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Lance, latest have we done it yet.
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scaredypantsFull Member
in another thread (and probably somewhere here too) someone posted a link to an article by nicholas roche
If you look at all the riders recently who have been caught and admitted doping, some people are saying it’s great that these riders are helping the sport. But saying, ‘I’m sorry, I was doping from this year to that year but I’m not going to do it again and I’m cleaner than clean… I’m helping anti-doping because I talk to kids about it,’ or whatever, that’s a load of bull. That’s not helping anti-doping.
Helping anti-doping is saying. ‘Okay I doped. I got it from this doctor. These are the riders that I met in the waiting room. This is how it’s done. These are the new products that are in the peloton that are not yet detectable. These are the products that we use to mask the ones that are detectable. This product does this, this product does that. This is how we beat the test.’ That’s helping anti-doping.
atlazFree MemberCenbuterol has been used in some protein shakes etc, as a ‘cutting’ agent, it is supposed to promote lean muscle mass. However, I am pretty damn certain that Contraband certainly did not take clen knowingly, I mean, why the hell would he? It’s not like he’s got a weight problem, and it doesn’t have any benefits to the cyclist, none that I’m aware of – if it does please enlighten me.
If I remember correctly it is usually used by asthmatics as it helps breathing and as you said, promotes lean muscle mass. So basically he could have used it earlier in the season for training to build up his strength and “open” his lungs whilst training and climbing. Given the effects are over a longer period usually, it’s odd he was caught with it on that day.
So there’s two possibilities:
1, Contaminated cow or supplements
2, Blood doping with blood taken earlier in the seasonThe first seems to be a problem for me as it would mean that the team just let him do what he wants during a TdF where he’s a GC contender.
alexathomeFree MemberThe first seems to be a problem for me as it would mean that the team just let him do what he wants during a TdF where he’s a GC contender.
And for that matter, why don’t the doctors test the blood that they a re-infusing to make sure that its clean? Especially in the case of Landis. Something about these cases never really rung true for me. It s not like the riders were taking out their own blood, storing it, then putting back in, they had help, and you’d like to think that the team doctors knew what they were doing.
ooOOooFree MemberAnother disturbing report about the ‘hologram hero’ and John Kerry/Obama
http://reader.roopstigo.com/view/roopster/story/595#/chapter/2/
atlazFree Memberalex – well that would presume that for Contador for example, the team were helping him dope. Not sure the rest of the team’s performance really backed that up though. From the Hamilton book and interviews though, it sounds like the whole Fuentes transfusion service was a little unprofessional at times but at least Hamilton took responsibility for personally checking the blood was his own (even if he got a bad bag once).
alexathomeFree Memberalex – well that would presume that for Contador for example, the team were helping him dope. Not sure the rest of the team’s performance really backed that up though. From the Hamilton book and interviews though, it sounds like the whole Fuentes transfusion service was a little unprofessional at times but at least Hamilton took responsibility for personally checking the blood was his own (even if he got a bad bag once).
That’s true, I forgot about the gory findings in his fridge. The reason Hamilton was so adamant that he didn’t dope (or at least the doping of someone else’s blood) was that he always checked the name on the bags, and never had someone elses. It must be tough for these doctors, what are they going to write on their cv’s when they are applying for jobs at the local hospitals, now that the are banned from working in sport, I hope that they put some cash away for a rainy day.
atlazFree MemberSupposedly the whole thing with Ferrari was worth 30M euros. Decent pocket money.
deviantFree MemberAnd how do you stop a DR working in sport?….very hard, you could ban Ferrari from UCI events, ban him from being employed by teams but unless you strip his license (which a sports governing body will find hard to do) then there is nothing to stop him having a practice in Italy and seeing private patients…..who just happen to be cyclists.
Scardeypants….spot on, until a repentant doper is prepared to come forward and say: this is what we use now….you (UCI/WADA) cant test for it successfully because we do this to cover it up….him, him and him should be tested because they’re well known for it….etc etc….then all the guys like Millar are doing is simply ‘fessing up and then smiling for the camera and saying “drugs are bad kids, dont dope”….its good PR for them but they are still keeping quiet about their doped up colleagues in the peleton!
JunkyardFree MemberThere was information being circulated at the time (no, I can’t find the source…) that non-verified tests had found traces of plasticizer (used in blood bags) in there as well but because the tests weren’t legally valid, they couldn’t be used to prove he’d had a blood transfusion.
That is what I heard and the ashenden thought his biological passport showed clear si=gns of doping
I fear we have this generations equivalent of the LA failed test in 99 for cortisone and they still turned a blind ish eye to it all. Some of the statements from Spain were just ridiculous about how he was innocent and just downright denial like we got/get still with LA
The spanish cycling reaction was terrible whereby they just ignored the rules and did not ban him and he compete deven though we all knew what would happen to his results.
Terrible for cycling that this can still happen in the presentthen all the guys like Millar are doing is simply ‘fessing up and then smiling for the camera and saying “drugs are bad kids, dont dope”….its good PR for them but they are still keeping quiet about their doped up colleagues in the peleton!
