- May 26, 2010
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rainman said:This is a joke right? I feel like we're booing at the parolympics.
Yes it is like booing the Spanish basketball team some whose athletes were not intellectually disabled, but ringers.
2000 Sydney games.
rainman said:This is a joke right? I feel like we're booing at the parolympics.
JimmyFingers said:Interesting point: there's a definite personal edge to Walsh's pursuit of Lance. There's his anecdote about interviewing Emma O'Reilly in Ireland during the early part of one of the Tours and all he can think about if whether Lance has missed him and is wondering where he is. There is also an element of career building: Lance made Walsh, he's the reason he can sell books. It's certainly not his rather dubious prose. Now his crusade is being made into a film. Good times.
Benotti69 said:Yes it is like booing the Spanish basketball team some whose athletes were not intellectually disabled, but ringers.
2000 Sydney games.
thehog said:With a certified theHog stamp of approval
Can't wait for the end of year Clinic party in Vegas.
Libertine Seguros said:But the fact that Kimmage would unsettle the team was specifically why he wasn't brought on board. There needs to be a middle ground, somebody who can ask the difficult question without being so aggressive as to be a nuisance, or someone who can be nice and polite and know how to steer the conversation so that the participant hangs themselves. I understand and have a lot of time for Kimmage, but it's clear Team Sky have no interest in dealing with him.
Walsh probably does genuinely believe in Team Sky. He probably enjoys their company and found them very nice and accommodating and personable and not the kind to stab you in the back. Many reports of people who've met people like Froome at least would corroborate that (Porte less so and Wiggins definitely less so, of course). But Walsh really ought to also know that Tyler Hamilton was a nice guy. We have people on the forum who'll vouch for that. I always bring up the same three dopers because of the anecdotes of people on the board - Hamilton, Sinkewitz, Nozal - all extremely friendly and personable characters who all got busted for doping (twice).
I'm perfectly fine with David Walsh believing Team Sky are clean. But I'm not fine with him trying to sell me this based on reasoning so flimsy it is unbecoming of a journalist of his reputation and is insulting of the intelligence of the seasoned fan. Reasoning like "Froome must be clean because he roomed with the second most suspicious rider on the team" does not help anyone, least of all Walsh, who is made to look stupid by putting forward an argument an eight year old could counter. If he didn't ask tough questions and believes based on faith, then that's fine but it should be noted that he hasn't done his job as an embedded journalist very well as there are many questions that remain unanswered, that a whitewash book like this will only draw more attention to. If he did ask the tough questions, then why haven't the answers been at least alluded to if not detailed in the book? After all, if he has asked the tough questions and Brailsford, Froome, Kerrison or whoever has answered them in a convincing and satisfactory enough way to make Walsh a firm believer, then surely that information should be shared with the public so that the doubters' doubts can be assuaged?
Basically, if the questions weren't asked, then Walsh remains at least partially in the dark. If they were asked, and the answers were good, then why isn't Walsh telling us what these answers are, to silence the critics not just of Team Sky but of himself?
Libertine Seguros said:But the fact that Kimmage would unsettle the team was specifically why he wasn't brought on board. There needs to be a middle ground, somebody who can ask the difficult question without being so aggressive as to be a nuisance, or someone who can be nice and polite and know how to steer the conversation so that the participant hangs themselves. I understand and have a lot of time for Kimmage, but it's clear Team Sky have no interest in dealing with him.
Walsh probably does genuinely believe in Team Sky. He probably enjoys their company and found them very nice and accommodating and personable and not the kind to stab you in the back. Many reports of people who've met people like Froome at least would corroborate that (Porte less so and Wiggins definitely less so, of course). But Walsh really ought to also know that Tyler Hamilton was a nice guy. We have people on the forum who'll vouch for that. I always bring up the same three dopers because of the anecdotes of people on the board - Hamilton, Sinkewitz, Nozal - all extremely friendly and personable characters who all got busted for doping (twice).
I'm perfectly fine with David Walsh believing Team Sky are clean. But I'm not fine with him trying to sell me this based on reasoning so flimsy it is unbecoming of a journalist of his reputation and is insulting of the intelligence of the seasoned fan. Reasoning like "Froome must be clean because he roomed with the second most suspicious rider on the team" does not help anyone, least of all Walsh, who is made to look stupid by putting forward an argument an eight year old could counter. If he didn't ask tough questions and believes based on faith, then that's fine but it should be noted that he hasn't done his job as an embedded journalist very well as there are many questions that remain unanswered, that a whitewash book like this will only draw more attention to. If he did ask the tough questions, then why haven't the answers been at least alluded to if not detailed in the book? After all, if he has asked the tough questions and Brailsford, Froome, Kerrison or whoever has answered them in a convincing and satisfactory enough way to make Walsh a firm believer, then surely that information should be shared with the public so that the doubters' doubts can be assuaged?
