- May 26, 2010
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Re: Re:
The sensible argument is if an athlete wants to be thought to be clean in a dirty sport they need to be very careful what they say. There are a few examples of how one should verbalise in public, Bassons and Kimmage are 2 pretty decent examples. Otherwise one should keep one's mouth shut tight less it catch some flies.
No i dont think it is possible to get to the top of one's sport without cheating and that includes doping.
GJB123 said:sniper said:with Cookson more still than with McQuaid you see how antidoping is being moderated, used as a PR tool.
- hang some obvious bad guys out to dry (astana)
- hide positives that could be more damning from a PR perspective (Menchov, JTL, Vos) away from the public eye.
Very IAAF-esque.
Add in Cookson's direct line to Saugy, and Saugy's direct line to IAAF. I think Cookson is working from the same manual as Coe/Diack/Dolle on how to 'manage' antidoping.
I wouldnt be surprised if they'd let Vos ride some races so as not to raise any suspicion.
If you start making all kinds of assumptions out of the blue (without any evidence, albeit circumstantial) you can basically reason away any sensible argument and discussion.
The sensible argument is if an athlete wants to be thought to be clean in a dirty sport they need to be very careful what they say. There are a few examples of how one should verbalise in public, Bassons and Kimmage are 2 pretty decent examples. Otherwise one should keep one's mouth shut tight less it catch some flies.
No i dont think it is possible to get to the top of one's sport without cheating and that includes doping.
