zigmeister said:I made that same point in your response to me. He *thinks* he might have a reaction, fine, you take a hit. But my next paragraph said, hmmmm...why have we never seen him do this before? Or even brought up and mentioned?
True, I've done the same. I didn't need a doctor to tell me what my condition was. Cold weather exercised induces asthma, allergy induced asthma. I take a few things when necessary, including singular 5mg/day. Same point as above. But I've been to the doctor for confirmation and testing. There are standard tests using inhalers to determine if you have certain conditions, that assumes you are experiencing them at that time though.
Yes, perfect point I've been making like a broken record over and over in many threads about defining what performance enhacement is. This guy agrees with me. Fascinating!
I posted a similar study about 20 pages back. The point with these are that the "athletes" tested were normal, they didn't and were not diagnosed with asthma or any respiratory illness. And it didn't improve performance.
There is no study I could find for people like "Froome", who say they have asthma, to measure their performance with asthmatic reactions, and after they use the inhaler. That is the point. Obviously, there will be a marked difference and improvement, hence, why I always argue performance is relative. If you went from ZERO peformance due to asthma, take your inhaler hit, then you can perform and ride...that is performance enhancement. Making some arbitrary judgement and comparison against another person is meaningless...because there is no "normal".
Bob Stapleton, T-Mobile's sporting director, said several of his riders have exemptions for asthma. "They know that if there's any misuse of that product, they're going to get caught, so it's a crazy thing to do."
Some say a bigger problem is that medications like salbutamol can mask other doping agents.
"There's a general belief in the sport - I'm not sure it's true - that injecting corticoids into your body gives you a real performance boost," Stapleton said. "So if you use the inhaler, it's a way of saying 'Ah, this is why I have it in my blood.'
Hawkwood said:The `what was in the inhaler' is an interesting question. I've just done a bit of a search and it appears that with the exception of two products, all of the drugs are for asthma/COPD. The exceptions I found were a device containing an analgesic, but it appears to be quite a large device, plus one for influenza.
he first drains that inhaler like some sort of junky, then blows the field away with a mightily impressive uphill performance.hiero2 said:It is STILL an interesting question - what was in the inhaler.
hiero2 said:It is STILL an interesting question - what was in the inhaler.
doolols said:Whenever I'm feeling a bit down, I know I can always pop in here, and have a good laugh. "Round and round she goes ..." with the same old nonsense time after time.
"We've never seen him use an inhaler before ..." Have you had a camera staring at him during the easier portions of a race, stage after stage? Just because you haven't seen an event, doesn't mean it hasn't happened.
With the micro-analysis of every utterance from Froome and Sky, there's no wonder things crop up which, taken out of context, look strange.
I'll pop back tomorrow, ready to have a good laugh at the same old stuff being regurgitated in place of anything new, real and substantive.
thehog said:The point Stapleton makes is that asthma medication isn't used for performance enhancement but as an aid to conceal cortisone usage. An offset if you will against injecting cortisone.
Which we know Sky do.
doolols said:Whenever I'm feeling a bit down, I know I can always pop in here, and have a good laugh. "Round and round she goes ..." with the same old nonsense time after time.
thehog said:The point Stapleton makes is that asthma medication isn't used for performance enhancement but as an aid to conceal cortisone usage. An offset if you will against injecting cortisone.
Which we know Sky do.
Ventoux Boar said:How do we know that sky use asthma medication to conceal cortisone usage?
BYOP88 said:To play devil's advocate. How do we know they don't?
Ventoux Boar said:How do we know that sky use asthma medication to conceal cortisone usage?
Ventoux Boar said:Best evidence is that hog said the opposite is true. How come you guys are cool with posters making stuff up seemingly all the time?
thrawn said:I think Hog was saying that we know that Sky use cortisone injections, not necessarily that we know they use asthma medications to conceal this usage.
Ventoux Boar said:Best evidence is that hog said the opposite is true. How come you guys are cool with posters making stuff up seemingly all the time?
hiero2 said:Not sure how far you looked, but results of what drugs are available in what form will vary quite a bit from country to country.
Saint Unix said:Sky seem to be making stuff up as they go along too. Why are you cool with that?
sniper said:he first drains that inhaler like some sort of junky, then blows the field away with a mightily impressive uphill performance.
so yes, it's an interesting question.
anyway, is the UCI showing any interest at all in inhaler-gate?
fighting for a cleaner sport, they should be interested in the contents of that inhaler