sniper said:+1
+1
he sais it points clearly in the direction of a food contamination. That is dubious, since there are several other options that he's not considering. Then him advising Vascansoleil is dubious, him being a UCI-doctor is dubious.
Time to take off the blinders, I'd say.
sniper said:proof and dubious don't go together, you know that, right?
GJB123 said:I am awaiting your "explanantion" then, if you like that word better than "proof". You can dance all around the words as much as you like, but you offered up didley sh*t to show why De Boer is dubious and why now all other 14 scientists who couldn't connect the dots (that are supposedly so easy to connect for solid case of blood doping) should be dubious as well and corrupt for that matter. No amount of word games is gonna get you out of that one, I am afraid.
Regards
GJ
sniper said:Manual:
step 1: remove said didley sh*t from eyes.
step 2: check dictionary for definition of dubious
step 3: check previous posts
No amount of word games is gonna get you out of that one, I am afraid.
auscyclefan94 said:I will be convinced that the sport is seriously f***** if Contador's ban gets reversed.
GJB123 said:Why is that dubious? If you are a scientist you should have no problem disproving him. I am eagerly awaiting your proof. If you are just someone spouting baseless nonsens on a cycling forum it is perhaps time start ignoring you altogether.
Regards
GJ
“Laboratories must be able to find 1.00 ng/mL, while a normal threshold value is considered to be 2.00 ng/mL. The value of 0.05-0.10 ng/mL that was found in Fuyu Li’s body points clearly in the direction of a contamination. On top of that, such a low dose would not help his performance in any way.”
GJB123 said:Read what he said again, because basically he is saying the same thing as yourself. He is not claiming there is a threshold, he is saying that more and more scientists believe that due to environmental contamination the threshold should be set at 2.00 ng/ml. All else is mincing words.
So I fail to see how this particular quote shows De Boer is dubious. Yes, he is not throwing a clen-positive rider under the train just because we have strict liability rules but rather he is merely giving his scientific opinion on this particular case. What's supposed to be wrong with that?
Regards
GJ
“Laboratories must be able to find 1.00 ng/mL, while a normal threshold value is considered to be 2.00 ng/mL. The value of 0.05-0.10 ng/mL that was found in Fuyu Li’s body points clearly in the direction of a contamination. On top of that, such a low dose would not help his performance in any way.”
How can you say his transgression was minor when you acknowledge it was probably a transfusion?Berzin said:I for one am hoping the ban is lifted.
I want Contador to keep his 2010 Tour title and be able to defend it again this year.
His transgression was way too minor for all the drama that has ensued over it.
Time to put it behind us and let the racing begin.
Alberto has learned two lessons from this-
1) Store the to-be-transfused blood in a bottle and not plastic, and...
2)...have the blood checked for stuff like clenbutarol and anything else he may be ingesting when having blood taken out.
jae2460 said:What an incoherent pile of rubbish. WADA should and probably was going to appeal even the One year ban and give him the 2 he deserves. But now the Spanish have lost what little credibility they regained with their initial 1 year proposal.
Dr. Maserati said:I have read it again - and the highlighted is exactly what he is saying.
Someone of De Boers experience knows the difference between threshold and MRPL and by claiming that 2.0ng is a threshold is 'dubious' at best.
hrotha said:It's a disgrace that the president, who doesn't even have a scientific background, would speak publicly about this at a time when the RFEC is supposed to be studying Contador's allegations objectively. No wonder they see us as a country of dopers.
hrotha said:It's a disgrace that the president, who doesn't even have a scientific background, would speak publicly about this at a time when the RFEC is supposed to be studying Contador's allegations objectively. No wonder they see us as a country of dopers.
python said:are you saying contador has a uci permit for high blood values ? i've been following this case pretty closely and hear this for the first time.
please provide the source.
we hardly need anymore misinformation and conjecture than already out there.
Fair enough, but when has 'no comment' ever been seen as a reasonable response, either to journalists or Clinic dwellers?GJB123 said:Not good indeed. I would just wish that all parties not directly involved and not privvy to the full files would abstain from publicly stating their opinion. That applies to Zapatero as wel as to McQuaid and anybody else.
Regards
GJ
I just woke up to the news regarding a possible overturn of AC's suspension...two questions regarding it. If, indeed, he is not suspended by RFEC, can another governing body such as the UCI then appeal that decision and take the case to CAS? If that is what happens, will Contador then be free to race until CAS decides the case?Met de Versnelling said:Off to CAS we go.
He'll get a year, regardless.
CAS might back date the ban to the Tour if they give him a year, means he could still ride the Vuelta.
Unless WADA/UCI can make the plasticisers stick, then his defence will in all likelihood (and this is just my opinion), stick at CAS.
Personally, i think he doped, and should get a 2 year ban. But it's more than conceivable that a year is all he will get.
Met de Versnelling said:Python, my comment was directed at the post regarding Ricco. Which quite frankly, should have been clear, given there was a double quote with Ricco mentioned.
GJB123 said:Either your reading skills are failing you or you are taking things way out of context. He knows the difference between MRPL and a thershold. He ven states the MRPL. He just feels that the MRPL is set so low that it also catches out those who ingest Clen accidentally. In doing so, he is claiming that the prevailing scientific opinion seems to be that a threshold of 2.00 ng/ml is reasonable if one one wants to exclude cases of accidental ingestion or contamination. Nothing dubious about that, just a scientist's opinion and apparently not the only one having that opinion.
Regards
GJ
“Laboratories must be able to find 1.00 ng/mL, while a normal threshold value is considered to be 2.00 ng/mL. The value of 0.05-0.10 ng/mL that was found in Fuyu Li’s body points clearly in the direction of a contamination. On top of that, such a low dose would not help his performance in any way.”
Dr. Maserati said:Nothing wrong with my reading skills -lets take it from the top:
"Laboratories must be able to find 1.00 ng/mL" - incorrect, the MRPL is 2.00ng/ml
"while a normal threshold value is considered to be 2.00 ng/mL" - there is no threshold, that is the MRPL.
"The value of 0.05-0.10 ng/mL that was found in Fuyu Li’s body points clearly in the direction of a contamination" - clearly the Chinese Fed did not agree with him.
"On top of that, such a low dose would not help his performance in any way." - the clen would deplete over time, so the amount found has little to do with what was originally taken.
GJB123 said:Stop already, I am convinced. Not by your arguments, mind you, but by the fact the guy led the WADA laboratory in Lisbon., and we all know that anything to do with WADA is notably dubious.
Regards
GJ
don't bother me with the facts
hrotha said:It's a disgrace that the president, who doesn't even have a scientific background, would speak publicly about this at a time when the RFEC is supposed to be studying Contador's allegations objectively. No wonder they see us as a country of dopers.
Señ said:That's because the ones pointing the finger are a bunch of hypocrites unwilling to look at their own countries.
