Don't be late Pedro said:Would Blood bags offer such a great improvement in one day races? I have always seen it as a tool for recovery more than anything else. Most people would go into a one day race fairly fresh and so their HCT would be close to 'normal' anyway. What kind of gains could be expected without flagging?
pmcg76 said:My point is simple, nobody really knows how many riders were on EPO in 1992, they can guess but it is just that, a guess.
Nobody knows how many riders were doing blood bags, EPO in 2013 so to say LeMond beat a few guys on EPO whilst Martin beat an entire field on BB/EPO is projecting something they wish to be true.
Race Radio said:There is a misconception abut the early days of EPO. It took years before riders and doctors figure out how to use it and combine it with a full program. In many cases riders "Crashed" after using it as their body struggled to manufacture new blood cells.
I see people tossing out 89,90,91 as start dates for EPO use. Edwig Van Hooydonck won Flanders in 91.....Clean
roundabout said:Perhaps Bugno as well?
pmcg76 said:Would LeMond have shown up as well if everyone were on BBs/EPO in his era? If his performances 91-94 are anything to go by then, No would be the answer. So how do you compare and contrast exaclty?
Netserk said:Talk about projecting...
DW clearly said that since Martin won L-B-L he beat all the other riders in that race. Of all those riders some were probably doping. If there were 20 dopers and 180 clean riders, he beat all 20 dopers and all 180 clean riders. If there were 40 dopers and 160 clean riders, he beat all of the dopers too.
He didn't say that all the riders were dopers, but that of all the riders who doped, Martin beat them all. Every single one of them.
A bit likeGuyIncognito said:The original. His domination at that infamous Giro was just silly. He could drop anyone at will anywhere.
1)Not in the '92 ITT.SaxonUK said:1)Wouldn't that mean Lemond beat every doped rider in the field?
2)Are we saying that if someone wins a race they must be doped since they beat doped riders?
GuyIncognito said:The original. His domination at that infamous Giro was just silly. He could drop anyone at will anywhere.
red_flanders said:You would have to assume the junior ranks were fully doped to imagine Lemond not showing up. He was seen from his late teens as someone with immense talent, beating pros of the day at that point already. He was a freak amongst freaks. No question in my mind that he'd have shown up as what he was as a junior, even now. I would add only that the difference between him and the others in his age group would likely have been smaller. But he'd have been a prodigy all the same.
Dr. Maserati said:The reason LeMond was introduced in this thread was about the comparison in PEDs, not talent.
LeMond if clean was still beating or very competitive at a time of essentially unrestricted PED use.
Therefore, now with PED use being somewhat restricted would mean a rider who is talented (not on a LeMond scale obviously) could be competitive while clean.
red_flanders said:You would have to assume the junior ranks were fully doped to imagine Lemond not showing up. He was seen from his late teens as someone with immense talent, beating pros of the day at that point already. He was a freak amongst freaks. No question in my mind that he'd have shown up as what he was as a junior, even now. I would add only that the difference between him and the others in his age group would likely have been smaller. But he'd have been a prodigy all the same.
Sky mention - everyone down a shot.Benotti69 said:Sky have disproved that myth.
What does regulate their doping mean? And Kohls comments were in 2009, just after the BP had opened a case.Benotti69 said:Bernard Kohl said the BP helped riders regulate their doping.
Plenty of riders have not dropped a level over the last few years. Piti being an example. Scarponi another. Horner also disproves the idea that anti doping is anyway effective.
crucial stuff right here.Netserk said:Whilst the restrictions are there, so are more knowledge for the dopers.
what controls?Dr. Maserati said:Sky mention - everyone down a shot.
What does regulate their doping mean? And Kohls comments were in 2009, just after the BP had opened a case.
Again, you say "plenty of riders" and then give 3 examples out of 700+ pros.
Just so I am clear - there will always be those who will attempt to dope and find the weakness in the system - but this does not take away that all these controls do restrict the ability to dope with impunity.
Serious question - what is crucial about that?sniper said:crucial stuff right here.
Is the risk/reward ratio the exact same as it was 10 years ago? 20 years ago?sniper said:and there's the risk reward ratio.
look at Garmin. lol. look at large parts of the peloton. dominated by guys who benefited from doping.
risk-reward...
All controls, the collective.sniper said:what controls?
the BP is flawed in many aspects, we've gone through that plenty of times.
Dr. Maserati said:All controls, the collective.
In the early 90's a rider could dope with impunity.
Indeed the BP is flawed - as are many other controls, regardless they have frustrated the dopers who have to use lower doses of PEDs, or less effective methods.
Therefore that lessens the advantage a doper would get.
Dr. Maserati said:All controls, the collective.
In the early 90's a rider could dope with impunity.
Indeed the BP is flawed - as are many other controls, regardless they have frustrated the dopers who have to use lower doses of PEDs, or less effective methods.
Therefore that lessens the advantage a doper would get.
Dr. Maserati said:Sky mention - everyone down a shot.
What does regulate their doping mean? And Kohls comments were in 2009, just after the BP had opened a case.
Again, you say "plenty of riders" and then give 3 examples out of 700+ pros.
Just so I am clear - there will always be those who will attempt to dope and find the weakness in the system - but this does not take away that all these controls do restrict the ability to dope with impunity.
Benotti69 said:Sky have disproved that myth.
Bernard Kohl said the BP helped riders regulate their doping.
Plenty of riders have not dropped a level over the last few years. Piti being an example. Scarponi another. Horner also disproves the idea that anti doping is anyway effective.
Are they? As in 'much faster'?Netserk said:So why are riders much faster today than in 1992?
Why give a site that just mentions all dopers throughout the last 10+ years?Benotti69 said:Want more examples? dopeology.org
Horner it would appear dopers with impunity.
The BP question - I dont know, but not enough.SundayRider said:Has it though? Or do the just 'prepare' for every race now? Bit like Wiggins/Froome. How many riders have been sanctioned by the BP?
