- Dec 30, 2011
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Dear Wiggo said:The escalation of ludicrous happenings generated by Sky has continued from ASO meetings
Ludicrous... ASO Meetings?
Dear Wiggo said:The escalation of ludicrous happenings generated by Sky has continued from ASO meetings
Froome19 said:Ludicrous... ASO Meetings?
“We felt it’s our job to be transparent and tell people what we’re doing, and the more we can tell people the less mystery there is. We’re not doing it to try and convince them we’re clean, we are clean. We’re meeting them because we’re genuinely proud of the work we doing and they enjoyed what we had to show them," their spokesperson explained
tanx for the reminder. what a load of crap.Dear Wiggo said:
as in dictating what riders put on their bread, but not doublechecking the background of your docs? right.our no stone unturned philosophy
Libertine Seguros said:Wasn't Froome in the break that day? Either way, the last man detached from the heads of state group before him was Johan van Summeren.
There were FAR too many riders in the void between the superchargers of 2008 (Riccò, Piepoli, Schumacher, Kohl obviously, and to this we can add the likes of Menchov) and the young and raw Froome who wasn't even the most impressive young African rider on his team (which wasn't exactly known for its cleanliness either), for us to accept it being logical for him to become a top rider without, as you say, some kind of assistance. He was not the total schmuck that he sometimes gets made out to be, and yes he showed signs of moderate promise that suggested he could one day be a pretty decent mountain domestique. But nothing that suggested this. Compare his impressive showing in the Alpe d'Huez stage with, say, Jakob Fuglsang in the 2009 Dauphiné or Roman Kreuziger's first tilts at the Tour. Both of those guys are now at Astana, so if you wanted to accuse them of doping I don't think you'd come up against much opposition. Why aren't THEY totally smiting the field, having shown way more promise than Froome?
Froome's 2008 Tour and 2009 Giro showed promise. It showed that he would be likely to be a worthwhile mountain domestique or maybe strong breakaway guy for the future. If you want me to pin somebody down as an example, I'd have thought he could be around the level of a Chris Anker Sørensen or Egoí Martínez. Augustyn looked more impressive, and was younger. Did I ever miscalculate or what.
Ferminal said:Kreuziger was probably doping as an amateur. Fuglsang 2009 at Riis was probably a result of doping too.
Froome may have been clean in 2008.
Pentacycle said:Yeah I think he looked to be a good guy to make some tempo. Genre Tiralongo or indeed CAS. Also guys like Fuglsang, Gesink, Kreuziger show that early promise isn't everything. The Dauphiné, Suisse and Vuelta results they showed were good, but of course the promise always requires some extra room for growth to be fulfilled, to become a GT podium rider. This didn't happen to any of them. They're now good domestiques who can either get a good top 10 or sacrifice their chances for a real GT rider. Right now there are probably some youngsters from 1990 or something who haven't shown much, but they're bound to have their breakthrough ride the coming seasons. Who knows who they are? Steve Bekaert? Very hard to determine, since there are load s of riders who have been impressive in one or two occasions.
BroDeal said:Does anyone think Soler was clean in that time frame?
the sceptic said:![]()
Shane Stokes speaks a lot of sense.
thehog said:It was good. Agreed.
Of note that cyclists in the peloton have raised skepticism to Stokes in regards to Sky.
Shane offered to Sky Ashenden to go over their numbers and offer independent analysis. Sky never came back to him.
This is despite Brailsford asking the media what they want.
Reading the 2007 speeds quote was a nice touch.
Benotti69 said:Walsh went after plenty of athletes who were not guilty!!! Armstrong, Smith De Bruin, Contador, Rasmussen, Roche.........
hrotha said:Berzin. Probably because he can relate to Walsh. After all, just like Walsh, Berzin was only about Armstrong.
BroDeal said:You mean aside from several seasoned pros on the same team having mid career, or even late career in the case of Wigans, transformations that allow them to match the performance of dopers even though none of the riders showed they had that potential in their early years and the best of them now could be aptly described pre-transformation as a chump who was barely good enough to get a pro contract?
gooner said:It's OK for Shane to go back to 2007, so why don't we go back to one in 99 from him.
http://www.independent.ie/sport/lances-life-wheel-turns-full-circle-26145118.html
Instead of just spouting about all this on radio and twitter, why doesn't he ask the appropriate people and if he feels so strongly about it, write a big column on the Irish Times who he works for also. He can expand on his claim of other teams who have strong reservations on Sky and share it with us.
What he's doing at the moment is achieving nothing.
Wrong. Armstrong had the bullying of Bassons and the story in Le Monde about the positive. Smith had the link with her doping husband and her rise would be the equivalent of Froome coming out of nowhere in his late 30's and finishing 2nd in the Vuelta in 2011. It doesn't compare. Look at the famous Sports Illustrated article in 1997 about her rise. Rasmussen was thrown out of the Tour and Contador was linked with Puerto before Walsh said that. On Roche, Walsh went to Italy for a week after the story with Conconi first broke over there and got the backbone and facts on Roche's association with him.
