Re: Re:
Parker said:
We have no idea what he has or hasn't said.
He said he broke no rules. That means he didn’t accidentally inhale too much. He very definitely has claimed that he didn’t ingest more than the allowed amount.
There's no harm in looking for other explanations and then saying "well maybe I did make a mistake after all".
Except that it’s difficult to make a mistake of that magnitude and yet initially (i.e., closest in time and strongest in memory to the event) be so certain he didn’t make one. An “admission” of a mistake at this time looks too much like an insincere attempt to avoid a longer sanction.
Six months would be suitable for everyone. Any longer and Froome misses the Giro then the UCI faces legal consequences if he eventually wins at CAS.
Urbi27 said:
I really understand that nobody believe in Froome's version, but he is 33 and he cannot waiting for a verdict if he is really innocent. Try to look at this situation from his side.
I understand the reasoning. If he wins at the Tribunal, and WADA/UCI appeal, I would fully support his riding, just as I supported Contador’s riding the Giro/TDF in 2011. But if Froome loses, the small probability that he would win an appeal at CAS has to be balanced against the ambiguity of having a leading contender whose results probably won’t count.
I don’t see that UCI faces any legal consequences. Rules are rules. Froome is taking advantage of a rule to stay active despite an AAF. If he loses at the Tribunal, UCI takes an advantage of a rule to have him out of racing while he appeals.
And most important, since CAS basically starts all over, even if Froome received a back-dated six month suspension now, and appealed it, CAS could lengthen it, so his results in the Giro/Tour could still be stripped. Just because Froome appeals an already relatively favorable decision doesn't mean CAS can't make it worse. Indeed, if Froome were given a six month suspension and didn't appeal it, WADA/UCI likely would, just for that reason.
IOW, there is no scenario such as you describe in which Froome can ride the Giro/Tour with certainty that his results will count, unless one can be sure that no one appeals. And if the back-dated decision comes down in March, a decision by either side on whether or not to appeal might not even be made until after the Giro begins.