I do agree we need atruth and reconcilliation type thing here where we find out the truth and it gets erreadicated.
I wont hold my breathstevomcdFree MemberTo be fair to Millar, when he returned from his ban to find that his new team were all doping, he wrote to the head of the UCI (was Macquaid in the job at that time?) personally. He says he never received a reply.
bigdawgFree Memberone of the points that is missing from the contador case is the appearance of plasticizers in his blood, which was ignored by CAS – the only way they could have got into his blood stream was by using an older style of blood bag, no ifs or buts.
And again this year at the vuelta he looked like a normal rider until the rest day before the mountains and then suddenly turned into an ‘amazing’ rider with continued accelerations, the like of which we havent seen since…. oh… erm
The UCI are embarassed by this whole matter – they had the same info from landis and hamilton, only they chose not to actually do anything about it, except take the same stance as Lance and try and spin them off as unstable liers, unfortunately 2 agencies in the US did their job for them and now theyre backpedalling like mad, but to say one thing in a press conference and then to say something else in a written release makes McQuaid look like a lying hypocrite, there are some countries governing cycling bodies already looking to place a vote of no conifidence in the UCI as a result.
atlazFree MemberAfter originally hammering them in the press when they first made their statements, Pat even called Hamilton and Landis scumbags in the press conference this week. Hard to imagine that it creates an environment where whistleblowers come forward, particularly as a lot of those whistleblowers may well be doping themselves.
ormondroydFree Member“I hope that people remember that the events being uncovered mostly occurred seven or more years ago, amongst a minority of those involved in a sport which has already changed and moved on”
Oh, what a shame, I had high hopes for Cadel. I’ll add him to the list.
ormondroydFree MemberI think the constant line from the peloton that the sport has changed is one of the most depressing (and predictable) things about all this. It’s the same thing we heard in 1999, among other occasions.
Remind me who won the Vuelta? And who’s hot favourite for the TdF next year? Oh, and who won the Olympic road race?
MrSmithFree MemberHi Lance,
First of all, I want you to know I love you. You are my favorite cyclist of all time. I say this because you have been an American hero not just for all the American cyclists, but for me. I know you have to be struggling through the obsession of the media right now – in this case, like attracts like. They are feeding on it. What I see is that you have touched everyone and in a good way. I am sorry for what has happened the way it has happened. It is what it is and no matter how angry folks are right now, they all need to see you rise above this, which you can do. My hope is that you will help repair. I just want you to know in my heart I appreciate what you have done for cycling and for every single person affected by cancer. Thank you Lance. And may peace be in your heart.
Tinkerthat’s a prize enabler right there.
ormondroydFree MemberAdded to the list. Gosh, they make it easy, don’t they? Forget retrospective testing, just wait for them to open their mouths
atlazFree MemberI appreciate what you have done for cycling
Jesus, who’d have thought Tinker Juarez hated cycling so much
grumFree MemberWhat I see is that you have touched everyone
Not another Jimmy Saville is he? *sorry*
I appreciate what you have done for cycling and for every single person affected by cancer.
Every single person affected by cancer? 😕
WackoAKFree MemberI started listening to the 5live podcast Peddlers – Cycling’s Dirty Truth well worth a listen.
(you need to scroll down a bit for the download link)
aracerFree MemberHowever, I am pretty damn certain that Contraband certainly did not take clen knowingly, I mean, why the hell would he? It’s not like he’s got a weight problem, and it doesn’t have any benefits to the cyclist, none that I’m aware of – if it does please enlighten me.
Hasn’t got a weight problem you say? Please remind me of the important measure of how fast you can ride up a hill – it’s power to XXX ratio, now what is that XXX? Meanwhile, excuse me for not being a pharmacologist (no idea if you are – please tell me I’m talking a load of tosh if so) and just getting this info off the web, but you yourself mention it promoting lean muscle mass, apparently it also “causes an increase in aerobic capacity, central nervous system stimulation, and an increase in blood pressure and oxygen transportation”, all of which you might think were handy for cyclists.
There is also a suggestion that it’s more potent than salbutomol, now I accept that has no proven performance benefits for non-asthmatics, but that doesn’t seem to have stopped an awful lot of cyclists being registered as asthmatic in order to be allowed to take it for therapeutic purposes…
Tom-BFree MemberAt the time of Berties positive test, someone posted a link to tests of European beef for traces of clean (apparently in days gone by it was widespread) I can’t remember exact figures, but we’re talking hundreds of thousands of samples taken with zero showing any traces of clenbuterol. That coupled with Berties name (or at least CONT) being written on blood bags in Puerto tells me all that I need to know. Surprised at the cuddles statement, but its hardly surprising to see Bertie trying to play down the LA evidence-i bet his lapping his chamois at the thoughtt that witness testimony can now see you banned!
atlazFree MemberThere’s also a huge interview with Ashenden on NYVeloCity about the CAS hearing for Contador. The summary is that because Contador was never chased for doing blood bags, it was outside the remit of CAS to assess so they ignored most of it and also then didn’t take into account blood bags as a source of contamination.
surferFree Memberhere is also a suggestion that it’s more potent than salbutomol, now I accept that has no proven performance benefits for non-asthmatics, but that doesn’t seem to have stopped an awful lot of cyclists being registered as asthmatic in order to be allowed to take it for therapeutic purposes…
I can confirm it has no benefits 😥 or could it be that I am even slower than I thought!
mtFree MemberDoes Ashenden have a view on whether the positive test could have come from a pork pie? A lot of them northerners can ride up big hills and they all eat those crusty porky portions.
