Contador acquitted

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runninboy said:
ahh glad u stilll have not admitted to anything counselor. :D

Yep, that feels soooo goooooood. ;)
just wondering if by way of your recent statements if you would like to retract your earlier remark?

until you have more facts at your disposal of course
:D

Nope, that was just my fellow non-native speaker take on a sentence that you clearly failed to grasp. Feel free to disagree with me on that anytime. :p

Regards
GJ
 
Jun 16, 2009
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Benotti69 said:
It is very easy to condemn Contador, I have looked at what i know, Contador's history, teams, associations etc and how this case has been handled by the various bodies and to me it stinks like the back of an abattoir in the heat of July.

I dont see any variables or unknowns. He had clen in his system. Rule states that's a 2 year ban. If he can prove different great but he hasn't and if he could why not make it public. He had no problem talking about the meat, no problem saying there was receipt. Let's see all the variables and unknowns.

Where's the farmer that got busted for Clen boosting his animals? That's a more serious problem that an athlete testing positive for a banned substance and would be bigger news too. But no raid on a farm, no farmer in prison, no herds of cattle slaughtered and bodies burnt etc..

+1 excellent point. As food safety is paramount in the EU and one of the reasons for the implementation of the current tracking system i would think there would be rapid action to protect the public.
However there is little if any acknowledgment of endangerment to the public health. Given that the prime minister is privy by way of his tweeets to the facts of the case,it is incomprehesible and probably illegal for him not to act on the presence of a substance that endangers the puplic health. Of course if there is no illegal substance in the food supply he is in no legal jeopardy for failure to act in the public interest.

Kind of damning on the face of it, is it not?

If there is no contamination AC is guilty of doping
If there is contamination the PM needs to act to protect the public's health
hmmmmmmmmmmm
 
Jun 16, 2009
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GJB123 said:
Yep, that feels soooo goooooood. ;)


Nope, that was just my fellow non-native speaker take on a sentence that you clearly failed to grasp. Feel free to disagree with me on that anytime. :p

Regards
GJ

Well it is good for you to admit that you have no personal knowledge of the situation and it was just your poor interpretation of the facts.
I would expect nothing less from you.

Now as for the rest of us, we can take a more objective look at what is presented and in what context based on what we know to be true and not just implied. and interpret for ourselves if we wish to believe all the "coincidence" supposedly involved or the more plausible and direct explanation.
:D

ps the amount of coincidence that has to occur for AC's alibi to prove plausible is getting to be quite a long list. We have to jump to so many conclusions that my head is swimming.
Not to mention that public officials would have to be ignoring a food safety problem. Not just Spanish officials but those of the EU as well. It boggles the mind that to believe we know must believe that all public health officials in EU & Spain as well as the PM are negligent in their duties to protect the public.
where is the quarantine? where is the investigation Rapid response is crucial here. Seriously. The list just grows and grows and grows
and in the meantime we wait for the facts
lots of people got some "splainin to do....Luceee"
 
runninboy said:
Well it is good for you to admit that you have no personal knowledge of the situation and it was just your poor interpretation of the facts.

Like you do have personal knowledge of the sitaution? ROFLMAO. So please do share that with us. Or are you gonna stick to your usual drivel as you did with your personal take on industrialized farming, farm boy.

Regards
GJ
 
May 26, 2010
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runninboy said:
+1 excellent point. As food safety is paramount in the EU and one of the reasons for the implementation of the current tracking system i would think there would be rapid action to protect the public.
However there is little if any acknowledgment of endangerment to the public health. Given that the prime minister is privy by way of his tweeets to the facts of the case,it is incomprehesible and probably illegal for him not to act on the presence of a substance that endangers the puplic health. Of course if there is no illegal substance in the food supply he is in no legal jeopardy for failure to act in the public interest.

Kind of damning on the face of it, is it not?

If there is no contamination AC is guilty of doping
If there is contamination the PM needs to act to protect the public's health
hmmmmmmmmmmm

yep there are a lot of dots and which ever way you join them it is very difficult to see that Contador is innocent of doping.
 
runninboy said:
+1 excellent point. As food safety is paramount in the EU and one of the reasons for the implementation of the current tracking system i would think there would be rapid action to protect the public.
However there is little if any acknowledgment of endangerment to the public health. Given that the prime minister is privy by way of his tweeets to the facts of the case,it is incomprehesible and probably illegal for him not to act on the presence of a substance that endangers the puplic health. Of course if there is no illegal substance in the food supply he is in no legal jeopardy for failure to act in the public interest.

