Home › Forums › Bike Forum › Armitstead and these missed tests…
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Armitstead and these missed tests…
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christhetallFree Member
BC might have been feeling a bit guilty that the guy they assigned to help her had left and no one had told her.
My understanding is that tests 2 and 3 hinged on inconsistent data being input and he was supposed to spot this.
But what sort of shit system allows input of inconsistent data, let alone penalises you for the mistake ?
metalheartFree MemberThey might indeed chris, but I’d also imagine they were shitting themselves at losing a prized asset (and by extension possibly their jobs).
christhetallFree MemberI think I’d have pro-actively challenged that first whereabouts failure before it became a big problem!
She says she did contest it immediately, but UKAD rejected her case and stood by it’s officer. It’s only after the crucial third case that she got a lawyer in and went to CAS. With hindsight she should have gone to CAS earlier, but it isn’t cheap.
ransosFree MemberIf Lizzie wasn’t British (say she was Spanish for instance) would you accept things as readily then? Because if she was Russian…. Well
We know that Russia had (has?) a state-sponsored doping programme, so why wouldn’t we regard Russian athletes with more suspicion?
chakapingFull MemberIt’s just really baffling how it was allowed to get this far.
Indeed. Did you watch the interview with her I posted up there?
Seems like she might have been having a hard time personally, which may explain (but not excuse) some of the oversights.
There’s a reasoned decision to come from CAS apparently.
mrblobbyFree MemberShe met with BC to put an action plan in place after the second failure in order to avoid this situation arising (according to her statement.) So assume that would have been end of last year. One of those actions seems to have been assigning some chap to double check her Whereabouts entries (who stopped doing this a few weeks back and is now being blamed for this it seems.) I just wonder why they didn’t decide to also challenge the first failure at that meeting? Would have seemed an obvious thing to do and would have reduced the risk considerably.
She says she did contest it immediately, but UKAD rejected her case and stood by it’s officer.
Again… UKAD says she did not contest it at the time. This is contrary to her statement.
rollindoughnutFree MemberI really think it’s appalling how so many think it’s ok to condemn someone on such scanty evidence and sensational headlines. This is her whole career being steadily destroyed by a bunch of keyboard warriors. I think she’s such an inspirational athlete yet everyone seems so keen to drag her down.
I’d hate to be a public figure, the population seem hell bent on destroying anything at all special just to make themselves feel better about their own mediocrity.TrimixFree MemberI think its appalling that a professional that relies on us to ride a bike for a living can miss something as simple as a drugs test.
mikewsmithFree Member
No matter what anyone says or how she is tested from now on some people will treat her like a cheat.
Those same people have no idea who else is on 2 strikes.rollindoughnutFree MemberWhere are you going to be every day for the next year Trimix? Don’t forget to update us every time your plans change.
Want to nip out for a spot of lunch with a friend? make sure you fill in a form first.
Tough gig if you ask me.dragonFree MemberWorth noting other athletes have queried why she didn’t challenge the 1st strike earlier, it isn’t just keyboard warriors.
it’s ok to condemn someone on such scanty evidence and sensational headlines.
Well it was enough for UKAD to start proceedings, so the authorities thought it was iffy. As it is CAS threw it out, but it isn’t scant evidence. The wherabouts system is essential to reduce drug taking, it wasn’t invented just to make athletes lives harder. All ex-dopers have said the biggest prevention is out of competition testing, and this is part of that system.
rollindoughnutFree MemberId imagine there is quite a big file on this which the qualified people will be looking at rather than couple of sentences on the internet.
mikewsmithFree MemberWell it was enough for UKAD to start proceedings, so the authorities thought it was iffy.
Or they operate in a black and white world
mrblobbyFree MemberNo matter what anyone says or how she is tested from now on some people will treat her like a cheat.
Suspect most of those people probably were of that frame of mind with regards to most professional cyclists (or athletes in general) before this news came out. Only thing now is that they have an incident to hang that on.
Id imagine there is quite a big file on this which the qualified people will be looking at rather than couple of sentences on the internet.
Indeed. It seems even UKAD aren’t convinced and are awaiting an explanation in the CAS Reasoned Decision.
D0NKFull MemberShe couldnt be bothered to update her whereabouts but could be bothered to use lawyers to clear her to compete with CAS
IMO that points more towards innocent ineptitude. She got a no show for incident 1, it costs money to lawyer up and she didn’t intend to miss any others so she let it be, if she was doping and may have to “play the system” at a later time I’d expect her to immediately try to get that incident revoked.
Some ineptitude in her whereabouts thing, some serious facepalm in choosing her wording for the statement. BC and their funding means there’s a conflict there so should be kept out of the process.
If it was someone from another country I wouldn’t have read 9 pages and probably wouldn’t have commented either way.
