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#31 | |
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Community Team
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: at the bar
Posts: 12,487
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You could substitute one name in the above sentance (change Pantani to Armstrong). But then you'd be screaming, where's the proof ? |
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#32 | |
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Community Team
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: at the bar
Posts: 12,487
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Quote:
You're wrong Flyer. The fact is that MP was hevaily favoured to do well in the 1998 TDF. He had won the Giro a few weeks before this '98TDF and he said "I am going to the TDF and I hope to do well. I can't say that I am going to win it but I intend to give it a go". I put £50.00 on MP and when I saw him soft tapping up Christchurch Hill in Dublin in the Prologue I thought "there goes my bet". The rest is history. My point ? His TDF win was also feasible. Look at how well he cycled in the 1993 TDF (the year after he went pro). Look how he upset BigMig in 1995. Pantani was destined to win the TDF at some point. I don't know whether he took drugs or not. The man is dead - we should let him rest in peace and we should try to prevent other untimely deaths in this sport of ours. |
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#33 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 1,125
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Dude we don't know........only 3/4 people know around armstrong! And I will sleep fine if he gets caught, life goes on! As I said before it's not the end of the world. But hee let me stop here........you have some weird image about me (ooh in particular if youre a fan of armstrongs riding, BECAUSE that is not done in youre world) Luckily I respect youre talk about ullrich.......but hee it must be FRUSTATING to have so much tourtalk going on. And no one posting about the ULLRICH's of the world! Know go back and post some good stuff about cycling, because you can do much better!
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#34 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 333
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I disagree with nothing you say here. Unless you want to leap to the incrimination of Pantani for PED usage solely because a lack of definitive tests available at the time, or because lawyers get ridiculous calumnious cases dropped because there is no rule on the books against having high hematocrit at the time. That would not be a very solid platform and I don't think you mean that or no? I thank you for referring to a quotation from my post, it shows you have at least read some of it.
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#35 | |
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Community Team
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: at the bar
Posts: 12,487
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Quote:
I don't think that TDF talk is all that interesting to be perfectly honest. I think there is far too much emphasis on the TDF : but that emphasis was was there during the Indurain days as well. As regards JU, it doesn't frustrate me that JU isn't discussed. I admire his ability and I wish he would do more to try to utilise that ability. To be honest, I was fortunate enough to see this sport when it was more interesting and when the level of competition was higher during the 1980's. Indurain/Ullrich/Armstrong eras are boring by comparison. |
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#36 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2003
Posts: 1,498
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Let's keep one thing straight - Marco died of a broken spirit, even if the actual mechanism was cocaine. He did not die directly as a result of using blood thickeners or other performance enhancing drugs, and he wasn't using coke to improve cycling performance. (absurd though that notion may be) His cycling career was over at that point. He was probably using cocaine to relieve the pain from the psychological blow he had taken. Not the first time that has happened.
I am in complete agreement with Limerickman - Marco's death is a tragedy, not a vehicle for personal agendas. Let that bright star rest in peace, and resolve not to let this happen again. |
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#39 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 333
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Wait now you are really starting to entertain me. The same Festina that is truly caught with drugs, you call "powerful "? I remind you that Pantani who had previously buried Zulle in the Giro. The winner turned out to be a drug user you say, ok. But not a doper and while an active cyclist he never tested positive for any illegal drug. One day the truth of his innocence will come out. I will tell you he was a stronger rider in 1999 than in 98. And he would not have been beaten that year in the tdf. In 1998 Zulle would need binoculars to keep Pantani in sight. Ullrich only built a lead over Pantani because Marco had the strain of the Giro still in his legs. That advantage of that freshness was eroded after a couple of mountain stages and then the mythical escape that propelled him to the lead. (Bonk or no Bonk, perhaps Jan had bad day or perhaps that Marco had put him under serious physical stress in the previous stages). Although it seems you would like better to say that Ullrich messed up otherwise he would not have lost.
I will include a translation of documents found with Pantani in Rimini. Not really for you Flyer, because you are so convinced of yourself, you do not even bother to read what others write. It is quite choppy writing, one can only imagine the state he must have been in. "I wait in much truth… I have been humiliated for nothing and for four years I am in all the tribunals. I have only lost my desire to be like so many other sportsmen, but cycling has payed the bigger price and many boys have lost the hope of justice. And I am wounding myself with the deposition of a truth on my document so that the world will understand that all my colleagues have suffered humiliation in rooms, with hidden cameras that are there to try to ruin relationships between families….after which how can you avoid doing harm to yourself. I don’t know how I can stop myself, in moments of letting it all out, like this…. It is pleasing to me that I know that I have never failed a drug test… But only when my sporting life especially private was violated did I lose much and I am in this place with the desire to say “Go for the Victory” which is a great directive for a sportsman… But the most difficult thing is to have given your heart for a sport with so many injuries and bad fortunes and yet always I got myself going again… But what is left to believe after all the sadness and anger for having such judicial violence and injustice fall on oneself? But my story I hope will be an example for the other sports… that yes the rules are necessary, but they must be equal for all. There does not exist another career that requires blood be given and controls be taken at night to entire families of athletes. I do not feel more serene for not having been controlled in house, in hotel by telecamera and have ended up doing harm to myself… so as not to renounce my privacy, that my girlfriend and other colleages have lost, and many stories of violated families. But go and see what it means to be a cyclist… (and how many men go in the middle of the torrid sadness) to return with my dreams of manhood that collide with drugs… but of this I mean, after my life as a sportsman. And if a little bit of humanity helps one to understand that after such a real mistake one feels guilty for those that are giving there hearts for you. This document is truth and my hope is that a real man or woman reading it will step forward in defence of one like me who wanted to give equal rules for sportsmen to the world. And I am not a liar. I feel I have been wounded and all the boys that believed in me must speak out. Marco Pantani" Quote:
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#42 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2003
Posts: 696
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Quote:
I believe we can run out a list of athletes who have never failed a drug test but have admitted to taking PEDs on the strength of other evidence. Refer to BALCO case and the results of numerous authority raids on athletes' residences.
__________________
VF "Remember, even if you win the rat race, you are still a rat" |
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#44 | |
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Community Team
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: at the bar
Posts: 12,487
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Quote:
Flyer : you're jumbling the issues here. My contention is that Pantani's palmares prior to 1998, indicated a strong possibility that he was going to win a TDF at some point. 1993 and 1995 TDF results show this. If it wasn't for his breaking his leg, it would have been conceivable that 1996 might have been the year when he could have won a TDF. As Pirata pointed out : Pantani blasted Zulle in the 98 Giro. I draw the line at condemning a man who is now dead. I believe that he did die of a drug overdose and that he was suffering from terrible depression. I don't see any merit whatsoever in your trailing over the ashes of MP. You don't need to hold the example of MP up as a warning. The evidence of drug abuse is abundant elsewhere in this sport - without having to try to condemn someone who is dead. |
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