Kind of damning on the face of it, is it not?

If there is no contamination AC is guilty of doping
If there is contamination the PM needs to act to protect the public's health
hmmmmmmmmmmm

Add to that the original premise that this was special Spanish beef delivered especially for Contador's taste. The diversionary issue of Clen contamination in China and other potential sources are laughable in light of that one fact. Someone actually would bring doctored beef to Contador? Was it sabotage?
 
Jun 16, 2009
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GJB123 said:
Like you do have personal knowledge of the sitaution? ROFLMAO. So please do share that with us. Or are you gonna stick to your usual drivel as you did with your personal take on industrialized farming, farm boy.

Regards
GJ

I didn't say that i had personal knowledge of the facts did i?:D
That is once again your non native speaking interpretation of what was said.
I am glad you admit that you are just jumping to conclusions without waiting for the facts...
when it is convenient for you no?
my usual drivel has exposed that you jump to conclusions when it fits your needs and prefer to wait for the facts when the scenario is less to your liking. You interpret things for others, then when your interpretation is called into question, you admit you have no knowledge and hide behind translation issues. But you stand by your most likely erroneous assumptions clinging to the remote possibility of an error in translation.
You jump to conclusions when you wish them to fit and then you hold out for more evidence when it doesn't.

And i have first hand knowledge of current farming practices, so do you have primary knowledge of farming today?

Or should we look forward to more of your self admittedly poor interpretations?
Seems to me your posts follow a bit of a pattern not incommon with those in the legal profession.
First you present your interpretation as if it were fact.
then you swagger a bit call a few names.
when the errors are pointed out to you, you stand by your assumption and ask for time for the facts to be revealed.
As your position is eroded further and further you tend to find more and more excuses.
When the position borders on the laughable
(the facts are that for AC's theory to be true many public health officials would be risking serious charges of negligence or corruption)
you try to divert attention away from your position by use of deragatory terms and interjection of another topic

"Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain, I am the GREAT & POWERFUL OZ!!!"
 
GJB123 said:
You cannot defend yourself against a mirage DEHP test if yiu are not given the results. Do I have to spell it out for you, are you stupid? It wasn't in the file that WADA sent to Spanish cycling federation, hence AC's team couldn't refute it (there was nothing to refute) and hence the disciplinary commitee couldn't mention it in their verdict.

If Mr Howman was so sure that there was a DEHP test for AC and that it could be used a supoorting evidence in this case, why wasn't it mentioned in the WADA-files sent to Spain? Answer me that one.

Do you have a link for this assertion? Here is Joe Lindsey on the decision:

And while we have some idea of what Contador presented in his defense, there has been zero reporting of what the prosecution presented to support its side – or even, in the opaque world of the RFEC tribunal, who is the prosecution.

http://bicycling.com/blogs/boulderreport/2011/02/15/contadors-case-blazes-new-trail/

If I have missed something, and it is known for a certainty that there was no mention of DEHP in the files, then my answer would be that it's because the test is not validated, and maybe until it is (see below) it can't be part of the case. IOW, Bert is getting off on a technicality. I can't do anything about that, but just because some technicality doesn't allow evidence to be considered doesn't mean I won't consider it to come to my own conclusions.

LA can't be sanctioned for the '99 samples, either, but that doesn't mean that anyone coming to his own conclusion about whether he doped can't consider that evidence. And I would say to Bert what I would say to Lance: just because you can't be sanctioned for something that looks very suspicious doesn't mean you shouldn't address the allegations. The point for superstar role models is not just to be not guilty. It's to be above suspicion.

RC expressed outrage that Bert’s reputation has been savaged. Indeed it has. The question is, what has he done to try to repair it? He has many, many options:

1) He could demand to know the specifics of the DEHP test on his samples, in order to try to refute it in a meaningful sense of the word. He can certainly afford the best scientific advice here. If the data were made up, or if there were mistakes made in the test, surely some deep digging would stand a good chance of revealing this.

