martinvickers
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- Oct 15, 2012
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Benotti69 said:Kimmage and Walsh, apples and oranges.
It's really for the Walsh thread, but that's just a pointless quip.
Benotti69 said:Kimmage and Walsh, apples and oranges.
Parker said:Every CEO ultimately answers to the shareholders and investors. Do you really think Sky's $50m investment doesn't give them a say in things are wrong.
I don't know who sets policy but I do know that David Millar had agreed with Brailsford that he would join Sky at their inception, but was then blocked by the introduction of the policy. However, he was selected for GB every year until 2013. Brailsford is the Principal for both, yet the policies are different. It strongly suggests someone higher is writing the rules at Sky
red_flanders said:Not sure where that leaves things RE: Leinders. Brailsford is responsible whether he set the policy or not. If he doesn't believe in the policy that would actually make a lot of sense if you look at what he's actually done in terms of hiring people with dodgy pasts.
gooner said:Kimmage had very little dealing with Armstrong outside of the Cali press conference. Some try to play up Kimmage's role in exposing Lance but in reality he had little to do with it. He has been outspoken on it down the years but in regards to doing the digging and getting the backbone to the story, it is Walsh who takes the credit. Kimmage is great at writing columns giving his take on doping and holding people to account in press conferences and interviews. I just don't think the investigative journalism part is his strong point in the same manner as Walsh.
thehog said:No one exposed Lance other than Landis.
Not Walsh, not PK not anyone.
Walsh included are only now reaping some rewards because one guy ripped the ar/e off the sham.
PK with full reign could tear Sky apart. But who's going to print that in English language press?
gooner said:I was speaking from a journalist point of view and the role of it in this.
Still doesn't change the fact that Kimmage had little dealings with Lance outside the Cali press conference in comparison to Walsh.
The Daily Mail and Telegraph are papers who have asked questions on Sky regarding Rogers, Barry, Yates, ZTP, Leinders etc. The Mail in particular did very good work. I'm with Paul regarding questioning them but I disagree with his comment that the British media won't touch the story with a bargepole.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/ot...ons-doping-Lance-Armstrong-fallout-grows.html
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/othersports/article-2220801/Team-Sky-braced-departures.html
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/ot...-stare-abyss-senior-staff-look-set-leave.html
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/ot...at-cycling-can-regain-full-trust-of-fans.html
Parker said:Every CEO ultimately answers to the shareholders and investors. Do you really think Sky's $50m investment doesn't give them a say in things are wrong.
I don't know who sets policy but I do know that David Millar had agreed with Brailsford that he would join Sky at their inception, but was then blocked by the introduction of the policy. However, he was selected for GB every year until 2013. Brailsford is the Principal for both, yet the policies are different. It strongly suggests someone higher is writing the rules at Sky
gillan1969 said:national teams have a legal backdrop which commercial teams do not. Over the period of time Millar was riding there was the ongoing legal battle regarding if non-selection for a national team was in effect a double punishment after the original doping ban. It was ruled that it as. It was not Millar pursuing this I think it was Dwain Chambers (athletics).
So national teams found they might have to pick an ex-doper if they would be picked on merit regardless. Commercial teams can pick who they want, when they want....
del1962 said:That only applied to Olympics, not national championships, Millar competed at worlds and I think chambers did in athletics.
gillan1969 said:national teams have a legal backdrop which commercial teams do not. Over the period of time Millar was riding there was the ongoing legal battle regarding if non-selection for a national team was in effect a double punishment after the original doping ban. It was ruled that it as. It was not Millar pursuing this I think it was Dwain Chambers (athletics).
So national teams found they might have to pick an ex-doper if they would be picked on merit regardless. Commercial teams can pick who they want, when they want....
Parker said:That rule was a British Olympic Association rule, not a British Cycling one. Millar was picked every year for the Worlds. And there was no obligation for Brailsford to do so - there was no qualification system. After all BC never selected Wegelius or Southam again after the 2005 fiasco.
It's just an illustration of BC not picking someone who was good enough. There's no criteria and no policy for selection at BC. Brailsford or Ellingworth are free to pick who they like, but at Sky they are not due to the anti-doping policy. The difference in the policies shows that different people are laying down the rules (i.e. not Brailsford at Sky). As I have mentioned, Millar was going to join Sky before the policy was put in place and Brailsford was happy to have him.martinvickers said:Not sure it's as simple exactly as that. Refusal to follow team orders would be a relevant criteria in picking a team, regardless of doping stance - it would be evidence of unreliability in the actual race.
