- May 15, 2010
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Alpe d'Huez said:Amazing that there are people out there who actually believe Ferrari was merely working as a coach and had nothing to do with doping.
Moose McKnuckles said:Nobody believes that Alpe d'Huez. Nobody. The only point of all this is to sow misinformation and doubt about Ferrari's guilt and to slime Lemond. We've seen it over and over again. The Andreus were attacked, Lemond was attacked, Kimmage, etc., etc.
If you make as much money as Lance, you can hire a lot of muppets especially at the deal he must be getting for the ones who post here.
eleven said:Lol. eh..no.
you should check your "Facts" before you post such things. Come to think of it, you have quite a history of wrong "facts" about Armstrong etc...on this board. A pattern, one might say, of being wrong.
Race Radio said:If I had a long history of being wrong then please point out where.
So are you saying that Public Strategies did not prepare the public powerpoint presentation for the Trek-Lemond case? They did, they even admitted so in court. They then fought to hide what other work PS was doing for them, what do you think they are trying to hide?
Are you saying that the Trek Spokesman, Bill Mashek, who was the public face of the recent federal subpoenas
http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/m...trong_sponsor_trek_in_cycling_drug_probe.html
Is not an employee of Public Strategies?
http://www.pstrategies.com/index.php/bios/consulting/william-mashek.htm
Are you saying that Mark MicKinnon, the guy who sits on the board of Livestrong and crafted the media strategy behind Armstrong's return is not the same guy who works at Public Strategies?
http://www.pstrategies.com/index.php/bios/senior-strategists/mark-mckinnon.htm
In the same building as Armstrong's CSE management firm?
It appears obvious who here is often wrong.
Alpe d'Huez said:Amazing that there are people out there who actually believe Ferrari was merely working as a coach and had nothing to do with doping.
Moose McKnuckles said:........
If you make as much money as Lance, you can hire a lot of muppets especially at the deal he must be getting for the ones who post here.
Moose McKnuckles said:I'm a Lemond fan, of course. I have seen ZERO evidence that he ever doped. I saw the guy suffer like a dog for his 3 Tour wins and cheer Armstrong on until Lance's ties with Ferrari came to light.
scribe said:You actually think a connected TdF champion hadn't a clue what was going on with Armstrong and cyclists in general before this Ferrari connection became news? Which was incidentally right about when it was clear Armstrong was favored to eclipse Lemond's number of titles.
scribe said:You actually think a connected TdF champion hadn't a clue what was going on with Armstrong and cyclists in general before this Ferrari connection became news? Which was incidentally right about when it was clear Armstrong was favored to eclipse Lemond's number of titles.
goober said:Bravo...
"But what Greg does not know, or pretends not to know, is that one of such “confidants” actually clearly mentions his name and that of his doctor in relation to doping events."
http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/open-letter-from-dr-michele-ferrari
Somewhere Jim Henson just rolled over in his grave.Moose McKnuckles said:If you make as much money as Lance, you can hire a lot of muppets....
CitizenErased said:Hahaha, exactly!
Everybody in the professional cycling world knew of LA working with Ferrari, since 1995. It was no news when it came "public" in 2001.
CitizenErased said:Hahaha, exactly!
Everybody in the professional cycling world knew of LA working with Ferrari, since 1995. It was no news when it came "public" in 2001.
It's more likely Greg red the Donati report himself. You can read it here. It's 109 pages and dry medical info at times, but eye opening.perico said:Interestingly, David Walsh quotes the "Donati Dossier" as fact in the book From Lance to Landis (Check page 48). If I were a betting man, I would wager that LeMond is getting his facts from Walsh, who may have forgotten to tell LeMond that the dossier apparently mentions him and his trainer...
Race Radio said:Ferrari is comedy gold.
He appears to forget how the rapid spread of the cancer of his most famous client can be attributed to the aggressive steroid program Armstrong admitted that participated in.
Greg's strategy is working. The rats are clearly afraid.
Alpe d'Huez said:It's more likely Greg red the Donati report himself.
Alpe d'Huez said:It's more likely Greg red the Donati report himself. You can read it here. It's 109 pages and dry medical info at times, but eye opening.
I would strongly recommend everyone who wishes to comment on this issue at least peruse through it. Donati was extremely thorough in his report, painstakingly citing references, studies and sources.
Here is WADA's release, and info on Donati.
9. 1994, THE EPO DOSSIER
Before the Committee was closed down, however, I decided to investigate closely, and very secretly, on the incidence of doping among professional cyclists.
I identified twelve key-figures of the cycling milieu, athletes, physicians, officials, and spoke to them assuring that the information would remain strictly anonymous, as my interest lay in collecting information that I would then report to the President and to the General Secretary of CONI in order to establish adequate measures.
After four months of investigation, I arrived to extraordinary conclusions:
1) anti-doping tests on cyclists were very rarely positive because they used new substances, peptidic hormones, which cannot be traced with urine tests;
2) in particular, the erythropoietin hormone also known as Epo, was being used ever more frequently;
3) the idea of using Epo for athletes involved in endurance sports, and therefore also for cyclists, had clearly come from Prof. Conconi, who had been nominated member of the IOC Medical Committee some years before;
4) Prof. Conconi and his assistants had signed very important contracts with professional cyclist clubs to administer Epo to the cyclists;
5) at that time the production of Epo was quite limited and the substance was provided only to the hospitals who treated nephrology and the cyclists therefore obtained it through illegal channels;
6) the cost of Epo on the black market was very high (about 150 US$ per dose); there were also other very expensive hormones, such as Gh, or Igf1; in other words the doping market was becoming as lucrative as the narcotics market;
I wrote out a 14-page report and sent it, complete with a protocol letter, to the President and to the General Secretary of CONI. The President did not even answer it. The General Secretary sent for me and said he was very worried.
Time passed but nothing more was said about my report.
Elagabalus said:Now your footing is a little less solid. Only a few people knew Lance was working with Ferrari (Even his team was kept in the dark and Lance didn't even bother to mention it in "It's not about the Bike").
For you and scribe:
http://books.google.com/books?id=zJ...&resnum=4&ved=0CCYQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q&f=false
go to page 178
goober said:Bravo...
"But what Greg does not know, or pretends not to know, is that one of such “confidants” actually clearly mentions his name and that of his doctor in relation to doping events."
http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/open-letter-from-dr-michele-ferrari