Considering the Sunday Times found themselves in the exact same position with Armstrong, a disclaimer at the end of the Walsh article may have saved them million dollars over 8 years (later to be recovered).samhocking said:The thing is the Sunday Times tip off came from Dan Stevens himself. At the end of the full-length video there's a disclaimer "The Sunday Times has no independent evidence Dr. Bonar treated the sports people he has named". So, it sounds like they might have additional video not yet public with specific athlete names or I think most likely the disclaimer is in relation to when Bonar simply says "I have worked with lots of professional athletes'.
The big question, is if Dan himself withheld names to CIRC and UKAD, but gave them to Sunday Times? If he did ,then I think it puts UKAD in much better light given that all they have is a statement from Dan about a boxer he doesn't know the name of.
Glenn_Wilson said:I find this is "like deja vu all over again".
Except this time it is a different set of people trying to discredit the story or the person's involved. Very much the same.
What makes anyone think that their countries or favorite athletes are above the use of PED's?
Freddythefrog said:What happened over at that other thread ? I quite like the idea of Lord Moynihan being a counter to Lord Coe.
Coe states the media (aka the Sunday Times) have declared war on his sport and, no doubt, Sapstead in place. burying the bad news.
Moynihan wants Sapstead gone and questions whether UKAD and its management processes are fit for purpose. I know who the sports' fan is.
Sniper - loved the line of Reedie reading a Coe PR company script - superb. I could just imagine him flicking the pages over as he was asked the questions.
So in case it gets lost - the link to the petition to criminalise doping in sport in Britain. Best bit of proposed new legislation I have heard in a long time.
tinyurl.com/dopingscandal
There is no redemption for the clean athlete denied selection or winnings by a competitor who knowingly cheats. And what is worse the cheat, with the chance of a long lasting benefit derived from an enchilada of performance enhancing drugs, knowingly shreds the dreams of clean athletes with every needle they inject.
That is why, saddened by the failure of international sports bodies, many countries ranging from New Zealand, Austria, Italy, France, and Sweden to Mexico and China have either criminalised the use of performance enhancing drugs in sport or enacted legislation that criminalises the trafficking of these drugs.
Germany is the most recent country to introduce legislation proclaiming "a declaration of war on cheaters." Under its new law, athletes found guilty of intentionally doping face fines or prison terms of up to three years. Those involved in supplying athletes with performance-enhancing substances, could face jail terms of up to 10 years. Now there are calls by Kip Keino, the head of the Kenyan National Olympic Committee, for Kenya to follow suit. Yet we in the UK have delayed and failed to introduce long overdue sport specific legislation.
The Director General of the World Anti-Doping Agency reflected last year: “I want to pose the question: should doping be a criminal matter? It is in Italy and we think - some of us - that the real deterrent that cheating athletes fear is the fear of going to prison. Not the fear of being stood down from their sport for a year, two years, four years but a fear of going to prison”.
He is right. Over the years many British Olympic athletes have taken a firm and uncompromising stance that those guilty of cheating should never again be selected to represent their country.
Here there is the opportunity for sportsmen and women; Olympians and Paralympians; coaches and sports fans to call for action and sign this Petition urging the Government to act on the calls from athletes in the UK and beyond our shores.
Politicians from across the political divide will heed the voices of our athletes and take action. If we prevaricate yet further, top level sport will continue to be transformed into competition between chemists laboratories bearing no resemblance to the objectives of the International Olympic Committee to deliver the Games between the greatest athletes in the world living out the Olympic ideals.
We have to turn to a new era of closer cooperation between Governments, athletes, sponsors and international sports federations. We owe it to clean athletes to act and to act now.
kwikki said:gillan1969 said:samhocking said:UKAD could have athletes banned from working with Bonar. The problem is, when they asked for evidence from Dan Stevens, he didn't know a single name. This is what they're saying. They can investigate an athlete and a Dr under their jurisdiction. To investigate just a Dr though requires the GMC.
yup it's more than my jobsworth...![]()
so the job of policing doping in the UK can't done by the 'police'....
but people who aren't the 'police' can police it..
welcome to the zany world of international sports administration......fortunes can be made![]()
You're are kind of spot on with this.
It's a very nuanced situation with no one single viewpoint across the whole array of vested interests. Within the current UK government there are a range of views of criminalisation of doping, with sports minister Tracy Crouch open to a discussion. Of course, UKAD are against it because it undermines their position, and they would cede ground and influence to law enforcement agencies with bigger budgets. UKAD is a minnow.
