Mad Elephant Man
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- Sep 22, 2012
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Manuthan said:Alfredo cordova .. Former kelme and lyberty doc..
I hope media start to dig more about milan
Mad Elephant Man said:Just heard on a sports radio show here in Adelaide that it is rumored that the supplement Essendon were taking was a synthetic form of testosterone that is not banned yet by WADA but will be in May.
Unfortunately I missed the name of the product and it is only a rumor.
sniper said:btw.
Ironic to see Alfredo got only 10 IG units to run 2 cycling teams.
RSOC got 40 to 50 units.
Did anybody say doping is less prevalent or important in soccer than in cycling?
"San Millán" doesn't sound a lot like "San Milan".the asian said:Could be AC Milan or Inigo San Milan
hrotha said:"San Millán" doesn't sound a lot like "San Milan".
You're probably kidding, but there's people out there who would take it at face value.
sniper said:I noticed that too. Could be a coincidence of course. The German squad just had a couple of cancellations of players who played the whole game in the weekend. But an interesting coincidence in any case.
true.
Agree, though you're not counting with the national and international press, who might smell blood and decide to go digging.
Fearless Greg Lemond said:Milan is indeed a strange name on the papers, like they do not have the Milan medical centre. Maybe a codename.
Furthermore, Australia must be a dopers heaven.
the asian said:
Inter Milan won't need to be afraid for now though.Milan usually means AC Milan.
They had a lot of success during Fuentes hey days and a club owned by Berlusconi engaged in team wide doping shouldn't be too much of a surprise.
hrotha said:Joking aside, those aren't codenames, they're abbreviations. "Kelm" for "Kelme", "RSoc" for "Real Sociedad". Obviously Fuentes wasn't concerned about these documents being seen by an outsider. "Milan", in sports, can only mean "AC Milan" in Spain.
edit: someone at Parlamento Ciclista mentioned it might be Milaneza-Maia. However, the doses are the same as for RSoc, which suggests a similar program.
Good call, when you look at their roster it looks like a match. Even old buddy Mauri was there.hrotha said:Joking aside, those aren't codenames, they're abbreviations. "Kelm" for "Kelme", "RSoc" for "Real Sociedad". Obviously Fuentes wasn't concerned about these documents being seen by an outsider. "Milan", in sports, can only mean "AC Milan" in Spain.
edit: someone at Parlamento Ciclista mentioned it might be Milaneza-Maia. However, the doses are the same as for RSoc, which suggests a similar program.
sniper said:what if it's a codename for Barca?
in 2005 Frank Rijkaard was head coach.
ex-AC Milan.
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Albatros said:Nice one. I buy it, especially with a Dutch manager at the helm. Having studied doping in football extensively your are one of the worst lot throughout history. Still, Cruyff never heard anything ever.
sniper said:i'd readily assume we are.
De Boer, Stam, Davids, and I 'm probably forgetting one or the other.
There might be an interesting correlation, by the way, between those positives, AC Milan, and FC Barca.
Do we know if Fuentes prescribed nandrolon?
Matschiner hinted contaminated T products in 2003. Why not a similar case in 2001?Albatros said:Nandrolone is a doping substance very hard to eliminate and thus easily detectable. Where they not testing for it until all of the sudden?
this indeed.zebedee said:...
One cannot say for sure, but it seems unlikely in my view that such a prominent Italian club would use a Madrid-based, Spanish doctor as an outreach doping facility.