- Jul 27, 2010
 
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Re: Re:
I didn’t say the allowed amounts weren’t a rule. I said they were basically guidelines, because a rule that can’t be enforced is basically a guideline (which you confirm with “athletes know where they stand”), and the 800/1600 ug rule can’t be enforced. Most athletes can exceed those amounts without ever testing over the DL. Has any athlete ever been sanctioned with a urine level < 1200, or no urine test at all, because it was proven s/he took more than 800/1600 ug? I very much doubt it.
The passport test (and prior to that, the 50% HT rule and the off-score) is an analogous situation. The rule is that riders are not allowed to transfuse or take EPO, but that rule is frequently unenforceable, so the passport offers a way of enforcing it. If a rider triggers the passport, that is a positive, even though he may eventually be cleared.
Thanks for supporting my point that in principle there’s no difference in most respects between salbutamol and non-specified substances.
Neither am I, but Taxus is having problems with this. Can we cut to the chase here? The only reason Taxus is beating this dead horse is because “positive” seems to stain Froome; he doesn’t like the association. But it is a positive, just as Impey’s probenecid test was a positive. And btw, I’m waiting for Taxus and Sam to argue that Impey’s rights were violated? Shouldn’t his positive have remained a secret, so after he was cleared he wouldn’t be associated with doping? What exactly is the difference between Impey's situation and Froome's, except that it's a little less likely to explain a probenecid positive? (And maybe not even that, since those Brazilian swimmers got away with a diuretic positive, too).
			
			Parker said:I think you got this wrong I'm afraid. I've put an screenshot the rules below. It clearly states it's the allowable amounts that are the rule and the urine sample is the evidence of the offence but can be disproved.
It's set up this way not so the testers can catch athletes, but athletes know where they stand. They can't know what levels they are producing, so how can they measure their intake? Their intake they can be in control of. The WADA rules are set up first and foremost to protect clean athletes.
I didn’t say the allowed amounts weren’t a rule. I said they were basically guidelines, because a rule that can’t be enforced is basically a guideline (which you confirm with “athletes know where they stand”), and the 800/1600 ug rule can’t be enforced. Most athletes can exceed those amounts without ever testing over the DL. Has any athlete ever been sanctioned with a urine level < 1200, or no urine test at all, because it was proven s/he took more than 800/1600 ug? I very much doubt it.
The passport test (and prior to that, the 50% HT rule and the off-score) is an analogous situation. The rule is that riders are not allowed to transfuse or take EPO, but that rule is frequently unenforceable, so the passport offers a way of enforcing it. If a rider triggers the passport, that is a positive, even though he may eventually be cleared.
Sure an athlete could take 2500ug and not breach the limit, but that's no different than any other drug test is it?
Thanks for supporting my point that in principle there’s no difference in most respects between salbutamol and non-specified substances.
You may want to argue the toss over what exactly 'positive' means. But I'm not interested in a squabble over semantics
Neither am I, but Taxus is having problems with this. Can we cut to the chase here? The only reason Taxus is beating this dead horse is because “positive” seems to stain Froome; he doesn’t like the association. But it is a positive, just as Impey’s probenecid test was a positive. And btw, I’m waiting for Taxus and Sam to argue that Impey’s rights were violated? Shouldn’t his positive have remained a secret, so after he was cleared he wouldn’t be associated with doping? What exactly is the difference between Impey's situation and Froome's, except that it's a little less likely to explain a probenecid positive? (And maybe not even that, since those Brazilian swimmers got away with a diuretic positive, too).
				
		
			