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blackcat said:
roundabout said:Rinero finishing 4th in the Tour says it all. Ok, probably would have been 5th had the Spanish teams continued, but don't think he finished in the top-40 in any other GT that he has done.
If there's one big race you could win clean than its Paris-Roubaix.GuyIncognito said:blackcat said:
Z is GAN, and we know quite a few dopers on there
Heck, we don't even have to go to the GAN years. Duclos-Lassale suddenly winning Roubaix twice at age 38 just when EPO appeared?
No surprise there about P. Lance. Another rider who should not have had any difficulties to complete a GT but finished outside the time limit twice.pmcg76 said:Greg LeMond also of GAN team mentioned about they had an idea of what was happening but it wasn't until a team-mate moved to Italy that they got the full picture. This could have been Philipe Casado who moved to AKI in 94 or Eric Boyer who moved to Polti in 95. Both riders quit the sport after one season in Italy, and Casado sadly died during a friendly rugby match. Pascal Lance, another GAN rider was also named as a clean rider whose career had also suffered for refusing to dope according to Giles Delion.
GuyIncognito said:blackcat said:
Z is GAN, and we know quite a few dopers on there
Heck, we don't even have to go to the GAN years. Duclos-Lassale suddenly winning Roubaix twice at age 38 just when EPO appeared?
blackcat said:GuyIncognito said:blackcat said:
Z is GAN, and we know quite a few dopers on there
Heck, we don't even have to go to the GAN years. Duclos-Lassale suddenly winning Roubaix twice at age 38 just when EPO appeared?
i was not being serious.
for some reason, I always thought la Vie Clare or la Vie Claire, Tapie's healthfood team with Lemond was also "Z",. But thanks for correcting me. Anyway, I still stand by my position, wrt teams, tous dope. tous
That's your opinion, dont share it as a fact.roundabout said:Bouwmans was screwed by the advent of EPO only in the sense that it allegedly didn't work for him. He was moral enough to try it after all.
I wouldnt go that far. Never been a fan of him as person, but Virenque was quite a battler. I feel he would be very good without dope as well. As amateur Virenque was much better than Bouwmans.Echoes said:Belgian teams jumped on the EPO bandwagon long after the French. Even in the Netherlands, PDM aside or because of the intralipid trauma, you had a tolerance zero against EPO. Van Hooydonck said that many times about his former manager Jan Raas (how surprising it might be, Raas was very strict against doping until the UCI blood test of 1997, he and Godefroot were probably the ones who called the UCI for help).
Peter Post abruptly stopped his career as a manager, sanctioning the current blend of Dutch riders as a "potato generation." Eddy Bouwmans had as much talent as Virenque.
Rabobank only started to take EPO by May 1996 (Van Hooydonck retired on April 29 1996) as is told by Thijs Zonneveld. Post riders probably never took EPO in their majority (except Planckaert E. and a few isolated cases). For Lotto it was not until J-L Vandenbroucke became manager (and his doping his riders might be the reason for his being fired by Lotto).
Tulip, Histor-Sigma, Tonton-Tapis, that was relatively clean.
So many Belgian and Dutch talents were screwed by the advent of EPO. Edwig Van Hooydonck, Frans Maassen, Jim Van de Laer, Sammie Moreels, Peter De Clercq, Eddy Bouwmans, ...
Those who wished to perform like Museeuw or Bruyneel went to Italy or Spain
No, the French don't have a monopoly on morality!
Yvonne van Gennip yes. I always thought she did it with the help of EPO. She beat all the East-Germans at Calgary but who cares about speedskating anyway, its folklore.staubsauger said:Ain't Dutch athletes are also the true pioneers of EPO? Mathieu Hermans admitted he used EPO in the 1989 Vuelta a España and given his palmares is likely to have done so in 1988 already! Okay, he rode with Caja Rujal back then.
But: There were this female speed skater at the Olympics Kwibus (?) mentioned a while ago in the clinic. There was PDM. There were the sudden deaths of many Dutch amateur cyclist.
We will never find out as well from my pov, whether Erik Breukink was a very early benefiter of EPO usage or his career has gotten destroyed once the Italians and Spaniards upped the game with it. The second is widely believed. But one can't be 100% convinced given he rode for PDM, never managed to get back his shape at rocket fueled Once and his major role in the Rabobank doping program (protecting Rasmussen to some degree). Normally this ain't the actions of a man that got his career shredded by EPO abuse. We won't find out. Either he was very lucky (not to die in about '88 when noone had a clue about EPO and it's dosage) or very unlucky (not to respond as well as Indurain, Cappuccino and co. to EPO).
If there's one big race you could win clean than its Paris-Roubaix.[/quote]"Jeff"":4s45ctq9][quote="GuyIncognito said:blackcat said:
Z is GAN, and we know quite a few dopers on there
Heck, we don't even have to go to the GAN years. Duclos-Lassale suddenly winning Roubaix twice at age 38 just when EPO appeared?