- Apr 19, 2010
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happychappy said:
Andynonomous said:Ya, so if he extracts blood when doping, then transfuses it back in (diluting the PED), he can get off scott free.
Legitimate argument.![]()
Andynonomous said:Ya, so if he extracts blood when doping, then transfuses it back in (diluting the PED), he can get off scott free.
Legitimate argument.![]()
ah, yes. you two are obviously those who believe in innocent until proven guilty, huh?sniper said:+1
AC's case teaches us one thing: why there shouldn't be a threshhold.
If someone is really unguilty, there are plenty of ways of showing that.
Greetings, Ovtcharov.
wildeone said:ah, yes. you two are obviously those who believe in innocent until proven guilty, huh?![]()
roundabout said:^^^ This is all a sidetrack from the real issue of possible blood doping^^^
wildeone said:ah, yes. you two are obviously those who believe in innocent until proven guilty, huh?
i am not saying i don't think AC dopes. i'm sure he does, as well as a majority of the top riders out there... but i do believe there needs to be a threshold for Clen since it is possible to get it through contaminated meat. that there wasn't a threshold was sheer laziness! that looking into getting one now, after all this publicity, is practically a crime.
you want to catch the guys transfusing their own blood? refine the plasticizer test. then you won't even have to worry about trying to find trace amounts of diluted PEDs.
How high would you have the threshold be? Because technically anything under poisonous levels is possible through food contamination (and above too, of course, but then the rider would notice).wildeone said:ah, yes. you two are obviously those who believe in innocent until proven guilty, huh?
i am not saying i don't think AC dopes. i'm sure he does, as well as a majority of the top riders out there... but i do believe there needs to be a threshold for Clen since it is possible to get it through contaminated meat. that there wasn't a threshold was sheer laziness! that looking into getting one now, after all this publicity, is practically a crime.
you want to catch the guys transfusing their own blood? refine the plasticizer test. then you won't even have to worry about trying to find trace amounts of diluted PEDs.
Moose McKnuckles said:Why is it that people keep saying that "Contador needs to prove it got there from the meat?" It's virtually impossible to prove that. You're putting riders in a no win situation because WADA wanted an easy way out by setting a zero threshold. It's a stupid rule that allows a rider virtually no ability to challenge it. We know the food supply is contaminated. We know riders can't prove a substance came from the food. But, they still get banned anyway? Makes zero sense.
Moose McKnuckles said:I know it's easier for the bean counters at WADA or the UCI, but you're putting people's careers on the line here. It's not EPO we're taking about, it's something that has been found in the food supply.
Benotti69 said:1 is that all, and another the famous not my fault "i took the wrong medicine". Who lately do we know did that? Tyler hamilton. You would think that athletes would be extremely careful with every single item they put in their bodies due to the efforts they make to train and compete. When this happens you got to question whether the person is telling the truth.I do think they are extremely careful and when caught they are caught for a reason unless they can prove different. At least Hamilton held his hands up, took his ban and took the full responsibility of what he did.
Sport if full of weak excuses that they ate, drank, kissed, had too much sex, toothpaste, cocaine sweets and other BS to try and cover their doping. To argue anything else is burying your head.
To say that Contador's Clen was too small to 'Performance Enhance' is beside the point unless he can prove how it got into his system. He can't, because? Oooops he ate the evidence and no one else did who got tested, shame. Ok Bertie off ya go and please be careful in future. Li Fuyu had a better case (being Chinese and having been in China eating their dodgy food) than Berie but still got banned for 2 years. But we all connected the dots back to Radiosuck and Bruyneel so no major outcry there!
hrotha said:How high would you have the threshold be? Because technically anything under poisonous levels is possible through food contamination (and above too, of course, but then the rider would notice).
AC proved to the satisfaction of the REFC that he ingested the clen through no fault or negligence on his part.
All those who speculate that it was the residue of an earlier blood transfusion are barking up the wrong tree. There is NO evidence AC did this. Certainly this minscule trace amount does not do it.
Albertos positive test has to be put in it's proper context. It measured 50 picograms of clen. That is 50 trillioneths of a gram. This is so ridculously small that there should not have even had to be an investigation. Under no conceivable circumstance could this amount enhance performance or given Alberto a competitive edge.
Merckx index said:Patrick, as I said before, your posts just reek of argument from authority:
Have you never, ever, even once heard an organization, or some authority figure--such as the President, the Congress, some court, whatever--issue a decision that you did not automatically agree with? Do you never say to yourself, rather than simply accepting what someone says, I will look at the facts as I know them and come to my own decision?
As a criminal defence lawyer for 35 years I have constantly through out my career questioned and disagreed with decisions of the courts, authority figures, the establishment and my government (which is not American therefore the pronouncements of the President or the Congress have relevance to me) etc. Those who know me would not call me a yes man.
But that does not mean I can ignore such decisions or pronouncements. That is called accepting reality. Many decisions of the courts I disagree with, such as for example the Supreme Court of Canada are binding. And even though I disagree with them I cannot put my head in the sand and ignore them as if they do not exist or do not apply to my cases. I have to be realistic.