I think you miss the point.JimmyFingers said:I heard before it was the sponsor's stipulation that Sky use the ztp, not Brailsford. I think it was for the British public, who were already wary of the state of road racing, to make them confident in a clean team. In fact when the whole idea of a British road team was mooted Cookson was against because of the drug problem there. Brailsford was less concerned, wanting David Millar on board and actively using him in the GB road race set up. I think that translates to them hiring people with suspect but 'clean' pasts, then the Armstrong relevations forced a clear out.
That seems to be the problem a lot of people have with Sky: that they talked ztp but hired character like Leinders and Yates anyway. I would suggest it was pragmatic: the need for experience within the set up so without something being proved in the past about a rider/staff they were willing to look the other way.
Quite frankly the moral indignation displayed by some people here again and again is Daily Mail-esque in its ridiculousness. They are a professional cycling team. Ask any pro outfit if they are clean they'll say yes, claim transparency or openess, point to membership of the MPCC, talk about rigorous internal testing blah blah blah. They all have the same PR, Sky's is a little bit louder than most, but mainly because of the extra media coverage down to the success of the team and British media.
I know it's irritating, but not sure somehow you can demand Sky be whiter than white while allowing every other team to be fifty shades of grey.
Netserk said:
Benotti69 said:Nope Jimmy didn't miss the point. He is spinning the story.
Sky never implemeted a ZTP, from day one, they hired Mick Barry! They refused to let Kimmage interview Barry, when Kimmage worked at the ST.
Not many teams ( except USPS and Garmin) have gone to the levels of Sky in proclaiming they are whiter than white. For jimmy to compare sky to all others is a joke. Brailsford showed Kimmage a tome that Sky had produced on its ZTP. Did Quickstep ever do this, BMC, Lotto or any other? No.
Sky made a huge issue out of transparency and cleanliness. They have show very little.
If Sky were getting hammered at races (like they are after the TdF with the exception of ToB) people may have believed them, but that have performed like those who came before and the explanations for it dont wash, well Brailsford obviously knew this would happen but the knighthood was worth the aggravation.
And yes Hitch has addressed this.
JimmyFingers said:I heard before it was the sponsor's stipulation that Sky use the ztp, not Brailsford. I think it was for the British public, who were already wary of the state of road racing, to make them confident in a clean team. In fact when the whole idea of a British road team was mooted Cookson was against because of the drug problem there. Brailsford was less concerned, wanting David Millar on board and actively using him in the GB road race set up. I think that translates to them hiring people with suspect but 'clean' pasts, then the Armstrong relevations forced a clear out.
Catwhoorg said:In Millar's autobiography that point is discussed, if not explicitly stated. Millar was originally going to be one of the key initial hires (Cav was the other target), then Sky put the kybosh on that.
thehog said:More to the point there is no actually "policy".
It doesn't appear anywhere in words, or in a document.
Its a branding term that was thrown in at interviews.
I've not seen or heard what the ZTP actually is... has anyone?
Does it exsist?
..."zero tolerance for anyone convicted of using or facilitating the use of performance-enhancing drugs"...
Benotti69 said:Maybe because they knew they would lose any litigation from Kimmage's articles on Armstrong, so ST sent him off to write Faldo's golf diaries.
Kimmage may have requested to write such stuff in editorial meetings but was told no.
Telegraph has changed its tune on Sky and Gallagher has rolled over and has his tummy tickled.
But the dailymail did get Kimmage to write an article. Did you link it? No why not? It would prove the point that ST wouldn't let him write the stuff but others would.
there was a german article on it, i can't find it now, but I've linked it before, in which a (imo) compelling parallel was drawn with former east german practices, where PEDs were as we all know administered by team docs, and athletes had to sign convenants which assured the docs and executives would stay out of the legal line of fire and the athlete would take the fall in case of a positive.thehog said:More to the point there is no actually "policy".
It doesn't appear anywhere in words, or in a document.
Its a branding term that was thrown in at interviews.
I've not seen or heard what the ZTP actually is... has anyone?
Does it exsist?
sniper said:I have a google alert for Geert Leinders and nothing has popped up for weeks in a row.
Also, I see two big sponsors (Rabobank and Sky) with a clear interest in having this investigation disappear.
Perhaps Race Radio knows something but I think he'd have told us already if he did.
So as it stands I think this one is destined to be shoved under the carpet.
question is also: are the Dutch ADA in anyway after him without us knowing? They should, obviously, be after him, considering the damaging testimonies. But again, probably too many parties interested in never hearing the name Geert Leinders again.
Benotti69 said:Armstrong used the term 'zero tolerance' in 2003 when he denied working with Ferrari
'Disappointed Armstrong cuts ties with Ferrari after conviction' article 2003, The Times.
