Granfondopers

Dec 7, 2010
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Alex Simmons/RST said:
http://velonews.competitor.com/2014/06/news/police-yank-ex-doper-spains-largest-gran-fondo_333182

Police intervene to pull a former doping rider 30km from the finish, when in winning break.
OMG, now that is friggin' hilarious! :D
(Of course I'm referring to the fact that Velonews had something worth reading. :p)

the sceptic said:
also a nice touch to mention that they had no problem with Indurain and Olano competing.
That was quite the punch line to the whole article, wasn't it? :D



JESUS! How can you not love this circus?!?! :eek:
 
Last year there was a granfondo in Sicily during which they announced there would be testing at the finish. Circa 90 participants disapeared into the woods.

I am aware, at the moment, that there is a list of riders who will be stopped and tested soon.
 
May 26, 2009
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the sceptic said:
also a nice touch to mention that they had no problem with Indurain and Olano competing.

I understand the humor but even you realize that:

1. neither of them was oficially ever found out to be doping (Olano cut it reaaaaally close though).
2. neither of them was competing the event.

What would be stranger is that someone would have a problem with those two riding. Vigilante justice is despicable.
 
Jun 10, 2010
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There's some key facts missing from that article, and things that have been reported differently elsewhere. For example, the story goes the bawss of that gran fondo (none other than Fernando Escartín) personally allowed Ángel Vázquez to compete on condition that he wouldn't contest the "win". Vázquez agreed but then raced for the "win" anyway, and then the organizers tried to convince him to allow himself to be caught, or to withdraw. Vázquez told them he wouldn't stop, but simply wouldn't cross the finish line. That's when the organizers decided to force Vázquez to stop by asking the Guardia Civil to intervene.

How they missed Escartín's role in all of this, I do not know.
 
May 26, 2010
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Franklin said:
I understand the humor but even you realize that:

1. neither of them was oficially ever found out to be doping (Olano cut it reaaaaally close though).
2. neither of them was competing the event.

What would be stranger is that someone would have a problem with those two riding. Vigilante justice is despicable.

Indurain tested positive at the 1994 Tour de l'Oise. Salbutamol was banned in France at the time but had not yet found its way onto the UCI's banned list. Indurain was not sanctioned.

Dutch broadcaster NOS quoted Italian investigator Sandro Donati who claimed that Banesto riders were involved with Conconi and another source corroborated the story.

Olano tested positive after winning Stage 1 of the 1994 Volta a Catalunya. He blamed the result on a product he had been using called Frenadol.

Following the 2013 publication of a French Senate Anti-Doping report and its annexe showing the results of 2004 retested samples, Olano was shown to have tested positive in the 1998 Tour de France after Stage 8.
 
Mar 10, 2009
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http://www.sportpro.it/#2071

Perhaps someone who reads Italian can do a better job than Google translate, but it seems a police raid netted a lot of pre-packaged EPO for cycling and other sports and a Granfondo winner and participants are among those now been caught involved in trafficking.
 
May 5, 2010
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rhubroma said:
Last year there was a granfondo in Sicily during which they announced there would be testing at the finish. Circa 90 participants disapeared into the woods.

Seriously? Sounds like something from a bad movie.
 
Jun 10, 2010
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RedheadDane said:
Seriously? Sounds like something from a bad movie.
That kind of thing happens pretty often, actually.

I'm glad that it happens. It puts to rest any arguments about how money equals doping. In reality, competition equals doping.
 
Aug 9, 2010
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Granville57 said:
OMG, now that is friggin' hilarious! :D
(Of course I'm referring to the fact that Velonews had something worth reading. :p)


That was quite the punch line to the whole article, wasn't it?



JESUS! How can you not love this circus?!?! :eek:

LOLOL :D
how fun would that be if they chased down Hincapie or similar..
 
Nov 14, 2013
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Red Rick said:
What is there to win in Granfondo for everyone to start doping?

It seems cycling attracts type A *******s who must dominate and crush there opponents. A subset will do it by any means possible. Lame. I feel fortunate to ride my bike for fun.
 
Mar 10, 2009
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Red Rick said:
What is there to win in Granfondo for everyone to start doping?

It's a narcissism / ego thing. Prizes are rarely the driver for such behaviour.
GFs are taken pretty seriously by some, with teams specifically targeting such events in Europe.

The UCI also has their own granfondo series around the world which are qualifiers for the masters road "world championships" each year. Rainbow jersey on offer.
 
May 26, 2010
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Some granfondos offer decent, 100K, prize money for wins.

But i guess, most do it for ego and narcissistic reasons.
 
Jun 16, 2009
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There's a good deal of charging going on in the UK local racing scene so it's definitely not prize money related.
 
Aug 11, 2012
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Alex Simmons/RST said:
http://www.sportpro.it/#2071

Perhaps someone who reads Italian can do a better job than Google translate, but it seems a police raid netted a lot of pre-packaged EPO for cycling and other sports and a Granfondo winner and participants are among those now been caught involved in trafficking.

Please oh please...oh please let it be Georgie Porgie........please.;):)
 
May 5, 2010
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hrotha said:
That kind of thing happens pretty often, actually.

I'm glad that it happens. It puts to rest any arguments about how money equals doping. In reality, competition equals doping.

Just get this mental image of a bunch guys riding along, they reach a wood an... whoooooooooosh! whole bunch of them disappears.