Dr. Maserati
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- Jun 19, 2009
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Le breton said:<snipped for brevity>.
Added after a quick search on the web
link to a 1990 Belgian paper given by a good French website
http://www.cyclisme-dopage.com/dossierdefond/1990-10-11-lesoir.htm
I will be back with an exerpt
Here it is
Les cyclistes meurent trop d'arrêts cardiaques
11/10/1990 - Le Soir - Bruno Deblander
Extraits
Apologies, I am only getting to this post now.
Thanks for that additional information.
I have always been curious about where that number came from and was it accurate. While I would not put all the deaths down to EPO (or any PED) a significant spike in unexplained fatalities would certainly be suspicious.
GJB123 said:<snipped for brevity> ......but I would be highly surprised to learn that before Oosterbosh and Draaijer amateur and junior riders were dropping like flies in the second half of the '80-s because they managed to get their hands on some EPO before all the pro's got to the party. Generally it is the other way around. The pro's get in early with new stuff and that trickles down to the amateurs in due course.
...
I had a wry smile when I read both your responses - even though I was the one looking for more information about the riders who said I had the same thoughts as yourselves "why would it be amateurs getting hold of EPO?"pmcg76 said:This seems logical to me also, I would be very surprised if Amateur and female riders were getting hold of EPO before the pro's had first mastered and reaped the benefits of EPO.
... <snipped>
My only theory on that is to an earlier linked piece that says that the European EPO production was in Germany. Only over the border from Holland & Belgium.
We know from Joe Parkins book that the back street dealing was done by soigneurs often at kermeeses and was alive and well at the time (EPO and the arrival of Doctors to administer it probably killed that side earner for them) and perhaps someone managed to get a hold of lmited stock without knowing its potency or dangers.
