sittingbison said:Arguments for doping:
1) Client of Ferrari
2) lots of known doping teams
3) performance against known dopers
4) not a vocal anti doper
5) silence on Armstrong
6) still performing at 35yo
The Ferrari link is tenuous at best, it was 11 years ago, before he turned pro on road. Organised by new manager Rominger (doper). He never went back and used Sassi instead. Plenty of touted "clean" riders have ridden for doping teams notably Bassons at Festina and Moncoutie at Cofidis. Evans as a GC prospect has always been at top teams with a chance of winning (except Lotto lol). He is not vocal about anything, we all know he is reclusive and private person, uncomfortable and prickly in the limelight and public address. Same argument for silence on Armstrong. Many athletes in many sports are performing into their 30s now through advances in training, diet and psychology - and he IS starting to taper off. The biggest argument, the one hardest to ignore, is his palmares against known dopers - see my post http://forum.cyclingnews.com/showpost.php?p=1054190&postcount=22
Arguments against doping:
1) no 'hard' evidence of any kind
2) no mutterings from peloton or media
3) normal career trajectory
4) no abnormal performance increases
5) no startling stages
6) physiology
Of course lack of 'hard' evidence means diddly squat. Omerta prevails in the peleton, but not even enemies have made insinuations. As to the rest, its hard to ignore that the guy is a top level talent. Always has been from young mountain bike career.
This is a guy who has been roundly criticised for years for being a wheel sucker, unable or unwilling to launch attacks or take risks. When the known dopers launched attackes in the mountains, he would struggle to maintain contact, or even minimise losses. He has beaten plenty of known dopers, but also been beaten by them. He has a great pamares but is in no way dominant. In fact that suggestion would have been laughed at until last years win. If anything his WC win and TdF are surprises.
All in all, given the history of doping in the sport, and what we have seen in The Secret Race and The Evidence, you back "clean" at your peril. However, there is still a realistic chance that he could in fact be clean or 'clean'. I don't think he is an out and out doper in the mould of Armstrong or Ricco, if he is doping it is augmenting his natural abilities. Personally, I choose to believe he is clean, but acknowledge this could be misguided, and will not vociferously and blindly defend him if something crops up. I also have no problem with people thinking he is doping.
The highlighted is the problem I have with this post and with this thread in general. The overall tone is, "if he dopes, he only dopes a little bit." WTF? Doping is doping. There's no grey areas, it's black and white. There's a clear friggin line.
Only doping to augment his natural abilities?? Give me a friggin break, Lance would say exactly the same thing. Every single doper ever would say exactly the same thing.
If Cadel doped to win a TdF, there's no difference between him and Lance as far as the doping goes (the behaviour surrounding the doping is clearly different and is not the issue I am raising). The result is still the same, the pressure is still on every kid in the peloton to dope to keep up... some poor b*stard was still cheated out of their rightful place because they wouldn't dope. Only doping "a little bit" doesn't change that.
I don't know whether Cadel dopes or not, I'd like to think he doesn't but I'm not naive enough to believe that 100%. But if he dopes, he's a doper. There's no half way point. An individual either crosses that line or they don't, you can't only cross it a bit. Yes, you may be able to come back and choose to never cross it agan, but ultimately you have to pick which side of the line you are on.
As long as this line of thinking remains, that doping a little bit is somehow ok, then yes, the fans are part of the problem.