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#106 |
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Registered User
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Sample B results today, or early tomorrow!
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#107 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: London
Posts: 78
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Quote:
Your answer regarding the speed of the tour does not adequately address the issue of higher speeds in the mountains. I just do not buy the view that tremendous athletes such as Merckx and Hinault are 2-3kmh slower in the hills than today's riders. Yes training can explain some of the improvement but doping also has a role in my view. If the impact of training has been so dramatic why is it that the althletes' hour record is only about 10 metres further than the distance achieved by Eddy Merckx? Surely around 40 or 50 top pros could demolish this record if hypoxic tents and power monitors work the wonders you say they do. Yet I don't see many riders attempting what is arguably the most prestigous cycling record in the book. Altitude training and interval training existed in the era of Merckx but he couldn't easily measure power as riders can today. To think that cycling is 95% clean is not credible. The doping problem is like an arms race. If the competition is taking it then others also have to dope just to keep up. The trick is not getting caught, which up until recently was very easy. Paul Kimmage's book (A Rough Ride) is an excellent overview on this although he was derided at the time. If Tyler Hamilton is doping (yet to be conclusively proven) then it is difficult to see why others are not or else they would probably be miles behind. |
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#108 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Minneapolis, Minnesota
Posts: 1,848
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Quote:
Sadly, I'm afraid this may very well be true. If so, would it be possible to ever completely "clean-up" the sport? Obviously if none of the riders were doping, the playing feild would be leveled again so to speak. |
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#109 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Anchorage, Alaska, USA
Posts: 1,672
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Quote:
I didn't say it was 95% clean. I said the evidence suggests it is 99% clean, but I proposed that if the number of doping athletes not detected by the tests is 5 times higher than the number detected, the result would be 95% clean. I don't think that such a huge fudge factor is necessary. I think that the real figure is more like a number between 98% and 99%. I still don't see any estimates from you in terms of real numbers. You only speak in vague generalities. Remember, 98% clean would be as many people hiding it as there are caught. I don't think that's happening. |
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#110 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Anchorage, Alaska, USA
Posts: 1,672
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Quote:
Let's put this another way to help you understand this a little bit better. Can you imagine that if Eddy Merckx had access to all the training methods and equipment of today and rode against today's riders, that he would fail to increase his speed by more than 2 to 3 km per hour? I think that he would smash all the competition today as he did in his own day. I don't think that's the case with Hinault. I don't think he was nearly as good of a rider as Merckx was, particularly in his later years. Merckx is the gold standard. |
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#111 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 111
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Im not sure if you lot all no or not but I just read on cyclingnews that Tyler Hamilton has been suspended from Phonak "pending further notice" said boss Andy Rihs.
He also said "For the moment, we have to concentrate on the facts. These seem to be against Tyler. But so long as we're not 100% certain that he is guilty of manipulation, we will belive him". The head of the IOC medical commision (a long name i cant be bothered typing!!) said the delay in reporting the results was "a regular feature of excercising the proper care before reporting a case. (Great timing though wasn't it!) It makes me think that if the IOC results were released at the same time as the Veulta ones, then perhaps the IOC wern't 100% confident with their tests and wanted to wait untill they had extra proof. I also would have thought that if Phonak were as they say beliving Tyler, why would they suspend him??? I mean Tyler has said he is innocent and is going to fight it all the way. (Untill he hasn't a cent left i believe) Why aren't Phonak staying close to him on this one and showing him thier FULL support. Perhaps they only have Tylers word to go on and no proof that he did or did not have a BT for any reason. P.S I hope none of you knew all that other wise its just rehashing what you know - sorry. Also i am a bit of a dummy when it comes to computers and i havn't worked out how to put a link in lol. So thats why there isn't one. But it was on cyclingnews.com if that helps. ![]() |
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#112 | |
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Registered User
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Quote:
[COLOR=DarkOrange]WELCOME TO THE CLUB sportzgurl! I don't know why Phonak suspended him, I am going to guess that they do it to maybe follow some type of ruling...not sure! I, wouldn't have done that. I'd like to see all the results before taking a determination to suspend him. What if this is all a mistake? would that have been fair to Tyler? don't know.....my heart goes out to him and I do hope as a cyclist and cyclist fan that he is not guilty. GOsh! this thread has started some kind of arguments here isn't it?[/COLOR] |
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#113 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 111
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Quote:
Whats colour DarkOrange???? Thanks for your welcome! I am just new to cycling - i don't ride, i just watched the Tour this year and became hooked after just one stage!! lol. Yeah, i dont think I would have done that either. It just seems like they want to belive him but just can't be too sure. I hope its a mistake but the more people here talk about the various aspects of it the more i am starting to wonder. I just wish Tyler would come out and say something other than ''I am 100% innocent". He should explain his surgery i think!! He is not getting to many votes here, not that we think he is guilty though. Yeah what is with the colours???? lol ![]() |
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#114 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Anchorage, Alaska, USA
Posts: 1,672
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Quote:
I agree with you that the IOC was not too confident until they saw the Vuelta results. If you look at one of the links mentioned above on http://www.haematologica.org/full/p...3_11/881284.pdf page 1289, you will see that the results give graphs. If the red blood cells are from one person, you see one hump, but if the red blood cells are from 2, you see two humps on the graph--a big one and a little one. The little one will degrade and disappear over time when the injected red blood cells gradually die out because it represents the injected red blood cells which are of course of lower count than the person's own blood. If the subject gets another transfusion, the small hump gets bigger. If the second transfusion is from another person, my guess is that you might have three humps--one big one, one smaller one for the blood just injected, and another even smaller one for the first transfusion. What I'm thinking is that they wanted to see if the small hump was getting smaller or if it got bigger or what was happening. My guess is that if he was doping, he might have done it before the Olympic TT and before the Vuelta TT. So the small hump might be bigger that day. If they kept taking these tests for all the other stages that he did before Vuelta stage 8, and then they observed a spike in the small hump on victory day, I'd say I would have a really hard time believing Tyler that he had an infusion sometime earlier in the year after a surgery. Tyler's already lost a few sponsors, and Phonak is not going to be caught holding the bag. They give him lip service out of respect for Tyler, but they are definitely in CYA mode. As soon as the results come in positive, if they do, his contract will be terminated. Last edited by gntlmn : 23-09.-2004 at 09:22 AM. |
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#115 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 111
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Quote:
I had to read that about 5 times!! I think i got what you were saying! It just gets more suspect every minute. I feel for him if he is innocent! |
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#116 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Anchorage, Alaska, USA
Posts: 1,672
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Quote:
Oops! You read it before I had a chance to edit it and put in the link. If you made sense out of it before I did that, you must be pretty smart. ![]() |
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#117 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2003
Posts: 246
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I thought this link was interesting, and appropriate to the thread:
http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam/Cycling/2.../581462-ap.html Quote:
The above quoted section almost leads one to believe that originally, there was no test scheduled for the time trial participants, but that because of the security goof-up, they instituted one.....Hm. |
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#118 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 111
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Quote:
Well no wonder I got a little lost!! Not smart enough to get it totally though. But you made sence (a little) even without the rest of it! I understand what you are saying. That if the second bump is up when he was tested before the TT at Vuelta then his case of surgery would be a tad dodgey!! If Tyler is innocent, he is getting some pretty rough treatment from Phonak. I would have thought that they would stand with him 100% and vow to fight it with him. Do they not believe Tyler totally?? Or is Phonak just covering thier butts and trying not to end up like all the other team managements that have had dopers. By saying "we believe rider X is innocent and he will get our full support" If Phonak were to say that, then find out that Tyler was guilty, they would look pretty stupid. Isn't Tyler part of the Phonak management? Im sure I heard that he was more than just the leader. The other thing I thought of is about a ban. (im not jumping to conclusions) But if Tyler were to found guilty I would think he wold get more than 2 years. Especially if the surgery turns out to be a lemon. It looks like he has had no pressure to dope from the management, and im sure none from the peleton, so he won't have the "I was forced into it" line to use like Richard Virenque or others from that time did. He would have cheated on his own merits alone, which is worth more than 2 years right?? |
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#119 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2004
Posts: 888
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Phonak is probably playing by the books.
Not sure about the rules, but unless there's a penalty for lying, doping gets you "no more" than a 2 year ban, regardless if he cheated on his own accord. Color dark orange meant that the text should have been dark orange, but do to some glitch, it turned out to be just black. Also happens sometimes when quoting. |
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#120 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 111
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Well i didn't know that the max was two. Thanks. It seems stupid to give a cheater a two year ban. I mean you may aswell not bother to ban them at all.
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