del1962 said:See Contador's team manager is still denying TH's accusation that he put him in touch with Fuentes, this may hamper the team;s ability to get a pro - licence
Le Baroudeur said:It has to. The word is that Tyler's twin has corroborated his story.
hrotha said:That shouldn't go here. Bugno is the head of the riders union, so what he said is particularly troubling.
del1962 said:I think it is seems failry obvious that Riiis is mentioned in Tyler's affadavit, you seem to have a problem with TH though.
Alberto Contador and Miguel Indurain have recently, and bizarrely, defended Armstrong. "I've thought a lot about them", Millar says of the former Tour de France winners, "because I know Contador and Indurain. I was so disappointed when I read those comments. But I live in Spain and have lots of Spanish friends. Our Anglo-Saxon mentality is puritanical – 'Punish 'em forever, they did wrong.' But the Spanish say: 'He's a father of five, he works for charity, he rides a bike … let's move on.' It was incredibly inappropriate what they said and, believe me, they went 'Oh ****!' when it broke. But they had no idea that what they said was wrong because their mentality is so different."
LaFlorecita said:In an interview with French tv Alberto said that he is all for zero tolerance and that there is no place in cycling for liars and cheaters. And he also said that he has never done anything against the rules and that his comments about Armstrong were misinterpreted.
So what's your opinion on his comments?LaFlorecita said:In an interview with French tv Alberto said that he is all for zero tolerance and that there is no place in cycling for liars and cheaters. And he also said that he has never done anything against the rules and that his comments about Armstrong were misinterpreted.
cineteq said:I thought so. Let's focus on the future.![]()
sniper said:sounds like the typical words of an unrepentent doper.
the peloton-internal rules of cycling are simple: dope or be a dope.
so if Dirty says he's never done anything against the rules, well, he's right.
Typical that he can't utter the words 'i never used PEDs'.
Makes one wonder what they asked him when he took the liedetector test.
What a sorry-assed liar.
I was asking what do you think of it. Do you have an opinion at all?LaFlorecita said:Wtf I just don't know what you want me to say, I don't know if what he says is true I just post it here
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cineteq said:I was asking what do you think of it. Do you have an opinion at all?
We're cool, fair enough.LaFlorecita said:No I don't have an opinion because I don't know if I can believe him on this matter. Sounds good to me though. It doesn't have to be true. That's the way it works, Wiggo and Kittel did it too.
he's becoming a pretty embarrassing figure. your blind support for him is pretty embarrassing as well, though that's just an opinion.LaFlorecita said:Is "I've never doped" ok though?
http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/contador-will-appeal-tour-de-france-doping-sanction
sniper said:he's becoming a pretty embarrassing figure. your blind support for him is pretty embarrassing as well, though that's just an opinion.
sniper said:he's becoming a pretty embarrassing figure. your blind support for him is pretty embarrassing as well, though that's just an opinion.
in germany dirty is no more than a symbol of the spanish golden doping generation.
germany represents almost half of europe. the envious and bitter half i guess.
sniper said:he's becoming a pretty embarrassing figure. your blind support for him is pretty embarrassing as well, though that's just an opinion.
in germany dirty is no more than a symbol of the spanish golden doping generation.
germany represents almost half of europe. the envious and bitter half i guess.
sniper said:Makes one wonder what they asked him when he took the liedetector test.
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Le Baroudeur said:So they like to talk about Spain do they?
And there was I thinking that Germany had enough to talk about with their own doping past, present and coverups? I guess it's always easier to look outside your own borders for blame... Doping your socks off and still getting beaten must hurt, especially considering the huge contribution to the art given by them during the glowing years. Can't they just give Jörg his own TV show? He perfectly fits the media bill of lashing out blame and refusal to accept his own limitations, responsibilities and flaws...
I would have thought an unbiased, open minded, well intended, bright spark like you would be able to read around and between the media ad nauseam and enjoy the real play as the après-piste politics unfold?
sniper said:the German press pay comparatively much attention to blatant cheating. Basically, they don't like it, they don't apologize it, and they don't beat around the bush when describing it. They tackle it.
Whether it's their own politicians doing plagiarism or taking bribes (regardless how small), their own sporters using PEDs (e.g. T-mobile, Pechstein), or Sjakhtar's goal against that Danish club: they (the press that is!) show and express their disgust.
And no, they don't hide their own doping past. Not sure why you imply that in your post. You wouldn't have if you were acquainted with German sports press. In fact, the government recently funded a research project that was supposed to look into the (East and West) German doping past, but the research and the researchers were sabotaged from above in various different ways, particularly by the German Olympic Committee who were clearly afraid of the results. How do I know? Indeed, because the German press covered the story in detail. You know what the unanimous conclusion in the press was? Indeed, that present-day German topsport is likely to be rife with doping. By the way, before quitting due to the resistance from above, the research team did manage to leak some preliminary results: the 1966 German soccer team who became world champions was doped.
Imagine something similar happening in Spain. rolleyes.