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#31 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Newcastle, Australia
Posts: 334
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Keep the personal comments to a minimum please.
Some of us read your comments looking for facts and debate, we don't need to put up with abuse from either side. I think my mum told me "if you havn't got anything nice to say; then don't post" |
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#33 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Newcastle, Australia
Posts: 334
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Sorry mate. While these is a possibility that a couple of riders have dopped and given that Australian are randomly drug tested and given 48 hours to announce any positive A results until the body announces it for them, I seriously doubt dopping is a major problem in Australian cyclists.
Eadie had enough trouble after someone posted a banned substance to him. He has personally told me about the random testing and monitoring Australians are required to undertake. |
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#34 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 103
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Quote:
Some data from selected national anti-doping agencies:
)Knowing that the number of active athletes dosn't scale even remotely close 1:1 with population, well if you were the speculative type you probably couldn't help wondering what UASDA really wants to get out of its work: Fewer OOC tests than Australia and just over 2½ times as many OOC as a country 59 times it's size ![]() |
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#36 | ||
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 103
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Quote:
Nothing more nothing less. The numbers were not used to "prove": "Australians are more clean than American athletes, and the Danes are by far the cleanest" nor were they used for "Look how many tests are being done, the athletes must be clean". In the future please try not to let your anti-doping enthusiasm get the better of you into reading hidden messages ![]() Quote:
Actually USADA issued 4 suspensions in 2004 for exactly THG:
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Last edited by toa : 24-05.-2005 at 03:34 PM. |
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#38 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Newcastle, Australia
Posts: 334
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I hope you realise there are more than 5 members to the AIS cycling squads.
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#41 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Newcastle, Australia
Posts: 334
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I'm just concerned by your willingness to paint a broad picture that all AIS athletes are doppers.
French and associates were dopping while in Europe, does this make all AIS athletes doppers? I'm not saying there arn't doppers out there (and I agree the TDF covers it up) but we can't make broad statements that certain bodies produce doppers. |
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#43 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Newcastle, Australia
Posts: 334
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And that's reason enough to abuse the image of all athletes from their country?
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#44 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: South Wales
Posts: 794
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Quote:
Apart from Millar he hasn't touched the British yet ![]() |
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#45 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2003
Posts: 696
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Quote:
Flyer, you have gone off half-cocked and speculated over the sacrificial lynching of one rider that there exists a systemic doping program within the AIS. Sport in Australia is assisted by taxpayer funding through a body known as the Australian Sports Commission (ASC). They provide individual and sporting organisation funding (about 75 different sports). All funding is based on a zero tolerance drug policy. If an individual or a sports organisation gets caught doping or being party to doping their funding is withdrawn. This happened with weight lifting. The Australian Sports Drugs Agency (ASDA) is the independent body that is the bloodhound for ASC anti drugs policy and pioneered this role in world sport. It is only the recent establishment of WADA that enforced countries to follow what Australia has been carrying out for about 20 years. The AIS is funded and managed through the ASC and is accountable to the ASC and their political masters. The government controls the appointment of ASC Commissioners (management). Generally, politicians are not sports orientated except towards elections and for photo opportunities. They take great glee, as in the French case, of using parliamentary privilege (not legally accountable) to expose events if they are not of the political colours of the government. Your allegation that AIS is part of an organised doping system is absurd given the structure and enforced policies of that organisation. If an athlete dopes in Australia it would be a personal decision using private resources.
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VF "Remember, even if you win the rat race, you are still a rat" |
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