On balance of probability I reckon she’s probably clean, but hey believing any cyclist after a fulsome history drug cheats is a bit of a leap of faith. But I’m sure there are plenty of clean riders about and some of them are winning stuff.TrimixFree MemberWant to know my whereabouts all year:
If my career depended on it,
If my public reputation depended on it,
If my competitors respect depended on it,
If my sponsors money depended on it………….it would be easy and it would be done without fail.It is not that hard to do on your own. If I needed help doing it I would get the help needed.
Failure to do these simple things in an environment of cheats will naturally raise suspicion. Especially if its covered up / or repeated.
aracerFree MemberIt’s kind of already been done, but I did really enjoy the combination of strawman and ad-hom in a single sentence.
mikewsmith sums up the attitude of some here quite neatly with that pic – it seems she’s damned if she does, damned if she doesn’t. Apparently it’s dodgy that she didn’t challenge the first one at the time. Yet apparently it’s also dodgy that she used lawyers at CAS to get her off now.
No, I don’t think there is no chance she is on the juice. However I also don’t think there is any evidence that she is, hence to me she is just as clean as she was before and just as clean as every other rider. Of course there have to be rules to avoid people deliberately missing tests and these have to be applied rigidly – which is what has happened here, with CAS ruling that she isn’t guilty of an offence. However at that point it seems reasonable to look at the nuances of the reasons for the misses and this is where I’m personally immediately striking off the October one as being totally irrelevant – have any of those condemning her actually considered whether that “miss” is any evidence at all of her being on the juice?
BTW where has this thing about the room number which some are now mentioning come from? I’m not seeing any mention of that in any of the main reports, the only place apart from here I’ve seen it come up is that dodgy indy opinion piece. My understanding is that there’s no requirement to provide a room number, that it’s not routinely something other athletes do, and that it’s standard procedure for a tester to ask reception for the room number.
aracerFree MemberExactly my thoughts on that – her failure to chase it up at the time points more to her being innocent than guilty. Unless of course it’s all a double bluff?
Can I just summarise where I am on this?
Test 1: she was exactly where she said she would be and available for testing, nobody ever knocked on her door, through no fault of hers the tester failed to make sufficient effort to contact her
Test 2: post/out of season, no benefit to her in doping then – though nobody actually attempted to test her anyway and she got a strike for a failure to update the system properly which appears to have been picked up post event?
Test 3: she may or may not have a valid reason/excuse, though not one that I’m buying based upon evidence given, that seems a fair strike
So me personal feeling is that she has one real strike for one real missed test – something which it seems has happened to most athletes, because they’re not all as organised as trimix.
mrblobbyFree MemberNo, I don’t think there is no chance she is on the juice. However I also don’t think there is any evidence that she is, hence to me she is just as clean as she was before and just as clean as every other rider.
This for me too.
As for this incident. I just see it as a calamitous series of events, seemingly all badly managed, that could have been avoided, but that she will now unfortunately always be associated with. And that for those understandably cynical types, casts a shadow over her achievements.
Test 1
I don’t think the info is out there currently to understand what happened here fully. Need to wait for CAS to publish.
post/out of season, no benefit to her in doping then
Seriously? The benefits to doping out of season is huge. Train harder, longer, recover quicker, etc.
pondoFull MemberI think its appalling that a professional that relies on us to ride a bike for a living can miss something as simple as a drugs test.
Me too – good job she only missed one, hey.
aracerFree MemberI get that, but the point is that it was immediately after the end of the season (hence “post season”) and she was partying, not training. Though as mentioned, they didn’t attempt to test her anyway – so she’s being penalised for an administrative error in a period when the testers weren’t interested (I’m assuming they focus their tests rather than just doing them randomly, and they didn’t see much point in testing her then). If it had been December or January my attitude would be somewhat different.
At least that is my understanding based mainly on EA’s statement – though given the date of the discrepancy (I’m not going to call it a test, because it wasn’t) her statement seems entirely plausible.
TiRedFull MemberI know it might seem obvious, but if she was truly organised enough to be successfully doping, she would not have missed the tests in the first place. I strongly suspect that those who are cheating are going to be better at maintaining their whereabouts – and hence changing them as needed during a “glowing” (never hear it called that at work!) than those who are not.
Nothing to see here….
mrblobbyFree MemberI know it might seem obvious, but if she was truly organised enough…
To say she’s probably just not very organised is most likely doing her a massive disservice given that she’s organised her life and training (self coached) sufficiently to be the best in the world at what she does.
ransosFree MemberTo say she’s probably just not very organised is most likely doing her a massive disservice given that she’s organised her life and training (self coached) sufficiently to be the best in the world at what she does.
And how do you reconcile that with supposedly not being organised enough to meet dope testing requirements?
TiRedFull MemberWhat I meant was that I don’t think she’s up there at the top of the organisational tree. “Self coached” can mean a lot of things. Given her obvious talent, I can’t comment on her discipline – riding lots and racing more is a valid training strategy 😉 . But my point still stands. I think that if one is cheating one would need to be more meticulous.
pondoFull MemberAnd how do you reconcile that with supposedly not being organised enough to meet dope testing requirements?
