heart_attack_man said:
So a quick question. If 2+2 = 4, are you convinced that it equals 4, or do you know that it equals 4?
Because with Froome, it's really as simples as that.
Froome ≠ cleans
To bring this slightly back on topic, the fact that Walsh is as blind to the truth as he is does indeed speak volumes to his motivations.
I'm assuming he wants the easy life leading up to retirement.
Hope you don't mind my joining in and adding my thoughts, though I don't generally loiter in the Clinic.
Regarding Walsh, I believe his proximity to Sky and Froome have put him too close to Team Sky to allow him to be an unbiased 'witness'. This would be true of any team he was 'in-bed' with; he cannot be objective.
That doesn't mean to say I believe he'd hide something he'd seen outright; I am not saying he suddenly has zero integrity, but he's bound to be predisposed to believing in people he's invested this much time and energy with.
IMO, to get to the bottom of whether a team/rider is doping, you need to be willing to question everything. He quite clearly doesn't - otherwise he'd have written a better researched and objective biography of Chris Froome, not ghost-written Chris Froome's autobiography with its occasionally laughable / mendacious glossing of his early 'achievements'. Given this, I think Walsh has rendered himself obsolete as a voice against doping in cycling. I think he can no longer be bothered.
As for Team Sky, I have no insider knowledge, but there is at least something suspicious about them. I'm a long time cycling fan, who is sceptical rather than cynical, but I think there is enough dubious, contradictory and frankly incredible stuff to raise serious questions. Since I haven't seen credible responses - hello, bilharzia etc. - I shall continue to harbour serious doubts about their "purity". It's not that I don't harbour doubts about Tinkoff or Astana, but then these teams are not constantly bleating on about their unique approach; their holier than thou policies and hence ****ing me off with their sanctimoniousness and (potential) hypocrisy.
What no one seems ever to admit to in all this doping talk are the personal credibility / character aspects. I guess no one wants to admit that thinking a rider is an untrustworthy tool plays a part in whether or not you believe he's a cheater. I 'knew' nothing substantive about Armstrong other than rumours, but since I had the impression the guy was an arrogant, bullying a-hole who'd sell his grandmother to win, it by no means surprised me to find out he was also a flagrant cheater. Had I personally any objective evidence? Hell, no. But then I wasn't tasked with trying to convict him of anything. As a fan, however, it did make me question whether I could trust anything he did or said. So I didn't. And lo - turns out my instinct was pretty accurate.
I feel much the same about Froome, frankly, if not on the same scale. I 'know' nothing at all. However, I do harbour suspicions. What I have read in his autobiography, and heard of his doings with Wiggins etc. - whom I also don't particularly like, btw - gives me the impression of someone capable of considerable mendacity. Hence, it would not surprise me one bit if he was a doper.
Now, I don't know the guy. I am quite willing to accept that these are impressions and that I might have completely misread his character. But how he comes over to me means that I find it impossible to invest anything in any his 'clean' achievements.
This isn't merely a question of 'like' or 'dislike', though I'm obviously not a fan of Froome. I like Voigt but this doesn't require me to think he's a clean rider. Likewise Brailsford, though I loathe him with the burning passion of a thousand suns, I would nonetheless be very surprised to find was systematically cheating. I do believe, however, he might be very easy to lie to simply because he seems to believe so completely in his own omniscience.