Is Philippe Gilbert Doping?

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The whole "peaking for specific events" vs "contending the whole season" thing doesn't depend exclusively on PEDs. After his accident, LeMond peaked for specific events. In the days of EPO, guys like Jalabert, Bartoli or Fondriest in 1993 were competitive all year long.

edit: by the way, I don't see much of a point in bumping this thread whenever Gilbert wins. It's not like there's any significant new info on the topic.
 
Mar 13, 2009
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AussieGoddess said:
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The Tour - he was good on day 1 (July 4), and after that he did have a good tour ... but wasnt in top form. If he was he would have won more than just the first stage...

Not sure I agree. I think he had aspirations for le Tour that were greater than stage-hunting.
 
hrotha said:
The whole "peaking for specific events" vs "contending the whole season" thing doesn't depend exclusively on PEDs. After his accident, LeMond peaked for specific events. In the days of EPO, guys like Jalabert, Bartoli or Fondriest in 1993 were competitive all year long.

edit: by the way, I don't see much of a point in bumping this thread whenever Gilbert wins. It's not like there's any significant new info on the topic.
Don't agree. Everytime he wins he makes it harder for people to believe in him just because the good form is stretched further more.
 
AussieGoddess said:
see I dont think he has been on peak for that long.

....

The Tour - he was good on day 1 (July 4), and after that he did have a good tour ... but wasnt in top form. If he was he would have won more than just the first stage. He couldnt beat Cuddles up the Mur de Bretagne ... thats not top form.
He was good again for San Sebastian (August 1) ... and has been good at Eneco as he wants it pretty badly.

So - he has really picked what he wants, and peaked for those. Yeah its a lot of peaks, but he also has had a pretty fantastic team to help him. He hasnt had to work until the last few km's, and all his wins have been pretty much on his terms. (ie hard-ish race to split things up, and he has been led until the last km)

The only time I have really seen him have to work for it was the stage last night at Eneco when he solo'd for 5km's.
People keep underestimating cuddles talent for some unknown reason that I don't know. He won the Tour and proved me wrong (and many people in this forum) but people still underestimating him. We want to find excuses for why he is not top notch rider. He is good and very talented. Don't need more proof of that. So being beaten by Cadel is not sign that he is not in top form. Besides Cadel is kind of slow in long climbs but on steep short ones he is very, very "punchy".
 
May 8, 2009
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sniper said:
there is some circular reasoning in that part in bold.

Also, the question isn't really if he's doping (only a fool would doubt that), but rather what he's having for breakfast that others aren't having.

On the other hand, I'm surely not arguing against the "clearly very talented" part of your post. In the absence of other factors (i.e. in a hypothetical level playing field), I'd definitely expect him to stand out. But his winning streak is quite exceptional, and IMO suggests that he's on to something more revolutionary.

I guess this is what I disagree with. If there were new drugs around then we would see many stand out performances (where's stefan schumacher suddenly winning TTs against Cancellara?), with the bio-passport, everyone is limited to the same doping, the debate is how much you can still get away with, but I don't think it's stretching it too far to assume how much you can get away with is the same for everyone, and that it's peanuts compared to a full 90s/00s program
 
May 8, 2009
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Escarabajo said:
People keep underestimating cuddles talent for some unknown reason that I don't know. He won the Tour and proved me wrong (and many people in this forum) but people still underestimating him. We want to find excuses for why he is not top notch rider. He is good and very talented. Don't need more proof of that. So being beaten by Cadel is not sign that he is not in top form. Besides Cadel is kind of slow in long climbs but on steep short ones he is very, very "punchy".

Gilbert in top form won everything and beat everyone, including Cadel
 
Apr 25, 2011
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TeamSkyFans said:
What bothers me isnt the number of the wins, but the fact that he has now been on form for what seems like about 6 months. I dont think I have ever seen a rider hold peak form from the start of the season through to August.

the fact that he appears to be able to ride away, at will, from who he likes, when he likes, and how he likes also troubles me.

Ive stopped taking the guys results seriously now.

Cavendish, Greipel and other sprinters win stages throughout the whole year. Cancellara & Martin win time trials the whole year...Peter Sagan (at his age!) wins stages and short tours the whole year..How about that? Joaquin Rodriguez, last year's nr. 1 wins stages throughout the whole year, and will be good again in the vuelta, how about that? Face it, he's just better. In the future you will be able to say the same things about Bo Hagen or Peter Sagan imho...
 
Apr 25, 2011
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patterson_hood said:
My main point is that claiming cycling is cleaner because Belgians are having a stronger showing is a little flawed to put it nicely.