Two mistakes, one admin, one under the duress of a family issue. Mrs Pondo would be very happy indeed if that was the limit of my annual admin screw ups.
aracerFree MemberI think the point of those seeing smoke and assuming fire is that she isn’t disorganised at all, simply deliberately avoiding tests. Though I’d then come back to that October discrepancy, which would appear far, far more likely to be a failure of organisation than a deliberate attempt to avoid the testers whilst partying.
ransosFree MemberTwo mistakes, one admin, one under the duress of a family issue. Mrs Pondo would be very happy indeed if that was the limit of my annual admin screw ups.
Mrs Ransos would say the same about me. Thing is, I’m not a professional athlete who would lose his entire career through three mistakes.
mikewsmithFree MemberThing is, I’m not a professional athlete who would lose his entire career through three mistakes.
True but as posted previously I’m guessing most people don’t spend that long on the road.
MoreCashThanDashFull MemberWhy are we still talking about this* – the powers that be have made their decision. To keep going over and over the same ground for days is doing nothing more than dragging her name through the mud when – as far as I’m aware and no one has alleged otherwise – other than two “properly” missed tests, there doesn’t seem to be any genuine rumours about her performance.
Loads of athletes in loads of sports are on two strikes. Not hearing their names being bandied about and reputations tarnished.
She’s always been up there with the best, and her main rival has been out of action the last year or so – of course she’s getting the best results of her life.
*Yes, I know the irony!
aracerFree MemberBut what if you were?
I reckon I can cover this one. Despite probably not having huge amounts of natural talent, I had enough and enough dedication to compete and win at a fairly elite level. All self coached and organised enough to manage training to achieve that. Allowing for differences in circumstances I probably wasn’t much worse at organising my training than EA. Yet a complete organisational disaster otherwise, I’ve ended up getting fined for late tax returns amongst other things (thank god they told me I no longer had to do those). I managed to make my way to races with all the right kit most of the time, but not without lots of stress before and my team-mates could comment on my pre-race organisational panic. If I had been good enough to be on the drug testing programme then I’m sure I’d have ended up with a ban for 3 strikes unless I got outside help.
ransosFree MemberIf I had been good enough to be on the drug testing programme then I’m sure I’d have ended up with a ban for 3 strikes unless I got outside help.
Which, as I understand it, is what the top pros do. I believe Mark Cavendish fired his assistant over a single missed test. But compare and contrast his response with Armitstead:
“It was my mistake. I was with a film crew for the BBC and Giro d’Italia on Mount Etna. It was a simple, genuine administrative error. Of course I totally understand the importance of testing in sport. I was tested by the UCI [cycling’s world governing body] a couple of weeks before that and twice in the fortnight after and had around 60 tests in all last year. It’s part of the job and it’s my job to make sure I don’t miss another.”aracerFree MemberIt appears she had some outside help and he had left without her knowledge. In what way do you feel EA’s response is different to Cav’s?
mikewsmithFree MemberAt this point I’m resisting the urge to find the duck wood floating sketch….
ransosFree MemberIt appears she had some outside help and he had left without her knowledge. In what way do you feel EA’s response is different to Cav’s?
Cav’s response was a simple mea culpa with no reference to testing clean etc as evidence (edit: I suppose arguably he did). I think taking it on the chin, apologizing and moving on would’ve been a better strategy for her.
It’s also the case that he was responding to a single missed test with no UKAD involvement.
aracerFree MemberApart from this bit you mean: “I was tested by the UCI [cycling’s world governing body] a couple of weeks before that and twice in the fortnight after and had around 60 tests in all last year.” – or do you think he was pointing out that he’d tested positive?
Clearly we’re back to witch dunking with claims of testing clean being seen as incriminating.
It’s also the case that he was responding to a single missed test with no UKAD involvement.
Ah, so the difference is that the circumstances are different? Cav hadn’t needed to go to CAS and wasn’t responding to the outcome of a successful case there.
ransosFree MemberClearly we’re back to witch dunking with claims of testing clean being seen as incriminating.
Only in your mind. In fact, I’m saying that it isn’t a defence.
Ah, so the difference is that the circumstances are different? Cav hadn’t needed to go to CAS and wasn’t responding to the outcome of a successful case there.
Yes, I do think the circumstances are different. Armitstead was in the situation of having missed two tests, then missing a third. I’d argue that’s significantly different to Cav (or Froome’s) cases of a single missed test.
The authoritative body then initiated proceedings. She has successfully appealed the first test on procedural grounds and we await the publication of the reason why.
I do find this thread pretty odd: that those of us who think she’s clean but has been unprofessional are being railroaded into adopting a binary position of saint or sinner. So do us a favour and quit the silly witch-drowning references, would you?
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