCAR drivers are in better shape than most people think. Nextel cup cars are not the best handling cars and their races tend to be very long.
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (ogunski @ Feb 23 2008, 05:34 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>I think NASCAR drivers are in better shape than most people think. Nextel cup cars are not the best handling cars and their races tend to be very long.
HAHAHAH HOW MANY FAT ..... ARE IN THAT hmmm let me think....ALL OF THEM!!! Maybe their arms but that is is, same as every other ....... redneck!
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Noodlerizer @ Feb 25 2008, 05:33 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>HAHAHAH HOW MANY FAT ..... ARE IN THAT hmmm let me think....ALL OF THEM!!! Maybe their arms but that is is, same as every other ....... redneck!
Very intelligent response, that. Would you like a special badge?
 
Overweight drivers in the top Nascar series, Sprint Cup? Hmmm... let me think. Hmmm... Ken Schrader, but he is old school and only put on serious weight in the past few years, but still not a big guy compared to many Americans. Hmmm... I cannot think of anyone else. Most Nascar guys came from open wheel racing where anything over 210 pounds is giant. Paul Tracy is 190-ish and comsidered by many to be the limit as to a open wheel racer. You do not have to be big and lean like Carl Edwards

edwards150.jpg


But you have to fit.

Does it really require you to be fit? Not really. Junior Johnson ran for years as a fat, slob. Same thing with Jimmy Spencer. But todays world is about commercial and sellability, and those guys might have the personailty to appease sponsors, but do not have the look.


Overall, being a fit racer will make things easier. One thing less to worry about when racing as a team owner. Will my racer finish the race, or retire because he/she is a fat pig and cannot physically last a race.
 
I watched the documentary "The Doctor, the Tornado, and the Kentucky Kid" the other day. In it Colin Edwards said in 2001 he worked his butt off, riding bikes, working out, etc. in order to beat Troy Bayliss. That year he lost and decided the next year to not worry about working out, to just take it easy, relax and spend time with his family. He won the WSBK championship in 2002. I guess his point is, being absolutely fit was not required. Then again, he may have changed his mind since moving to MotoGP.
<
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Bootsakah @ Feb 29 2008, 02:34 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>I watched the documentary "The Doctor, the Tornado, and the Kentucky Kid" the other day. In it Colin Edwards said in 2001 he worked his butt off, riding bikes, working out, etc. in order to beat Troy Bayliss. That year he lost and decided the next year to not worry about working out, to just take it easy, relax and spend time with his family. He won the WSBK championship in 2002. I guess his point is, being absolutely fit was not required. Then again, he may have changed his mind since moving to MotoGP.
<

Good point. But keep in mind that he said he didn't work out as much (that is to say he was still very fit) just not Mr. Universe. Your point is well taken though because I think its not just physical fitness, but in Collins case, I think it spoke to a mental rejuvenation that his psyche needed to put his career into perspective. Its kind of like when people say, relax don't try as hard, and then the success will come naturally.
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Orrmate @ Feb 25 2008, 08:27 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>Very intelligent response, that. Would you like a special badge?
Outstanding!
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Noodlerizer @ Feb 25 2008, 01:33 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>HAHAHAH HOW MANY FAT ..... ARE IN THAT hmmm let me think....ALL OF THEM!!! Maybe their arms but that is is, same as every other ....... redneck!

^^^ You rode to school on the short bus didn't you? Have you ever met any of the current group of NASCAR drivers?
 

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