2) He could offer to get tested for DEHP regularly, to see if perhaps he is one of those apparently rare individuals who has, at least at certain times, very high levels of the substance that cannot be explained by transfusion. Even the most flagrant doper, Ricco, maybe, doesn't transfuse very often. If Bert were to demonstrate consistently high DEHP levels over a period of weeks or months, everyone would accept that they were not the result of transfusion.

3) He could ask to see DEHP data from other riders, to see if perhaps the control baseline is higher than is indicated by published studies. These tests could probably be carried out in a way that didn't implicate these other riders, if it were necessary to do so for legal reasons. The samples are there, they don't have to be identified.

4) If Bert continues to eat meat on occasion, he could make sure he gets tested for CB following every such meal, to see just how likely it is that one can test positive after eating meat. Because if he really tested positive as a result of contaminated meat, I find it virtually inconceivable that it would not happen again over the course of ten, twenty or however more meals. Really, if this is a significant problem, isn't Bert, or any rider who eats meat on occasion, concerned? He would be doing the entire peloton as well as himself a huge favor by providing evidence that could bring this problem out into the open. Then the calls for setting a threshold would make sense. Everyone could see the need to do this, even if it did mean some false negatives.

5) He could also ask Fran and his close friends to do the same, to accumulate some kind of evidence that would demonstrate CB contamination from food is a real problem. If it is, surely out of hundreds of samples following a meal of meat, some more positives will turn up.

If Bert is truly innocent, as he claims, what in the world does he have to lose by taking these steps? Yet to the best of my knowledge, he has not done any of these things. The message I get is not that he is intent on proving he didn’t dope. He is intent on convincing RFEC that he should not be sanctioned. Those are not the same things, no matter how much some people conflate them.

I understand that his first priority is being allowed to race again, whatever it takes. But don’t complain about the stress you have endured, the unfair hit your reputation has taken, if you aren’t willing to take some very obvious steps that could repair the damage.


Furthermore, AC and his team have refuted the alleged plasticizer-findings in October when they first came out in German media.

Again, can you provide a link? If you mean, Bert denied that he transfused, sure. But I would hardly call that a refutation. Anyone can deny any charge. You refute a charge by providing evidence against it. Did he establish that the test never took place? No. Did he establish that the reported level of DEHP was incorrect? No. I’m not sure what you mean by “refuted”, but you seem to be using the term in a sense that would apply to any athlete testing positive who claims innocence.

Could it perhaps be that it was a rumor and that Mr Howman inadvertently reacted to that rumor without actually knowing whether it could be applied to AC's case? Because all I can find is a general nmention by him that a DEHP-test could used as supprting evidence, however he doesn't state anywhere that there actually is such a result in this particular case. But if you gave a link or anything stating otherwise, I would be might interested.

The news of the scientific paper’s publication [on DEHP test] was reported today in El Pais. The article quoted an unnamed source close to the scientific committee of WADA, who suggested that the push for approval could be linked to the Tour de France winner Alberto Contador.

“The publication complies exactly with the description of what WADA calls a validation article, which is necessary so that a method can be used officially by laboratories as an anti-doping test,” they told El Pais. “I can’t help suspecting that this is related to the position of Contador.”

http://www.velonation.com/News/ID/7...ation-in-anti-doping-cases.aspx#ixzz1EvXNxI5h

Why would he think this is related to Contador unless they believe that there is such a result?

As you for your last paragraph. You have made it abundantkly clear that you couldn't give a rat's a$$ about someone being convicted innocently. Do you apply that same notion to common poenal law as well? If yes, that to me is shocking and you are a very scary person indeed.

Not really, I just see that there is, always has been and always will be a trade-off between false positives and false negatives. Which means that protecting the innocent will always involve letting some guilty riders off. Like a great many other people, you studiously avoid confronting this sad but irrefutable fact, clinging to the fairy-tale notion of a system where no innocent person is punished AND no guilty person ever gets off. Or if you acknowledge that guilty people are constantly getting off, you refuse to confront the very serious damage this does to the innocent. You see the innocent victim getting suspended for a year or two and feel his pain. You don’t see the many innocent victims being cheated out of their livelihood, and don’t feel their pain at all. Seeing reality begins with acknowledging that there will ALWAYS be one or the other. If I appear to be scary to some people because I refuse to close my eyes and pretend this isn’t happening, so be it.