I have tried to present an argument in this thread based on logic and reason that there is no case against Alberto. That there should never have been an investigation based on the ridiclously low amount of clen (the legal principle of "diminmus non curat lex") and that his explanation whether you like it or not was accepted by REFC and should not be appealed.
Obviously my arguments have rubbed you the wrong way because you incorrectly perceive them to be sourced from "authority" as opposed to logic and reason.
PS My tag is Robbie and not Patrick
RobbieCanuck said:I played sport at a high competitive level ...
As a criminal defence lawyer for 35 years
RobbieCanuck said:Merckx index said:As a criminal defence lawyer for 35 years I have constantly through out my career questioned and disagreed with decisions of the courts, authority figures, the establishment and my government (which is not American therefore the pronouncements of the President or the Congress have relevance to me) etc. Those who know me would not call me a yes man.
But that does not mean I can ignore such decisions or pronouncements. That is called accepting reality. Many decisions of the courts I disagree with, such as for example the Supreme Court of Canada are binding. And even though I disagree with them I cannot put my head in the sand and ignore them as if they do not exist or do not apply to my cases. I have to be realistic.
I have tried to present an argument in this thread based on logic and reason that there is no case against Alberto. That there should never have been an investigation based on the ridiclously low amount of clen (the legal principle of "diminmus non curat lex") and that his explanation whether you like it or not was accepted by REFC and should not be appealed.
Obviously my arguments have rubbed you the wrong way because you incorrectly perceive them to be sourced from "authority" as opposed to logic and reason.
PS My tag is Robbie and not Patrick
sniper said:In the last two decades of procycling, has there been one case that justifies the principle of "innocent until proven guilty"?
As far as I can remember, whenever there was smoke, there was fire. Give me one counterexample.
Moose McKnuckles said:Gilberto Simoni - the candy incident
Andynonomous said:Here is something "Robbie" wrote in "tennishasasteroidproblem" :
"I am a trained lawyer so I know a little about the law as it relates to defamation.
To suggest publicly that Nadal (or any other player) is a drug cheat is defamatory, as it brings his character and public standing into disrepute."
Of course real lawyers don't go around and brag about their credentials on the internet to win an argument like this.
This "lawyer", also claimed to be a professional tennis coach, amongst other professions. He uses multiple IDs, has been spamming many tennis boards, using adolescent reasoning, yet "tries" to sound smart by injecting big words (that he clearly does not have a proper understanding of).
He does some research before making long "arguments" for his favorite athletes. Unfortunately for him, he uses failed logic to make his case. For example "diminmus non curat lex" is not a valid reason to "aquit" Contador (it doesn't quite mean what "Robbie" would have us believe). It actually means that the case is too trivial for a certain court (like a $5 lawsuit), not that some of the evidence doesn't reach some imaginary threshold.
BroDeal said:If memory serves me right, Simoni was popped for metabolites of cocaine twice. The first time was explained away as lidocaine from a dentist. The second time it was cocaine candies. I tend to think that he had a bit of recreational drug problem.
Merckx index said:RobbieCanuck said:Have you disputed any of the points I have made about what Bert has NOT proven? No.
Are you on drugs?
Merckx index said:In the second place, we do have the DEHP test, until someone comes forward and definitively proves that the reported values are bogus. This IS evidence. If that result is real--and again, no one has come forward to deny it--it is about as strong as the evidence from the HBT test that was used to nail Tyler. It is probably stronger evidence than the altered passport values that have been used to take several athletes out of competition. There are other explanations for altered hematological parameters. There really don’t seem to be credible alternatives for very high DEHP values in the urine. Possibly a false positive, but not very likely.
ramos said:"The Basque Government gave us three possibilities, and curiously enough, the owner of the one that was most likely to be it is in partnership with his brother, who was penalised a few years back for using clenbuterol.
Merckx index said:You continue to ignore the most basic lessons of pharmacokinetics. The amount of drug detected in a urine sample bears NO RELATIONSHIP WHATSOEVER to the amount taken IN THE ABSENCE OF KNOWING WHEN IT WAS TAKEN, BY WHAT ROUTE, AND THE KINETICS OF THE DRUG ITSELF. That value, taken in isolation, is meaningless. Any pharmacologist (and I am one, btw) will tell you that.
You and others do have a point that if CB can be ingested accidentally, then at some point it might be helpful to set a threshold level. But there is nothing magic about such a level. It has to be balanced against the fact that any level can be indicative of doping--that if a rider does not exceed the threshold, it does NOT mean he didn’t dope. The peloton is loaded with riders who have never been busted for either testosterone or EPO, though tests for both have, in effect, threshold levels that everyone in the anti-doping field knows let off many, many guilty riders. It’s probably safe to say that for every innocent rider who is prevented from being wrongly sanctioned, the same threshold that protects him lets at least ten guilty riders get off. If I were being cheated out of prize money and advancement opportunities by this situation, I’d be a little irked by it.