Interestingly, and for the cynics, there was a petition to government to criminalise doping after the 2012 Olympics.
Who tabled it? None other than the chairman of the British Olympic Committee (2005-12), former sports minster and ex-Olympic athlete, Lord Moynihan.
It's politics, and frankly anti-doping is way down on the agenda for a country with huge structural economic issues.
Hilarious to see that clean UK is one of the last European nations to not criminalise doping
How many European nations have criminalised doping? One list suggests that perhaps the figure is 15 out of 50, but this probably isn't accurate. In one recent legal article I found Austria is described as one of the few countries that has criminalised doping, but I think this was `few' in the context of the world.
wrinklyvet said:I chose that version because it seemed concise. The same report is in most of the papers. Skysports has changed none of the contents.Benotti69 said:Skysports those unyielding truth seekers!
It's amusing that you prefer your news from that other Murdoch source, the Sunday Times! You are bound to think that Skysports has a different agenda. Red rag to a bull.
What is it that you say he didn't deny? I'm not sure what you mean.Benotti69 said:wrinklyvet said:I chose that version because it seemed concise. The same report is in most of the papers. Skysports has changed none of the contents.Benotti69 said:Skysports those unyielding truth seekers!
It's amusing that you prefer your news from that other Murdoch source, the Sunday Times! You are bound to think that Skysports has a different agenda. Red rag to a bull.
Bonar didn't deny it. Dailymail also published an article about Bonar last year, letting his patient die so he could get more money out of her. Does one think such a character would let people use PEDs? Not british athletes, morally superiror.!
I am not giving money to dailymail either, but neither am i quoting them for the truth.
Not sure what it requires for people to wake up to professional sports is more a business with cheating a standard part of what teams and athletes do to ensure their participation otherwise they must find employment outside of the sport.
I asked you what you previously meant. Care to share?Benotti69 said:No one would touch Leinders with a bargepole....oh wait.....
Benotti69 said:No one would touch Leinders with a bargepole....oh wait.....
UKAD were right on top of that case, too, weren't they.thehog said:Benotti69 said:No one would touch Leinders with a bargepole....oh wait.....
Its rather good point. Seemingly we are meant to believe Leinders was hired to treat saddle sores but Dr. Bonar’s claims should not be trusted
sniper said:UKAD were right on top of that case, too, weren't they.thehog said:Benotti69 said:No one would touch Leinders with a bargepole....oh wait.....
Its rather good point. Seemingly we are meant to believe Leinders was hired to treat saddle sores but Dr. Bonar’s claims should not be trusted
Catwhoorg said:The press cycle dictates that there will likely be more already written for next Sunday.
It will be interesting to see how far this goes, but I do think most of what he said is idle boasting, and many of his claims about "sportspeople" will be proven false.
Best case scenario he shops everyone to the authorities, in return for NOT being struck off.
He does deserve jail time though, for some of his none-doping stuff.
Catwhoorg said:The press cycle dictates that there will likely be more already written for next Sunday.
It will be interesting to see how far this goes, but I do think most of what he said is idle boasting, and many of his claims about "sportspeople" will be proven false.
Best case scenario he shops everyone to the authorities, in return for NOT being struck off.
He does deserve jail time though, for some of his none-doping stuff.
thehog said:Catwhoorg said:The press cycle dictates that there will likely be more already written for next Sunday.
It will be interesting to see how far this goes, but I do think most of what he said is idle boasting, and many of his claims about "sportspeople" will be proven false.
Best case scenario he shops everyone to the authorities, in return for NOT being struck off.
He does deserve jail time though, for some of his none-doping stuff.
How would it be proven false?
What you mean is there will be a lack of a paper trail to prove that there was doping of the said athletes. Nothing would actually be proven.
Catwhoorg said:The press cycle dictates that there will likely be more already written for next Sunday.
It will be interesting to see how far this goes, but I do think most of what he said is idle boasting, and many of his claims about "sportspeople" will be proven false.
Best case scenario he shops everyone to the authorities, in return for NOT being struck off
Catwhoorg said:thehog said:Catwhoorg said:The press cycle dictates that there will likely be more already written for next Sunday.
It will be interesting to see how far this goes, but I do think most of what he said is idle boasting, and many of his claims about "sportspeople" will be proven false.
Best case scenario he shops everyone to the authorities, in return for NOT being struck off.
He does deserve jail time though, for some of his none-doping stuff.
How would it be proven false?
What you mean is there will be a lack of a paper trail to prove that there was doping of the said athletes. Nothing would actually be proven.
How about "shown to be hot air and boasting/self-promotion" ?