Bassons, who in effect received a lifetime ban, was a victim not simply of doping, but of an anti-doping system that allowed inferior riders to slip through the cracks. Suppose, hypothetically, there had been a different system in place that cleaned up the peloton to a degree that allowed Bassons to have a full and very successful career--but one innocent rider was suspended. Maybe you think that's a bad tradeoff. More likely, you would prefer to bury your head in the sand and pretend that tradeoffs like this don't have to occur. I'm afraid they do, and have been occurring for a long time.
 
Jul 6, 2010
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Merckx index said:
Do you have a link for this assertion? Here is Joe Lindsey on the decision:



http://bicycling.com/blogs/boulderreport/2011/02/15/contadors-case-blazes-new-trail/

You continue:



Again, can you provide a link? If you mean, Bert denied that he transfused, sure. But I would hardly call that a refutation. Did he establish that the test never took place? No. Did he establish that the reported level of DEHP was incorrect? No. I’m not sure what you mean by “refuted”, but you seem to be using the term in a sense that would apply to any athlete testing positive who claims innocence.





http://www.velonation.com/News/ID/7...ation-in-anti-doping-cases.aspx#ixzz1EvXNxI5h

Why would he think this is related to Contador unless they believe that there is such a result?



Not really, I just see that there is, always has been and always will be a trade-off between false positives and false negatives. Which means that protecting the innocent will always involve letting some guilty riders off. Like a great many other people, you studiously avoid confronting this sad but irrefutable fact, clinging to the fairy-tale notion of a system where no innocent person is punished AND no guilty person ever gets off. Or if you acknowledge that guilty people are constantly getting off, you refuse to confront the very serious damage this does to the innocent. You see the innocent victim getting suspended for a year or two and feel his pain. You don’t see the many innocent victims being cheated out of their livelihood, and don’t feel their pain at all. Seeing reality begins with acknowledging that there will ALWAYS be one or the other. If I appear to be scary to some people because I refuse to close my eyes and pretend this isn’t happening, so be it.

Bassons, who in effect received a lifetime ban, was a victim not simply of doping, but of an anti-doping system that allowed inferior riders to slip through the cracks. Suppose, hypothetically, there had been a different system in place that cleaned up the peloton to a degree that allowed Bassons to have a full and very successful career--but one innocent rider was suspended. Maybe you think that's a bad tradeoff. More likely, you would prefer to bury your head in the sand and pretend that tradeoffs like this don't have to occur. I'm afraid they do, and have been occurring for a long time.


Nicely stated. The bolded is what needs to pointed to (endlessly, for some reason) in the constant doping chatter. That's the aspect of it that truly breaks my heart, the fact that under the system as it is, the dopers get the breaks. Bummer.

Good post.
 
Merckx index said:
Not really, I just see that there is, always has been and always will be a trade-off between false positives and false negatives. Which means that protecting the innocent will always involve letting some guilty riders off. Like a great many other people, you studiously avoid confronting this sad but irrefutable fact, clinging to the fairy-tale notion of a system where no innocent person is punished AND no guilty person ever gets off. Or if you acknowledge that guilty people are constantly getting off, you refuse to confront the very serious damage this does to the innocent. You see the innocent victim getting suspended for a year or two and feel his pain. You don’t see the many innocent victims being cheated out of their livelihood, and don’t feel their pain at all. Seeing reality begins with acknowledging that there will ALWAYS be one or the other. If I appear to be scary to some people because I refuse to close my eyes and pretend this isn’t happening, so be it.

Bassons, who in effect received a lifetime ban, was a victim not simply of doping, but of an anti-doping system that allowed inferior riders to slip through the cracks. Suppose, hypothetically, there had been a different system in place that cleaned up the peloton to a degree that allowed Bassons to have a full and very successful career--but one innocent rider was suspended. Maybe you think that's a bad tradeoff. More likely, you would prefer to bury your head in the sand and pretend that tradeoffs like this don't have to occur. I'm afraid they do, and have been occurring for a long time.

I abbreviated your response because it is all good but had been previously appreciated. The tradeoffs in Contador's case are now as far reaching as Lance's collateral damage, it would seem. Alberto is willing to implicate an entire industry for the sake of his passing reprieve. Unfortunately the beef industry in Spain will still feel the pain even after Alberto fades to a mediocre career end, ala' Armstrong.
Likewise legitimate charitable efforts will be compromised in the wake of cynicism following Lance's Livestrong abuses.
And all of this about cycling? It really sucks.
 
