Wallace and Gromit said:He was a mediocre GT rider in his early years. Mig's first 4 GT finishes (up to age 24) were 84th, 92nd, 97th and 47th. One can excuse a certain amount of slipping down the leaderboard for domestiquing duties, but pre EPO, every multiple GT winner was prominent in the overall standings at a very young age, irrespective of team duties. If someone replicated Mig's career progression now then the Clinic would explode.
And once again someone blatantly refuses to accept cold hard facts. Let's state them for the umpteenth time:
1. Miguel Indurain was Pre epo seen as THE coming man. Not by me, as I didn't belive in him, but every cycling mag hyped him for years. No, not just the Spanish, but so did the Dutch mag Wielerrevue. Were these people all psychic and did they just know about epo? Or was there something about Mig. Let's toss out the paranormal and go with that people indeed knew he would be good.
2. Miguel was brought slow. Every year again and again Echevarri stressed this. Again, this is Pre-Epo. Or do you actually think Echevarri was instrumental in researching Epo?
Sorry W&G, I am sick and tired of all this nonsense about Miguel. Was he on Epo. Certainly. Would he have won 5 times without Epo? Who knows? But anyone saying he was a scrub without Epo is just blatantly falsifying history.
Every time someone brings it up without mentioning that he was already hailed as the next big thing by the cycling world since mid 80ies. it's such nonsense. Only if Miguel was part of the biggest international conspiracy spanning every European cycling magazine and the pharmaceutical industry.
