Cavalier said:
My point was simply that the timing - and product - is exceptionally odd considering everything else that's happening around that team at the moment.
Not really. Its just a masking agent. If you work under the assumption, as I do, that most teams sporting a GC contender turn a blind eye and unofficially support - if not behind-the-scenes through some of their staff actually aid - doping within their teams, then this isn't much of a surprise at all. Its systemic, and a not unsignificant percentage of pro riders take something in order to remain at least relevant and among the top end, if only in conversation, since all of the rest of their competition on that level do as well.
Some people just get unlucky. Testing is a little like Russian Roulette, only your odds are way, way better, since testing is limited and random. If you know the system and have good medical advice, you can improve your odds greatly. Someone upthread said Frank probably scored a suspicious value and decided to take the risk to get it out of the system. Probably he was feeling the pressure to at least try and win a stage, or even if he thought he couldnt, he was getting the pressure to try.
Looking back on the Lance era makes it pretty obvious. Most of Postal were eventually caught doping, as were pretty much all of Lance's rivals of the time, as well as a few others winning mountains classifications etc. Not only does it become harder to say Lance trounced all of these guys day in, day out, year after year, and did it cleanly. It also becomes pretty hard when looking at the breadth across teams to say well, it was just these few riders. More likely it was simply any and all who wanted to try and win, get on the podium, simply try and compete, maybe win a stage, as well as a few key domestiques supporting each of these riders.
And it continues like that now. And occasionally some of these get unlucky and get caught on something and everyone around them denies knowledge and praises the current era of cleaner cycling, when really, its not changed all that much. New drugs, new methods. Try to stay ahead of testing knowledge and the testing curve. Take your risks that you are willing to take - some take more than others - and then roll the dice. It will probably stay that way too until testing is far more thorough and team management is included in the fall. Even then, testing fails to stay ahead of the speed of new methods and drugs, but at least retroactive testing can curb that a little.
I feel sorry for Frank. Not a good year for him. But he's just one of the unlucky ones caught in a random net. Some 30+ others probably simply dodged a bullet and continue riding. Just the way it is.
Having said that - I love the sport. I'm not a cynic. Just a realist. Call me a loon if you disagree, that's ok by me. I compartmentalize and that's how I continue enjoying this sport (and honestly any of them) as there is this other side to them too, which is fascinating in its own way.