Sep 25, 2009
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Merckx index said:
If I have missed something, and it is known for a certainty that there was no mention of DEHP in the files, then my answer <snip>
yes, you did and your self-serving answer has been among the few i tried to entertain.

you're free to assume anything you wish, you can dream anything that makes your day but it wont make a whiff of difference in cas. you certainly can win or lose on internet forums depending on who logs in near your posting time. but i repeat, it's arguing in your own head, not the way cas would.

the fact that you and other english-speaking media are so ignorant is unfortunate. almost all major official papers were posted in this very thread. it took only 10 pages of back and forth to throw a discussion completely off track and come back to what’s been killed 10 times.
http://forum.cyclingnews.com/showpost.php?p=442815&postcount=874

there is not a single official word in any interviews or documents that contador was tested for plasticizers. not one. It remains a speculation first broken by the german article.

The rest of your post #992 has been addressed many times. Only an incompetent or stupid defence team will act the way you want them to and comment on rumours to say nothing of addressing them in the official papers.

if you assume his lawyers are infinitely stupid and are willing to utter such arguments in from of a mirror, you certainly will win those arguments.
 
Jan 13, 2011
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Cimber said:
only 0,25% of the cattle in EU is tested for clen. Also interesting that some1 in the the likely supply-chain of the meat has formerly been penalized for clen in cattle. Very intereting if that is true.

CN has some news on Bert's defense:

http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/contadors-lawyer-reveals-defence-strategy

Using a term that's been thrown around a lot lately, you've still got to 'connect the dots' to come anywhere close to a conclusion that exonerates him. I am still to see or hear hard physical evidence to show it was consumed through beef by mistake, and that's because he cannot come up with the goods. Strict liability has failed spectacularly if he does not get a ban.
 
Sep 25, 2009
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Cimber said:
only 0,25% of the cattle in EU is tested for clen. Also interesting that some1 in the the likely supply-chain of the meat has formerly been penalized for clen in cattle. Very intereting if that is true.

CN has some news on Bert's defense:

http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/contadors-lawyer-reveals-defence-strategy
old news. nothing personal, but had we not been exposed to pages and pages of people trying to insult each other, you'd see my related post sooner.
 
python said:
yes, you did and your self-serving answer has been among the few i tried to entertain.

you're free to assume anything you wish, you can dream anything that makes your day but it wont make a whiff of difference in cas. you certainly can win or lose on internet forums depending on who logs in near your posting time. but i repeat, it's arguing in your own head, not the way cas would.

the fact that you and other english-speaking media are so ignorant is unfortunate. almost all major official papers were posted in this very thread. it took only 10 pages of back and forth to throw a discussion completely off track and come back to what’s been killed 10 times.
http://forum.cyclingnews.com/showpost.php?p=442815&postcount=874

there is not a single official word in any interviews or documents that contador was tested for plasticizers. not one. It remains a speculation first broken by the german article.

The rest of your post #992 has been addressed many times. Only an incompetent or stupid defence team will act the way you want them to and comment on rumours to say nothing of addressing them in the official papers.

if you assume his lawyers are infinitely stupid and are willing to utter such arguments in from of a mirror, you certainly will win those arguments.

Thanks for jumping in. My patience war running a bit low yesterday.

Reagrds
GJ
 
Merckx index said:
snip...

http://www.velonation.com/News/ID/7...ation-in-anti-doping-cases.aspx#ixzz1EvXNxI5h

Why would he think this is related to Contador unless they believe that there is such a result?


snip...

Naturally I found that link also and it does NOT prove or show that Howman said anything about Contador. All he states is, that it is good that the plasticizer test is mving forward and that, althouigh not usable as definitive proof of blood dpoing, it could be used before a tribunal as supporting evidence.

The article then goes on to state the following:

The news of the scientific paper’s publication was reported today in El Pais. The article quoted an unnamed source close to the scientific committee of WADA, who suggested that the push for approval could be linked to the Tour de France winner Alberto Contador.

“The publication complies exactly with the description of what WADA calls a validation article, which is necessary so that a method can be used officially by laboratories as an anti-doping test,” they told El Pais. “I can’t help suspecting that this is related to the position of Contador.”

