iejeecee said:http://www.bbc.com/sport/0/athletics/34101774
how hypocritical can the BBC get?
Dafne Schippers:
Because of where the sport is, because of what the sport has seen, the questions began almost immediately.
This is a woman who switched her attention full-time to the sprints in June this year having made her name as a heptathlete. She has knocked four-tenths of a second of her personal best in the space of a year, and become the first European woman to win a world sprint medal in 10 years.
Both Schippers and her coach insist that she is clean. Maybe it is a shame that a performance so astounding produces such a response. Equally, the sport cannot claim to have learned from its past if it does not.
The English...
There was brilliance from the old guard. All three of the home gold medallists from London 2012's Super Saturday, Mo Farah, Greg Rutherford and Jessica Ennis-Hill, came back to win gold once again, in Ennis-Hill's case just 13 months after the birth of her son Reggie and nine months after she began her training again with a 15-minute pedal on a bike.
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BBC is getting as bad as mainstream US news, if not worse. It's too bad, because in the past you could count on them on providing decent news and sports coverage, now it's filled with hypocrisy, lazy journalism, heavy bias, tabloid puff pieces, etc. The way things are going, if someone came out and publicly criticized Farah and Froome, they would be executed William Wallace style. We've seen how in the last few Olympics (Summer AND Winter), the host nation seems to have a major spike in performances and final medal counts. It happened in SLC, Beijing, Vancouver, London and Sochi...