rhubroma said:What practically all riders in every era have faced.
But to your inane and rather puerile inquires, I'd never have done what he did because I'm incapable. Not because I'm holier than though, but simply because I don't have within the type of arrogance, ruthlessness and brazenness needed to do what he did. If anything this was his special talent. And it was no less than cultivating ‘invincibility’ in becoming the mafia boss of cycling, which transcended his status as mere doped athlete in creating an appalling conflict of interests none of his rivals could take advantage of. One by one they were popped, either during or after, except him. That's power, not talent.
Such a power position only multiplied the fraud, beyond all measure. As has been said over and over again, it wasn't just the doping, but the ruthless pursuit of gaining an edge, of unscrupulously eliminating as much as humanly possible all chance of defeat, that didn't involve merely doping, but systemic support. All the while his American fan base and mass media were too stupid and clueless to do anything else but surrender to the fable.
I don’t think any other cyclist had his unique ability to manipulate everything and stack the odds in his favor, for which athleticism played only a relative part. This dialectic goes beyond a mere discussion about activeness vs. passiveness and into the diabolical.
So you would never have doped. You would have walked away. That's fine. How many of you folk on here can HONESTLY say you would have walked away?