Belgium (& perhaps France) has always been the heart of cycling, from the very start up untill now. Even cyclists themselves admit is. Wasn't it strange that no one but Museeuw was able to compete with non-belgian racers in the 1990's? Even cyclists who had the name of 'being a climber' ended 40 minutes behind Pantani and other Virenques in Tourstages. The only one which was able to compete was Bruyneel, and he was in a Spanish team -Once- which was, as we all know, doped up by Saiz.

For the first time in 30 years belgian cyclists win hill stages in a lot of tours: Vdb in Dauphiné, De Clerq in the Giro, De Gendt in Switzerland and Vanendert in the TDF. Vanendert was a huge talent in the young categories and a competitor of A. Schleck and others. This, combined with the fact that the real big riders such as Schleck & Contador are showing weaknesses is for me a sign that something is changing in this sport.

And there's just as much evidence in my post as in all the other previous 49 pages against Gilbert :D
 
Jul 28, 2010
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djerkson said:
Belgium (& perhaps France) has always been the heart of cycling, from the very start up untill now. Even cyclists themselves admit is. Wasn't it strange that no one but Museeuw was able to compete with non-belgian racers in the 1990's? Even cyclists who had the name of 'being a climber' ended 40 minutes behind Pantani and other Virenques in Tourstages. The only one which was able to compete was Bruyneel, and he was in a Spanish team -Once- which was, as we all know, doped up by Saiz.

For the first time in 30 years belgian cyclists win hill stages in a lot of tours: Vdb in Dauphiné, De Clerq in the Giro, De Gendt in Switzerland and Vanendert in the TDF. Vanendert was a huge talent in the young categories and a competitor of A. Schleck and others. This, combined with the fact that the real big riders such as Schleck & Contador are showing weaknesses is for me a sign that something is changing in this sport.

And there's just as much evidence in my post as in all the other previous 49 pages against Gilbert :D

Or, perhaps the Belgian cyclists are now doping at the same levels as the rest of the field.

See, my blanket statement makes just as much sense as yours did.
 
May 26, 2010
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Bumeington said:
I guess this is what I disagree with. If there were new drugs around then we would see many stand out performances (where's stefan schumacher suddenly winning TTs against Cancellara?), with the bio-passport, everyone is limited to the same doping, the debate is how much you can still get away with, but I don't think it's stretching it too far to assume how much you can get away with is the same for everyone, and that it's peanuts compared to a full 90s/00s program

It is very hard to know how much teams/riders are getting away with as we know that UCI shows favouritism to teams/riders, so who is getting away with more than others?

Gilbert seems a level above others. He has had a a season similar to something from 90s/00s so hence the thread.
 
Apr 25, 2011
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hrotha said:
Only Museeuw? What about Van Petegem, De Wolf, Nelissen, Vandenbroucke, Steels...?

Agreed, we had a few very decent riders, but Nelissen and Vdb can only count for a few years. Vdb was a talent, but one with a lot of products as well in home (for his dog :rolleyes:) Steels was on the same team as Museeuw and after a few incidents with his health :rolleyes:, he never reached the same level again. Take a look at his palmares, after reaching the age of 30, he never got a major victory again. Steels, Museeuw, Vdb were dirty, that's about all there is to say...Van Petegem only peaked 2 weeks a year: in the week of Tour of Flanders and at the world championship. He was a very decent rider, but not a big one. On a world level, there were only Museeuw and Steels and virtually no rider for an overal ranking. I'm just saying that it is different today.

Edit: well, i'm not that blind or naive: there is the case Vansevenant which was quickly swept under a dirty rug...I thought there would've been more commotion. But it was the same thing with F. Schleck and his expensive 'training advice' of Fuentes. You don't hear a lot about that anymore. Di Luca is doing his thing again in Katusha, Kaschechkin will make his comeback. Rebellin and Schumacher and doing very well in their new Miche-team. So Gilbert would be incredibly stupid to stay in the spotlights while being a user, or he's just that good...you tell me. Or maybe, time will tell and should that be the case, I'll feel pretty stupid :)
 
djerkson said:
Cavendish, Greipel and other sprinters win stages throughout the whole year. Cancellara & Martin win time trials the whole year...Peter Sagan (at his age!) wins stages and short tours the whole year..How about that? Joaquin Rodriguez, last year's nr. 1 wins stages throughout the whole year, and will be good again in the vuelta, how about that? Face it, he's just better. In the future you will be able to say the same things about Bo Hagen or Peter Sagan imho...
Wouldn't you want to pick somebody else to use as your analogy of clean? Purito is not going to help his case.

Sprinters are in different category IMHO. We have seen them win throughout the years including 80's, 90's and 00's. So we don't need any proof of that.
 