I see Greg Lemond has been calling out the chuckle twins at the UCI, will he be in court with Kimmage? Pat and Hein must starting to really feel the heat, mind you the that other crook at the IOC backs them as leading the fight against drugs.
atlazFree MemberI don’t believe there’s any record of illicit flights from Madrid to Leeds for “preparation” by El Pistolero.
footflapsFull MemberI appreciate what you have done for cycling
Jesus, who’d have thought Tinker Juarez hated cycling so much
I think its a US thing, I have US cycling friends and to them Lance can do no wrong and is still a national hero, no matter what he did. Bit like David Miller and STW.
mtFree MemberCome on now Tinker is a very nice guy and has many skills and talents. He is limited in some areas though above the shoulders, the hair is a give away.
MSPFull MemberThe reason plasticizers in the blood are allowed is because there are legitimate ways for it too get there, it’s not uncommon for a rider to be put on a drip at the end of a hard race.
The way national bodies assume a position of innocence for their own athletes is a big problem, its no good pointing the finger at the Spanish over the bertie affair, the same has been done for British athletes.
vinnyehFull MemberBrailsford starting to wriggle?
“People will be given an opportunity – if they represent a risk to the team going forward – to talk about it, to see if we can reconcile that and support people. It’s actually been a very constructive process.”
And we wonder why cycling has a credibility problem regarding doping?
JunkyardFree Memberits no good pointing the finger at the Spanish over the bertie affair, the same has been done for British athletes.
For example
None spring to mind
i dont recall the PM saying someone was innocent or anything like this here ever.Can you cite any actual example for British athletes
I doubt you will find any for cycling which is more relevant on this threadRe cycling we need truth and reconciliation. if they get an automatic sack and removed from cycling it is hardly likely to lead to truth from folk
Many riders and people will have cheated we need to make sure it has stopped not that every last one of them is forced out of cycling [ clearly some should be]
crazy-legsFull MemberAnd we wonder why cycling has a credibility problem regarding doping?
I think we’ve already worked out that it’s pretty much impossible to staff any team with crew who have never ever been involved in doping in any way. It was just too endemic, too entrenched and the tentacles went right through, from riders all the way up to team managers.
So Sky’s initial response of “sign this piece of paper – if you don’t you’re fired and if you lie, and we find out about it, you’re fired” isn’t constructuve, it gives no incentive to own up.
The best response is to say “we realise this took place, Sky are committed to a 100% clean approach and, regardless of a crew member’s past misdemeanors, we will give them the chance to talk openly about it, confess, help the anti-doping movement and give them an environment where they can work without the need or opportunity for doping, rehabilitate them (if you want to use that turn of phrase).
The best advocates for anti-doping are ex-dopers (like Millar) in the same way that the best thing for youth rehabilitation centres is to have an ex con/ex druggie talking to them, telling them how crime messed up their life, not to do it. The thing about ex dopers – they know how they did it so they can ensure that the riders never have the werewithall to dope in the first place, even if they want to.
LiferFree Memberfootflaps – Member
I think its a US thing, I have US cycling friends and to them Lance can do no wrong and is still a national hero, no matter what he did. Bit like David Miller and STW.
Boring troll is boring.
vinnyehFull MemberI think we’ve already worked out that it’s pretty much impossible to staff any team with crew who have never ever been involved in doping in any way. It was just too endemic, too entrenched and the tentacles went right through, from riders all the way up to team managers.
Aye, but that’s not my point. Maybe the initial statement a week or so back wasn’t practical to implement (though there was nothing really preventing a clean broom approach imo, but I accept that I’m no expert on building a sport from the ground up). However,Joe Public reads one week that Sky has a zero tolerance, past and present approach to doping, then sees the following week that the stance shows signs of softening.
Now while we are used to this sort of thing in most walks of life, in a sport that has such a high profile for it’s problems, backpedaling, even in the name of pragmatism, would seem to me to suggest a less than serious approach to problem solving. Akin to those the sport has seen in the past.
atlazFree MemberThe reason plasticizers in the blood are allowed is because there are legitimate ways for it too get there, it’s not uncommon for a rider to be put on a drip at the end of a hard race.
Illegal in pro cycling unless medial treatment requires it and then they need to leave the race. The basic rule is “no needles”
crazy-legsFull Member@vinnyeh: yep, fair point and I’m amazed that Sky (being like, a media company and all), didn’t actually think it through.
Usual classic knee jerk response to bad news then realise that oh, that’s not really practical.
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