Basically, if the questions weren't asked, then Walsh remains at least partially in the dark. If they were asked, and the answers were good, then why isn't Walsh telling us what these answers are, to silence the critics not just of Team Sky but of himself?
thehog said:Yes good post.
On his last podcast he brought up Kevin Livingston in relation to Porte. Saying Livingston was Lance's right hand man and was named in the Ferrari files but Porte is clean as a whistle on that front. Which means Froome and Sky are clean because they have no doping associations.
I sat there listening and thinking is Walsh a moron? Did he not apply the same logic to Rogers with Wiggins? Or Barry? Rogers had a double distinction of being named in the Freiburg papers as well. Or Porte with Rogers.
He appears to lose his head and apply one set of logic to tell the reader why they are not USPS styled dirty.
BroDeal said:Due to size constraints imposed by the publisher, not all anecdotes made it into Walsh's book. He was heartbroken to be forced to leave this one out.
"As a young boy Luigi was fascinated by bike racing. He would watch races with his father on the family's telly, and the two would often travel to the Italian countryside and mountains to stand on the roadside, cheering the riders as they passed by in their colourful outfits. He had his heart set on becoming a professional racer. His mother, who was a devout Catholic like many Italians, had other hopes for her boy. She envisioned him growing up to be a priest. So one day Luigi asked his father what he should do. He did not want to disrespect his mother, but he loved cycling. His father told him, 'Follow your heart. Whether a champion or a gregario, you can still do good in this world, maybe even as much as a man of the cloth.' Luigi's mother was disappointed, but she she held her tongue and put her faith in The Lord.
"Luigi's mother's faith was finally rewarded when her son went to work for Team Sky. It was as though God himself and, perhaps, Jesus as well had guided her boy by giving him the cycling passion that would eventually see him work for a cycling team with a wholesomeness and piety would awe even the Saints."
Libertine Seguros said:...Basically, if the questions weren't asked, then Walsh remains at least partially in the dark. If they were asked, and the answers were good, then why isn't Walsh telling us what these answers are, to silence the critics not just of Team Sky but of himself?
JimmyFingers said:But that said he did go after Michelle Smith when no-one else was, and Stephen Roche....
Libertine Seguros said:But the fact that Kimmage would unsettle the team was specifically why he wasn't brought on board. There needs to be a middle ground, somebody who can ask the difficult question without being so aggressive as to be a nuisance, or someone who can be nice and polite and know how to steer the conversation so that the participant hangs themselves. I understand and have a lot of time for Kimmage, but it's clear Team Sky have no interest in dealing with him.
MartinGT said:Someone has to ask Walsh re JTL
See, that's the problem. Walsh immediately defaults to the "mistake" theory. "They didn't know who they were signing, even though they should have". That paints Sky as naive fools, not as wrongdoers.JRanton said:Well in fairness to him he did break the story to start with and has criticised Sky for not learning from the mistake of the Leinders hire.
hrotha said:See, that's the problem. Walsh immediately defaults to the "mistake" theory. "They didn't know who they were signing, even though they should have". That paints Sky as naive fools, not as wrongdoers.
hrotha said:See, that's the problem. Walsh immediately defaults to the "mistake" theory. "They didn't know who they were signing, even though they should have". That paints Sky as naive fools, not as wrongdoers.
JRanton said:Yup, fair point. You only had to look at the leaked suspicion index from the 2010 Tour and the subsequent hires that Sky made to know that they made no effort to stay clear of suspect riders. In fact, you could argue they actively targeted riders with dodgy passports!
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thehog said:Excellent post and agree. Although the last line. I'm not sure he's looking for stories anymore. I think now he wants to be part of the story.
David Walsh @DavidWalshST
@paigerich Richard, the Rogers story is depressing. Clenbuterol same substance as Contador. If he's used this he deserves all he will get.
David Walsh @DavidWalshST
@grahambyrne12 As for Mick Rogers, if he's guilty would it not be slightly more logical to get suspicious about Saxo?
David Walsh @DavidWalshST
@AndrewLM777 Andrew, if Rogers doped this year, he could have doped last year. Do I think he could have done that with Sky's approval? No.
JRanton said:...You only had to look at the leaked suspicion index from the 2010 Tour and the subsequent hires that Sky made to know that they made no effort to stay clear of suspect riders. In fact, you could argue they actively targeted riders with dodgy passports!...
The Hitch said:...If Sky is all clean, why then did they in 2011 having promised to be team clean, take a lot of riders who scored so high on the UCI suspicion index.
I always knew Barredo had talent like a champ.sittingbison said:guys, you are looking at this from the wrong perspective.
Sir Dave wanted to hire the best riders, so he looked the UCI Index. Its only a marginal difference between performance index and suspicion index