lean said:you should know it as well as anyone, that's how forums/debate works. The vast majority of calm moderate views in the middle are drowned out by the vehemence of extremes on either side. you can wine about it all you want, it ain't gonna change a thing. each of us chooses to HTFU or go away.
No, you can't and neither can I (make requests). None of us are any better than the others. This "teaming" which leads to group bias is especially disruptive lately. You're welcome to continue your bromance via PM tho.
Back on topic. LBL is a seriously long and difficult race. It's also a one day event which makes it easy to slip through the antidoping noose. I'll spare the lecture on glow times, etc. I respect Vayer but I have serious doubts about winning LBL clean.
Whilst I appreciate the sentiment from Race Radio, I can more than handle myself as well. He is right about one thing though, I don't post here as frequently as I once did because there are just far too many posters of the type you describe, extremists that shout the loudest. I don't understand people who cling to a fixed position and are unwilling to move from that position regardless of what information is provided to them. People who dismiss stuff just because it doesn't fit their agenda.
Vayer is the perfect example, he is held up to the high heavens for calling out SKY but then is more or less dismissed because he says that things have changed and that clean riders are winning. What has Vayer got to gain by rider X is clean whilst at the same time saying Froome is dirty?
The same people who now dismiss what Vayer is saying were salivating at the mouth with excitement when Di Luca said 90% of the Giro field were doping. That was accepted by some as almost gospel even though Di Luca himself said doping had become a private matter and clearly has credibility issues.
I don't think Vayer has any credibility issues or Kimmage for that matter but certain posters will believe Di Luca over these guys because it fits their agenda.
I don't believe a good clean rider winning a one day race in the modern era is any less believable than LeMond winning the Tour de France against doped riders, yet there are posters who would defend LeMond to the grave but dismiss a one day success as impossible without doping. Ironically even LeMond himself once said that he still thought it possible for a clean rider to win a classic in the 90s EPO era.
I don't think people realise this but if you look at most PT teams, I would guess on average 50% of their rosters have turned pro in the last 5-6 years. Even DiLuca has admitted doping is now a private thing so I would imagine the young riders are not pressured by their peers or management to dope the way they once did. Anyone who has read Rough Ride would understand how open doping was in a team previously but that seem's to be all gone. If Kimmage had not felt the pressure to be one of the boys, would he have been as likely to have doped, I don't think so.
If riders believe things have gotten better, then they are less likely to feel the need to dope to keep up. After all a lot of doping is about psychology and again this is something Kimmage admitted in Rough Ride. It is hard to know where things are currently but based on a lot of things, it does seem to be a lot better. The only person to go against that tide has been Di Luca.
I have never believed there is just one side to this debate but unfortunately in the clinic, the minute you try to bring balance, you are usually subjected to the name-calling and sneering etc. There are plenty of people here who it is possible to have interesting and infromative discussion with, but sadly as you say most of them are drowned out by the idiots.