So we have an "unnamed source" (that is not Mr Howman then) who said that the push for approval "could be linked" to Contador's case. The "they" in the next paragraph, and this is simple comprehensive reading, can only link back to the unnamed source and not to Mr Howman. So my question remains where did Howman explictly confirm the positive plasticizer-test for Contador as you claim he did. Bewcause this link proves nothing to that effect. And if he did so, why wasn't it in the WADA-file, although he himself claims it could (and should) be used as supporting evidence? Please show me the link.

For now all we have is your believe that there was a plasticizer test for Contador based on an unconfirmed report in a German newspaper that was at no time confirmed by the UCI or WADA and was not part of the proceedings against Contador.

Regards
GJ
 
Oct 16, 2010
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I'm willing to bet a couple of bucks that AC is gonna fall in front of CAS, and that DEHP values will play a role in the decision.
No, no links, just gutfeeling, AC down, in LA's slipstream.

where there is rumours, there is a source for the rumours, and where there is a source, there is, well, either a sick mind, or the truth. My bet is on the latter.

Also, since McQuaid has turned his opinion on LA, he'll also be more keen on bringing down AC. Not that he's alone to decide whether AC stands or falls, but he'll be an influential factor nonetheless.

EDIT: admittedly, rumors can also emerge from misunderstandings, but still, i'm holding my bet.
 
Jul 30, 2009
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nuggs1 said:
Strict liability has failed spectacularly if he does not get a ban.

Strict liability is nonsense when lawyers can create reasonable doubt that clen could be in the food chain in places you should not expect to find it eg EU sourced beef.

less than 1% of livestock and tested and a possible source may have previous - that creates enough doubt for me

(obviously I think he doped, but giving it to Schleck and pronouncing him a clean winner would be as much of a joke as this whole farce - the best cheat won as far as I am concerned)
 
Sep 25, 2009
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sniper said:
I'm willing to bet a couple of bucks that AC is gonna fall in front of CAS, and that DEHP values will play a role in the decision.
as you, i'd absolutely love to see cas to take up this case and expose it to a rational analysis on the basis of facts and evidence. i'm skeptical and tbh tired of the crud generated by both sides. unlike you, i'm not sure, though i could be mistaken, if the plasticizer test will be brought to light during the cas hearing. not because it never took place but because it may bring a lot of issues, wada and the uci would prefer to keep away and can't leverage (like who else failed, was the entire 2010 podium a joke again, if the test was good, why was it not brought forth in the official papers at the right time etc...)
where there is rumours, there is a source for the rumours, and where there is a source, there is, well, either a sick mind, or the truth. My bet is on the latter.
agreed. i am 100% positive that a series of plasticizer tests were run by the cologne lab during the 2010 tour (there are several direct and less direct pointers to that). however, it remains a fair question if the german journo who leaked was reporting the story entirely accurately. and he may not have had a 'sick mind'. manipulating media by controlled leaks is an old business.

ps.
to answer your earlier question about my sig...i've always been following gesink and now that i see great eddy concurs with my opinion, i felt it deserved a mention. cheers.
 
Winterfold said:
Strict liability is nonsense when lawyers can create reasonable doubt that clen could be in the food chain in places you should not expect to find it eg EU sourced beef.

less than 1% of livestock and tested and a possible source may have previous - that creates enough doubt for me

(obviously I think he doped, but giving it to Schleck and pronouncing him a clean winner would be as much of a joke as this whole farce - the best cheat won as far as I am concerned)

Ok, just for laughs, what percentage of livestock should be tested for you to think that Contador's story is less likely than Gasquet's kiss?
 
Jul 30, 2009
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I dont know if 0.25% is statistically significant or not for that kind of testing - I'm sure some of the medical research experts on here could let us know that. My layman's gut feel on it is - its not enough - 5-10% would be more convincing.

But the exact number is to some extent irrelevant - lots of meat is not tested - you could test +ve for clen and you could have consumed that clen inadvertently from eating EU beef - however small the chance it does exist - and in the absence of a foolproof test for blood doping what can you do?

The previous for using clen from one of the possible suppliers should really put this one to bed.
 
If one percent of cows is tested, and all are clean, then that's A LOT of beef to make a meal from, for demanding guests.
If one percent of cars of a certain model will explode unannounced, but there is a simple test to know it will happen or nor, what do you buy? Yes, you could just eat chicken. But the responsibility when eating beef is all yours.
Contador needs to be banned, and for a full 2 years, starting a day in July.
 
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