Potvin29 said:I don't need to read that nerd's analytics of oxygen, some guy who's probably never taken a breath in his life. I actually watch and breathe the air.
Oh dear.. I can sense the sarcasm.
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Potvin29 said:I don't need to read that nerd's analytics of oxygen, some guy who's probably never taken a breath in his life. I actually watch and breathe the air.
Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:Frankly, 5280 is not THAT high up. I have spent considerable time in Denver, including hosting meetings that brought people in from all over the world, and I have never seen anyone get altitude sickness in the city. Not saying that the issue isn't real, and everyone responds differently. I just think it's overblown, and hyped by Denver teams for an advantage.
Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:Frankly, 5280 is not THAT high up. I have spent considerable time in Denver, including hosting meetings that brought people in from all over the world, and I have never seen anyone get altitude sickness in the city. Not saying that the issue isn't real, and everyone responds differently. I just think it's overblown, and hyped by Denver teams for an advantage.
OldTimeHockey said:Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:Frankly, 5280 is not THAT high up. I have spent considerable time in Denver, including hosting meetings that brought people in from all over the world, and I have never seen anyone get altitude sickness in the city. Not saying that the issue isn't real, and everyone responds differently. I just think it's overblown, and hyped by Denver teams for an advantage.
Your meetings were spent playing hockey? If so, are you hiring?
Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:OldTimeHockey said:Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:Frankly, 5280 is not THAT high up. I have spent considerable time in Denver, including hosting meetings that brought people in from all over the world, and I have never seen anyone get altitude sickness in the city. Not saying that the issue isn't real, and everyone responds differently. I just think it's overblown, and hyped by Denver teams for an advantage.
Your meetings were spent playing hockey? If so, are you hiring?
Highly oxygenated athletes in tip-top condition can handle it, ya dig?
Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:Highly oxygenated athletes in tip-top condition can handle it, ya dig?
bustaheims said:Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:Highly oxygenated athletes in tip-top condition can handle it, ya dig?
It still takes time to acclimatize to the situation, and the less than 24 hours they spent in the city before the game is nowhere near the necessary amount of time.
bustaheims said:Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:Highly oxygenated athletes in tip-top condition can handle it, ya dig?
It still takes time to acclimatize to the situation, and the less than 24 hours they spent in the city before the game is nowhere near the necessary amount of time.
Arn said:The body needs to work harder at altitude to process the oxygen into the blood. It's why endurance athletes like cyclists and rowers do high altitude training almost directly before their big events. The body adapts to increase the number of red blood cells when at altitude meaning when they go back to lower altitude they're more efficient.
But it takes time to adapt so for a team to go into the altitude for 24 hours they'd probably feel it, yes, as they wouldn't adapt in the time frame.
Nik the Trik said:Arn said:The body needs to work harder at altitude to process the oxygen into the blood. It's why endurance athletes like cyclists and rowers do high altitude training almost directly before their big events. The body adapts to increase the number of red blood cells when at altitude meaning when they go back to lower altitude they're more efficient.
But it takes time to adapt so for a team to go into the altitude for 24 hours they'd probably feel it, yes, as they wouldn't adapt in the time frame.
That would still show up in a home winning percentage vs. expected home winning percentage, wouldn't it?
Nik the Trik said:Arn said:The body needs to work harder at altitude to process the oxygen into the blood. It's why endurance athletes like cyclists and rowers do high altitude training almost directly before their big events. The body adapts to increase the number of red blood cells when at altitude meaning when they go back to lower altitude they're more efficient.
But it takes time to adapt so for a team to go into the altitude for 24 hours they'd probably feel it, yes, as they wouldn't adapt in the time frame.
That would still show up in a home winning percentage vs. expected home winning percentage, wouldn't it?
Arn said:The body needs to work harder at altitude to process the oxygen into the blood. It's why endurance athletes like cyclists and rowers do high altitude training almost directly before their big events. The body adapts to increase the number of red blood cells when at altitude meaning when they go back to lower altitude they're more efficient.
OldTimeHockey said:Wouldn't 'expected home winning percentage' be hard to determine?
bustaheims said:Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:Yeah, but he still interviews like a potato.
He interviews like a typical athlete - giving canned answers to predictable questions. On the very rare occasion he gets caught off guard by an actually interesting question, he generally answers them with some personality.
Chev-boyar-sky said:bustaheims said:Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:Highly oxygenated athletes in tip-top condition can handle it, ya dig?
It still takes time to acclimatize to the situation, and the less than 24 hours they spent in the city before the game is nowhere near the necessary amount of time.
As a singer this is very noticeable in Santa Fe (Summer Opera festival).
Takes 2 weeks to acclimatize fully.
Boils down to: more breaths to achieve the same amount of oxygen intake during an aria. Get light headed.
I can only imagine how much worse it'd be as a hockey player.....