May 12, 2010
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Is it really that unique? Look at the end of the 90's

1999: VDB 1st in LBL, Verbrugghe second in San Sebastian
2000: Verbrugghe 2nd in Fleche Wallone (four Belgian riders in the top-10), couple of guys in the top-10 in AGR and LBL, Tchmil second in San Sebastian
2001: Verbrugghe wins Fleche, four Belgian riders in the Gold Race top-10 (including Baguet on the podium)
2002: Aerts wins Fleche, 3 Belgian riders in the top-10 of the Gold Race, 1 in LBL

Was there a sudden lapse in doping use in the late nineties, early naughties as well, that Belgian riders were suddenly very good in the hilly classics? And let's face it, if VDB hadn't been a mental case, he would have been a rider of the same level as Gilbert is now, probably better in the high mountains.

If you take away Gilbert (because that's just one rider, you can't claim that Belgian cyclists in general are doing better thanks to a cleaner peloton based on one guy), that was a much better generation. Guys like Van Avermaet, Leukemans (lol, clean generation), Vanendert and Devenyns certainly aren't better. After that Belgium became less and less of a force in the hilly classics, but strong and weak generations are always present in every country, doping or not.
 
May 12, 2010
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The only peak that was comparable in the last couple of years that I can remember is Valverde in 2008:

http://www.cqranking.com/men/asp/gen/rider_palm.asp?riderid=5&year=2008&all=1&current=0

Wins Dauphine and national championship, stage and 8th in the GC in the Tour, wins San Sebastian, wins a stage and finishes 5th in the Vuelta. But outside maybe the Dauphiné and a couple of stages, Valverde was never really brilliant during that whole time, just really good and steady, not earth-shattering as Gilbert is. Of course, Valverde wasn't clean.
 
hrotha said:
The whole "peaking for specific events" vs "contending the whole season" thing doesn't depend exclusively on PEDs. After his accident, LeMond peaked for specific events. In the days of EPO, guys like Jalabert, Bartoli or Fondriest in 1993 were competitive all year long.

i see where you could get this view point.

however, lemond won the season long prestige pernod. it was only post-gunshot, 1989-1990, that he appeared to "peak"-- most of 1989 he was still getting back into shape, something he unfortunately repeated in 1990 due to an off-season that left him overweight.

bartoli hardly ever dominated an entire season.

jalabert, perhaps, but only when there was no hct limit.

the idea of "peaking" came into fashion with the arrival of the 50% hct limit and thereafter. before that you really never heard cyclists talking about it.

not saying gilbert isn't doping. but it would be almost impossible to have enough blood extracted to be good all season...and still be good all season.

however in the 70s and 80s the top riders fought and contended all season long because the natural hierarchy could not be turned on its head by who was "peaking" on their epo cycle.
 
Apr 25, 2011
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Lanark said:
Is it really that unique? Look at the end of the 90's

1999: VDB 1st in LBL, Verbrugghe second in San Sebastian
2000: Verbrugghe 2nd in Fleche Wallone (four Belgian riders in the top-10), couple of guys in the top-10 in AGR and LBL, Tchmil second in San Sebastian
2001: Verbrugghe wins Fleche, four Belgian riders in the Gold Race top-10 (including Baguet on the podium)
2002: Aerts wins Fleche, 3 Belgian riders in the top-10 of the Gold Race, 1 in LBL

Was there a sudden lapse in doping use in the late nineties, early naughties as well, that Belgian riders were suddenly very good in the hilly classics? And let's face it, if VDB hadn't been a mental case, he would have been a rider of the same level as Gilbert is now, probably better in the high mountains.

If you take away Gilbert (because that's just one rider, you can't claim that Belgian cyclists in general are doing better thanks to a cleaner peloton based on one guy), that was a much better generation. Guys like Van Avermaet, Leukemans (lol, clean generation), Vanendert and Devenyns certainly aren't better. After that Belgium became less and less of a force in the hilly classics, but strong and weak generations are always present in every country, doping or not.

Well, there you have it, take a look at the palmares from 1999-2002. Then take a closer look at the palmares of the Fleche Wallone, AGR and LBL from 2003 up to 2010 (Valverde, Di Luca, Rebbelin, Astarloa, Vino, Hamilton, Schumacher :mad:). No comments there I guess?

Vdb was doped up all the way, no need to take him in account (no matter how much I liked him, which I truly did, RIP his guts). The fact that 4 Belgian cyclists win 4 mountain stages in 4 difficult races in this year alone is a sign, we weren't able to do so in the past 15-20 (!!) years. The fact that Thomas De Gendt can beat Andy Schleck in the Tour de Suisse in a stage which ends on the top of a mountain of 1st category says quite a lot. Are Belgian cyclists doped up more these days?You tell me!

