the big ring
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- Jul 28, 2009
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doolols said:With a completely clean peloton, The Clinic would disappear, and with it, some of its most vocal posters.
I welcome that day.
doolols said:With a completely clean peloton, The Clinic would disappear, and with it, some of its most vocal posters.
doolols said:...With a completely clean peloton, The Clinic would disappear, and with it, some of its most vocal posters.
the big ring said:I welcome that day.
sittingbison said:Its a bit like the Gestapo, concentration camps and WW2.
Yup, there is a certain exhilaration in flying a Spitfire, but the reason for doing so is to overcome the filthy Nazi Regime and all their atrocities. And when the victory is achieved, the war over, sure you give up the Spit but you get to go home and enjoy peace. In fact not give up the Spit, walk away from it and never look back.
Unfortunately the victory for clean cycling is far from certain, its about 1942.
the big ring said:And Garmin and Sky are annexing "clean cycling" for themselves.
blackcat said:Anglophones.
Anglos=/=doping. Its a pleonasm.
F*ck David Millar.Millar, who came back in 2006 from a two-year doping ban after admitting his guilt, is furious at Landis.
"He's reached the end of the road and I just find it disgusting," said Millar from his home training base in Girona, Spain. "He's a liar and a cheat and he has nothing left in cycling so he just wants to burn the house down."
After Landis' ban four years ago, Millar said he tried calling him to give advice on how to return to the sport. He never received a return call.
"If he had stood up and manned up four years ago, he'd be racing the Tour de France now," Millar said. "He'd have a different book out. He'd have not lost a penny. He'd be admired by young people. He would have a different life ahead of him. He'd be in a decent mental state. He'd be sober.
"And he'd be married."
However, many in cycling believe doping was widespread in the early 2000s. How does anyone know Landis is lying?
"That's the problem," Millar said. "Now he's lost the ability to tell the truth whether it is or not. That's what's despicable about it - and sad. Because I'm sure there's truth in some of it. But it doesn't mean anything anymore."
Added McQuaid: "It's possible there's certain elements of truth but it's possible there are certain elements of lies. Therefore, that discredits everything he said."
Read more: Landis fallout continues as Garmin official gets support in doping allegations - The Denver Post http://www.denverpost.com/headlines/ci_15175682?obref=obnetwork
No, they're both talking about Landis, and saying exactly the same thing.bobbins said:Was McQuaid talking about Millar in that quote ^
Once the war is done, you still have veteran gatherings and reenactment. We'll use the Clinic to discuss the history of dope, being proud of our small contributions to the war.sittingbison said:Its a bit like the Gestapo, concentration camps and WW2.
Yup, there is a certain exhilaration in flying a Spitfire, but the reason for doing so is to overcome the filthy Nazi Regime and all their atrocities. And when the victory is achieved, the war over, sure you give up the Spit but you get to go home and enjoy peace. In fact not give up the Spit, walk away from it and never look back.
Unfortunately the victory for clean cycling is far from certain, its about 1942.
noddy69 said:That is from 2010 and while relevant to a degree not the most up to date material. Millar holding himself up as a bastion back then and trying to reach out and tell Floyd how to come back, and even goading that he would still be married is despicable. I can imagine how that would go.
"Floyd just keep your mouth shut, dont spit in the soup and rat out everyone, we can protect you as long as you play the game".....I wonder does Millar's quote not sum up Floyd but himself and in reality he is lashing out at floyd when in reality it is addressed to himself.
"Now he's lost the ability to tell the truth whether it is or not.
I believe Millar has never told the truth in full, he has never let go of the secrets that shame cycling and has only served to protect those who tarnish the sport by hiding behind his own culpability.
the big ring said:I still can't get over the implication, by the way Alberto's Vuelta win was avoided, that Millar doesn't consider him clean.
Mrs John Murphy said:Simple question for all those defending Millar:
'Why should we believe or trust David Millar given his previous statements and actions - specifically his earlier condemnation of Landis, his praise of Armstrong and defence of Contador?'
Maxiton said:Excellent point, one I should have thought of before being so effusive in my praise. It was fun, though, watching McQuaid squirm.
the big ring said:fun and effectively distracting.
Mellow Velo said:Corruption at the highest level of the UCI, not being under the spotlight, at the moment.![]()
Paul Kimmage @PaulKimmage
David Millar is not a journalist yet but he took his first step this weekend. David has many admirers and many critics...
...and I was once his biggest critic, but we're friends now. He truly loves the sport but (as I once reminded him) his love is blind.
...so he says some incredibly stupid things from time to time. His comments on Floyd Landis for example, and a recent tweet on Contador...
...spring to mind. But there were signs last weekend that he is opening his eyes. I hope, for the sake of the sport, he continues...
I made a lot of mistakes at the start of my career. And still do. Hopefully David can kick-on and be a great journalist...
...my only advice is a tip I got from my friend David Walsh in 1990: "Never run from the truth."
sniper said:Great post (up until that tiny boldfaced bit)
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sniper said:... JV is a marketing strategist. There is still enough money to be made in cycling for JV to stick around. He could have made good bucks outside of cycling. If he'd be interested in clean cycling, imo he sh/w/could have left cycling long ago, knowing (like you and me do) that clean cycling is a utopia as long as the cash flow is as big as it is.
thehog said:acoggan said:Thinking for a moment: how about McGee? I seem to recall him trying to become a GC contender, only to find that he tended to "crack" after a week or two of racing.
Dean Woods, McGree all tried.
McGee finished 8th in Giro one year several minutes down. He tried the whole weight loss thing as well. But he documented the reason why he couldn't complete in no uncertain terms.
"dope"
The only way he could become a world class GT rider was to dope. He then went back to prologues and won the honour of holding the leaders jersey in the Giro, Tour and Vuelta.
In his own words:
"I believe that given the right training, team working creation, recovery and mental approach that anything is possible in my profession. I have not, do not, and never will take performance enhancing drugs or procedures to make this belief come true. Why would I? And yet, given recent estimates and accusations in the media by cyclists, journalists, government officials and even a member of the World Anti Doping Authority (WADA) I fall into a category of 'must be' doped riders.
F*** You.
Come and live with me. Sit in a car and watch me train. Sit up all night stressing over upcoming races and map out game plans. Share the pain through injury and feel the torment when for unknown reasons the form is just not there."
Ex-team mate and leader of Philippe Gaumont, Dave Millar has made a steady if not quiet start to the year. Continuing to train and prepare himself for the coming season, Millar has been travelling to Northern Spain along with new teammate?s Stuart O?Grady and Matt White, helping to ease the pressure surrounding him from the fallout of this on-going media fall out. And remember folks, this year could well be Millar Time?..
“I have always hired riders that were, first, 100-percent committed to clean racing once they are part of our organization, and second, that I knew could perform at the highest level clean. That doesn’t mean winning everything, that means performing at the highest level, and doing it without doping. Obviously my approach has not been judgmental to the past, as evidenced by fact that David Millar is on our team. Our team has never condemned anyone. We accepted David Millar with open arms into our team because of his abilities, his focus and his dedication to racing clean with us.”