You couldn't be more wrong on Walsh.
gooner said:Instead of just spouting about all this on radio and twitter, why doesn't he ask the appropriate people and if he feels so strongly about it, write a big column on the Irish Times who he works for also. He can expand on his claim of other teams who have strong reservations on Sky and share it with us.
LaFlorecita said:Gooner, Walsh did not argue Contador doped because of Puerto, no, he argued he was a doper because he went as fast as dopers. Why apply this logic to Contador and not to Froome?
Trick question, because Froome had a tailwind of course![]()
"Michael Rasmussen went up the Gourette-Col d'Aubisque faster than Lance Armstrong ever went up it. Alberto Contador was alongside him the whole way."LaFlorecita said:Gooner, Walsh did not argue Contador doped because of Puerto, no, he argued he was a doper because he went as fast as dopers. Why apply this logic to Contador and not to Froome?
Trick question, because Froome had a tailwind of course![]()
DAvid Walsh said:If they were intent upon fooling me and used it all as a ruse to convince people, that would make the team out to be incredibly cynical. If you'd said to me before I joined the team, I'd have admitted that it was a possibility. But having spent the guts of ten weeks with these people, I can tell you now that it's not a possibility because the people who are the pillars of the management, people like Brailsford, Tim Kerrison, Rod Ellingworth, the lead doctor Alan Farrell and the lead carer Mario Pafundi, they're just not those kind of people. They're not the kind of people who would be duplicitous in that way.
http://autobus.cyclingnews.com/road/2009/giro09/?id=results/giro0921#gcChris Froome said:Moises isnt a bad guy!
My aime is to do well in the young riders classification
Link us up then.gooner said:La Flo, that's fair enough but Walsh wrote an article a number of years back about Contador, Puerto and Liberty Seguros. He wasn't accusing him out of nowhere.
Benotti is wrongfully trying to claim that Walsh was doing that.
Don't forget Contador is also Spanish.LaFlorecita said:Gooner, Walsh did not argue Contador doped because of Puerto, no, he argued he was a doper because he went as fast as dopers.
elduggo said:pretty sure he doesn't work for the Irish Times.
also, rather than you spout about it on a message board, how about actually addressing some of the points he made?
you couldn't be more wrong about Stokes.
Fearless Greg Lemond said:http://www.cyclingnews.com/features/interview-david-walsh-on-inside-team-sky
http://www.veloveritas.co.uk/2009/01/21/chris-froome-working-hard-getting-results/
http://autobus.cyclingnews.com/road/2009/giro09/?id=results/giro0921#gc
Young rider classification
1 Kevin Seeldraeyers (Bel) Quick Step 86.19.26
2 Francesco Masciarelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo 2.55
3 Francis De Greef (Bel) Silence-Lotto 17.03
4 Thomas Lövkvist (Swe) Team Columbia - Highroad 31.45
5 Jackson Rodriguez (Ven) Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni 34.37
6 Andrey Zeits (Kaz) Astana 58.41
7 Christopher Froome (GBr) Barloworld 59.06
Because there is nothing suspicious on being from an hour down to the big Kevin Seeldrayers to the best cyclist in the world. You just dont want to see it is completely in line with the Michelle Smith transformation.
Your rant re - Stokes is typical; didnt Walsh withness the rambling of pills while in the presence of Kelly? Did he report about it at the time? We all know that anser, Kelly was a good doper, Barabbas cum suis are bad dopers.
If you read that article of Stokes correctly his writing style is exactly the same how Walsh is now reporting on team Sky. Good thing Stokes has learned from the past, Walsh seems - I repeat: seems - to be back to his reporting on Kelly days.Link us up then.
gooner said:How about reading my posts throughout the thread?
Is that too hard.
http://www.irishtimes.com/search/shane-stokes-7.1837404
elduggo said:let me rephrase
I am pretty sure he is not an employee of the Irish Times.
better?
gooner said:At the end of the day it was the Walsh, Ressiot and Ballester type of journalism that did the trick with Lance/USP, not radio interviews or twitter comments expressing reservations or strong suspicions.
Dear Wiggo said:It was USADA. wtf are you talking about? And twitter didn't exist.
gooner said:He has written plenty for the Irish Times. I'm sure if has something of new to offer on all this which has no libel issues, they'd be more to willing to hear.
Still, he could do a feature piece on Velonation.
Kimmage is similar with the Irish Independent.
At the end of the day it was the Walsh, Ressiot and Ballester type of journalism that did the trick with Lance/USP, not radio interviews or twitter comments expressing reservations or strong suspicions.
elduggo said:I am sure that whatever Stokes says on twitter, velonation or the radio is of no concern to the Irish Times, given he is not directly employed by them. The majority of Stoke's articles in the IT are his friday columns about the local racing scene. Even the stage reviews the IT print during grand tours are generally bought second-hand from the guardian service.
If the inference is that Stokes should hold his tongue because the Irish Times commission articles from him, I would suggest that this is very incorrect.
sniper said:Why don't you take one step back and tell us honestly what you think of the quality of walsh's arguments. Why are you skipping that part? There are several pages with quality posts taking apart those arguments. Address those posts. Address walsh's arguments.
After you've done that, come back and tell us whether or not a man of walsh's caliber is likely to really believe in those arguments.