It's not just Gilbert: There's Vandenbroeck, Bakelandts, Hermans. Vansummeren wins P-Roubaix, Nuyens wins Tour of Flanders, how about these guys then?
 
Apr 10, 2011
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Vansummeren won P-R. That's the only good result he got this season. Same with Nuyens. None compare to what Gilbert is doing. VDB didnt show anything big expect Dauphine, he peaked for TdF, not like Gilbert who is ''peaking'' for over 6 months.
 
May 12, 2010
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djerkson said:
Well, there you have it, take a look at the palmares from 1999-2002. Then take a closer look at the palmares of the Fleche Wallone, AGR and LBL from 2003 up to 2010 (Valverde, Di Luca, Rebbelin, Astarloa, Vino, Hamilton, Schumacher :mad:). No comments there I guess?
I don't get what you are saying. Were all those guys doped? Sure. But are you claiming that nobody was doped in the 1999-2002 period, were multiple different Belgian cyclists (VDB, Aerts, Baguet, Merckx, Van Petegem) were winning or podiuming major hilly classics? Was there a sudden lapse in doping use in the late 90's? If not, how do you explain that Belgian cyclists were suddenly a lot better in the hills in those years, and why isn't that explanation not equally valid now (just a good generation).
Vdb was doped up all the way, no need to take him in account (no matter how much I liked him, which I truly did, RIP his guts). The fact that 4 Belgian cyclists win 4 mountain stages in 4 difficult races in this year alone is a sign, we weren't able to do so in the past 15-20 (!!) years. The fact that Thomas De Gendt can beat Andy Schleck in the Tour de Suisse in a stage which ends on the top of a mountain of 1st category says quite a lot. Are Belgian cyclists doped up more these days?You tell me!
Of course VDB doped. Belgian cyclists had good results in all kinds of races in those days, and all of them were doped. That's exactly my point, they weren't cleaner than the rest. Most of those results aren't really that impressive to be honest. Declerq was just a right tactical move, pretty good, but not a level we haven't seen other rider capable of. De Gendt wins in a breakaway, and on paper it sounds nice that you can beat Andy Schleck, but we all know the difference between Andy in a prep race and the real thing (dozens of decent cyclists have beaten Andy at one time in the Tour de suisse).

But you're making a serious attempt at re-writing history. Belgian cyclists were doing quite fine in the mountains. Tons of riders finishing in the top-15 in Grand Tours (Axel Merckx, Vanderwouwer, Devolder, Monfort, Vanhuffel, Aerts) in the last 15 years, all during years were everyone was using EPO and blood doping. Was 2005an extremely clean year as well? And that requires a level that at least equal, but most likely a lot higher than what guys like De Clercq showed. The current results by Belgian cyclists are far less exceptional than you paint them to be, there is no reason to support the idea that the current peloton is cleaner and that Belgian cyclism is profiting more from that than any other country. There's one really standout talent (Gilbert), but there have been more of those in the last 20 years (Museeuw, VDB, Boonen), the rest is just bussiness as usual.
It's not just Gilbert: There's Vandenbroeck, Bakelandts, Hermans. Vansummeren wins P-Roubaix, Nuyens wins Tour of Flanders, how about these guys then?
What about Bakelants and Hermans? Decend to good talents, but nothing exceptional about them, let alone warranting far-fetched explanations as proof that Belgian cycling is proviting from the clean-up in the peloton. I don't see what's so exceptional about Vansummeren en Nuyens either. Belgian cyclists won the Ronde van Vlaanderen/Paris-Roubaix double in 2000, 2003, 2005, 2008, 2009 and 2011, but suddenly the last example is proof of less doping?

VDB is the only real outlier, but then again, I'm not sure if I would use someone with an 8 on the suspicion scale in a debate about cleanness.
 
Mar 25, 2011
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djerkson said:
Belgium (& perhaps France) has always been the heart of cycling, from the start.

Why would this matter? England is the home of football but when was the last time they were truly competitive? Maybe other nations caught up with their doping programs and the belgians no longer stood out so much? After all the Belgians have a good doping role model in Merckx don't they...
 
He is HUMAN !!!!! :p


Yesterday - he was finally beaten at something he wanted to win. He tried to go and couldnt get away.

Is this what people were waiting for?

Surely if winning means he is dirty, then not winning is evidence he is clean? :p :p :p
 
AussieGoddess said:
He is HUMAN !!!!! :p


Yesterday - he was finally beaten at something he wanted to win. He tried to go and couldnt get away.

Is this what people were waiting for?

Surely if winning means he is dirty, then not winning is evidence he is clean? :p :p
He read this forum and decided to slow down.:p