- Jul 6, 2010
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Blakeslee said:This could also be looked at the opposite way. All of the recent Clenbuterol positives point to the possibility the drug is commonly used by professional riders as a performance enhancer. I believe Contador and others are using the beef defense because there is already some precedent for overturned or reduced suspensions based on this defense.
BroDeal said:I blame WADA for not fixing the detectable limit level. The director of the Cologne lab has said that accidental positives are possible when testing for extremely small amounts. We have reports of widespread contamination in Mexico and China. Instead of being proactive, WADA waited until it became a problem.
The result is that the credibility of anti-doping has been damaged. At the super low detection levels, there will always be athletes claiming that it was contamination. There will be lots of people who believe them. And having athletes who were victims of a screw-job because they ate food in a place like Mexico reinforces people's beliefe that the system is not fair.
Blakeslee said:This could also be looked at the opposite way. All of the recent Clenbuterol positives point to the possibility the drug is commonly used by professional riders as a performance enhancer. I believe Contador and others are using the beef defense because there is already some precedent for overturned or reduced suspensions based on this defense.
Blakeslee said:This could also be looked at the opposite way. All of the recent Clenbuterol positives point to the possibility the drug is commonly used by professional riders as a performance enhancer. I believe Contador and others are using the beef defense because there is already some precedent for overturned or reduced suspensions based on this defense.
lean said:WADA releases a prohibited substance list once a year. they don't really make changes on the fly and that's out of necessity. athletes need time to review changes and figure out how they're going to adhere to it. they (athletes) can't be expected to constantly adapt to new rules all throughout the year.
lean said:if WADA is to know about contamination then so are athletes and they need to plan accordingly. they are both equally responsible. to go a step further, WADA probably made the right call here. these recent positives are MUCH more likely to be PED use than contamination. we've been over it about a thousand times so i'm not going to dig thru the details again. is there a very slim possibility of contamination? yes. is it likely? no.
El Pistolero said:Yes, but you can't say Contador's meat theory is a joke because otherwise more people would test positive for it and then go in another thread and dismiss every athlete that tested positive for Clen. I've seen a lot of people do that here.
BroDeal said:It really doas not take much foresight to figure out having no limit for a substance that has turned up in food contamination outbreaks for more than a decade and lowering the amount that is detectable ever lower would eventually cause problems with people testing positive for eating ordinary food in certain parts of the world. This is incompetence on WADA's part.
BroDeal said:Tell that to the athletes who tested positive because they made the irresponsible decision to eat while in Mexico or China. I guess they should have survived solely on Cliff bars and Cytomax while travelling.
DAOTEC said:Friday 17 December 2010 sponsors Merida bikes int. and Multivan abandon van Houts on the spot
are not going to wait for the B sample and have terminated the contract.
(http://wielerland.nl)
lean said:i'll also add to the discussion that some dopers are really stupid and might begin experimenting with the drug because a high profile case has brought the effectiveness of a substance to their attention. the timeline for the dutch rider seems awfully tight to be a copycat (when did the contador news originally break?) but who knows?
I'd suspect that use in the peloton is a lot more 'quiet' than years previously with the likes of Landis dropping the bomb on his mates. I doubt clen is a secret though, as it needs to be administered thoughtfully and you can't figure that out with news clippings, but I am sure there are other techniques that might inspire use.Dimtick said:I had never thought that there would be copycats but it makes sense. I could see another rider saying "If Contadors using it, it must be good stuff". I find that thought rather disturbing.
lean said:i wouldn't suspect all of the top riders are on it. it's becoming very easy to detect
DirtyWorks said:Landis' comments are about the only way to know how many riders were using clen when the tests were less sensitive. As previously discussed, there is some anecdotal evidence that very valuable testing protocol information is being passed to teams/riders as new tests become available.
For this reason, retesting up to 5-10 years with present-day sanctions after any given year is critical to slowing doping.
I agree and would add that it is much more to the fore as the testing has improved.scribe said:I'd suspect that use in the peloton is a lot more 'quiet' than years previously with the likes of Landis dropping the bomb on his mates. I doubt clen is a secret though, as it needs to be administered thoughtfully and you can't figure that out with news clippings, but I am sure there are other techniques that might inspire use.
However, Van Eenoo, the head of the Ghent laboratory, said that unlike, for example, the stimulant cocaine clenbuterol broke down very slowly in the body and the effect was long term.
"If I took a lot and you tested me an hour later, I might still have a lot in my system, but if you tested me in four or five days, it might be there in small quantities and you wouldn't know what effect it had had," he said.
"Cocaine is very different, because while it has an enormous immediate effect if you tested me in two days you probably wouldn't detect it
"That's why cocaine is only banned in competition, and why we don't even report it if it's only there in small quantities. Clenbuterol, though, is always prohibited."
DAOTEC said:Dutch cycling federation suspends national mountain bike champion
The 26-year-old has said he will fight he charges. “I'm going to do everything I can to prove I am innocent,” he said.
December 23, 10:44 | [http://cyclingnews.com]
JMBeaushrimp said:Yipes! That makes me think that all result rosters would be pretty much blank for the last decade.
JMBeaushrimp said:How about rather than relying on retro testing, they come down hard on the ones that get popped TODAY.
I know that's asking a lot...
sniper said:Some difference with how the Spanish Federation was reluctant to suspend Contador, though Contador had more CLEN in his system than Van Houten, and though van Houten has a better excuse (he was in Mexico).
_Zipp0_ said:Is it possible that we are all consuming some small amounts of clen without knowing it? In China they will put poison into milk to increase profits, so why not elsewhere? This is the problem with allowing industry to "self-police." They are apt to put profit above all else.
The clen positives are probably doping, but there seem to be a lot of issues with this drug at the moment.
Polish said:Exactly.
Floyd Landis, doping expert who has worked with Mr "Balco" Novitzky, recently acknowledged that Clen use in the Peloton is WIDESPREAD.
But it seems riders are learning from the mistakes of others like Alberto and Rasmussen:
First, blame it on "meat" not "beef". The Beef Lobby is not someone you want to mess with.
Second, it is wise to have a "visting Mexico" alibi ready to use just in case your Clen use is detected. But just make sure you actually visit Mexico and not sneak around in Italy instead lol.