ManicJack
BANNED
🥱Don't you ever bring the name of Tugboat into this one, Lance!
🥱Don't you ever bring the name of Tugboat into this one, Lance!
How do you wish to be entertained, as far as cycling goes?
Is there a particular reason why you are so sure they are that effective? Because to my mind it looks an awful lot like someone figured out a good way to get around the passport in 2020, and they’ve been pushing it further and further each season.I'm sure we are looking at the same article:
![]()
Biological Passport: Have dopers found ways to beat it?
Procycling investigates the cracks that have appeared in the tool credited with cleaning up cyclingwww.cyclingnews.com
Biological passports haven't stopped doping completely, but they are incredibly effective in finding doping signatures and deterring people from trying to cheat for fear of losing their livelihoods. As the article states, researchers with the Adlerlass study used athletes' personal narratives to describe undetected cheating using the old out-of-competition blood bag method. These are from Lundby's studies in 2008 - 2012. And the biological passport system has improved as well. I'd read somewhere that we'll know if athletes have had *any* blood transfusions.
You say biological passports haven't stopped doping. I've stipulated that in several posts already. But what I'm saying is that the tests and biological passports of high-profile athletes are highly effective because they under constant and intense scrutiny.
I'm with you about being skeptical about cycling, especially after the dark years, 1990s-2011 (or so). And many are unhappy with the widescale use of TUEs in recent years.Is there a particular reason why you are so sure they are that effective? Because to my mind it looks an awful lot like someone figured out a good way to get around the passport in 2020, and they’ve been pushing it further and further each season.
I just can’t get past the 90s-level climbing performances and the fact that we got here from the relative plateau of the 2010s so quickly. All of the talk of technology, diet, and training improvements during those years yet the performances didn’t really improve, save for a few Sky bombs that would barely register compared to what’s going on now.
Then suddenly in the span of 3 years we’re here. The last time riders were flying like this they were all on outrageous doping programs. Surely for riders to get back to this level in such a short amount of time without PEDs, there must have been some incredible breakthroughs being made in other areas, no? Yet no such breakthrough seems to exist, and all we get are the same excuses - more dedication, more training, a new gadget or two - that we’ve always gotten. In the absence of any real explanation, how can I possibly come to any conclusion other than that they’ve figured out a way to dope like the 90s again? It’s like that old saying - Fool me once? Shame on you. Fool me twice? Shame on me…
I mean as you say yourself, all that graphic shows is that people are being caught muchI'm with you about being skeptical about cycling, especially after the dark years, 1990s-2011 (or so). And many are unhappy with the widescale use of TUEs in recent years.
Doping is certainly down. For example, here is a chart that is suggestive, but I would not say definitive. We can't say this is low percentage is how many people in Pro Cycling were doping, but we can say what percentage has been caught, admitted to doping, or refused the controles.
![]()
![]()
Infographic: Has Pro Cycling Cleaned Up Its Act?
This chart shows the share of Tour de France riders that have been involved in a doping case at some point in their career.www.statista.com
So I think cycling is doing much better keeping the sport clean. I and (judging from crowds) many others are more confident in our enjoyment of the sport. But who knows, maybe Lucy will pull the football from us yet again.
The question in the air is whether Jonas Vingegaard is involved in some kind of performance enhancing venture. The evidence that his detractors give is that his performance in the time trial was too good (not on any other stage, just in the time trial). But I do not know if we can say it was "too good" without more information from his biological passport. We do know that officials have looked at it and made a determination that it was not "too good," that it was in line with his fitness history.
A simpler explanation is that Pogačar should have been better on the time trial, maybe by as much as a minute, if he had been feeling better. And of course he should have been much better climbing and attacking la Loze.
Start here:Biological passports in 2008 are the game changer. If you don't understand them, you're just blowing smoke.
Yeah, imagine if the Europeans had like discovered the Americas. They might have wreaked havoc on the indigenous people. Or if they’d colonized Africa and stripped countries of their able bodied men and natural resources, or like carved up nations like the Indian Peninsula or the Middle East.It's awesome that Europeans never harmed anyone in the pursuit of wealth.
Lance has all the markings of a sociopath. If people mean that this characteristic makes you more likely to succeed in business, particularly in the US, that's an indictment of American capitalism not a positive trait to be admired.
Jonas Vingegaard simply rides to a watts delta, does whatever the radio tells him to do & then after the race he blows kisses & hugs his wife & child in front of the cameras.
Vingo is as much of a talent as Froome wasI mean I get it, it's the issue with the Clinic and why I burnt out or just soma'd myself into a complacent basic spectator : We throw around a lot of doubts, speculation, impressions but we rarely get any real confirmation of vindication. And if so, years down the line. It is tiring and it does kill a lot of joy in the sport.
I can't prove Vingo or Pog or riser X is doped and I can't state it definitely either.
I think the history of the sport (and pro sports in general) warrant a lot of suspicion towards it all and justify not being very charitable to the virtue signaling of authorities, organisers, teams and riders. But that's not proof.
Someone yesterday used the expression "guilt by performance" and I thought it was very apt. We're certainly guilty of that.
Maybe Vingo (or Pog) is the unicorn generational talent, freak of nature, perfectly suited genetics that just is that much stronger than everyone else while being only on mineral water.
It strains credulity, to me, we're getting one of those every 5-10 years and we do know, without a shadow of a doubt, that a handful of those were in fact cheaters.
most likely doped based on his family history and being a footballerExcept that Remco has been a world class athlete for ages. He ran a half marathon with no training in 1:18 at age 16. He's been a ridiculous level in cycling since he started.
He also races in the Belgian ITT and WC ITT.
Remco has shown failure and has had bad days. His form is much more in line with being "clean" and simply being a generational talent.
well, what we do know for sure is that Fisherman was not a "generational talent", hell he wasnt even a talent to be a proTL;DR:
Your guy is doped, but my guy is a generational talent born with incredible physical attributes few in this world possess. Delivered by Mother Nature.
so your claim is that both should be 3min ahead of all the rest on a 22km TT, good to knowI'm with you about being skeptical about cycling, especially after the dark years, 1990s-2011 (or so). And many are unhappy with the widescale use of TUEs in recent years.
Doping is certainly down. For example, here is a chart that is suggestive, but I would not say definitive. We can't say this is low percentage is how many people in Pro Cycling were doping, but we can say what percentage has been caught, admitted to doping, or refused the controles.
![]()
![]()
Infographic: Has Pro Cycling Cleaned Up Its Act?
This chart shows the share of Tour de France riders that have been involved in a doping case at some point in their career.www.statista.com
So I think cycling is doing much better keeping the sport clean. I and (judging from crowds) many others are more confident in our enjoyment of the sport. But who knows, maybe Lucy will pull the football from us yet again.
The question in the air is whether Jonas Vingegaard is involved in some kind of performance enhancing venture. The evidence that his detractors give is that his performance in the time trial was too good (not on any other stage, just in the time trial). But I do not know if we can say it was "too good" without more information from his biological passport. We do know that officials have looked at it and made a determination that it was not "too good," that it was in line with his fitness history.
A simpler explanation is that Pogačar should have been better on the time trial, maybe by as much as a minute, if he had been feeling better. And of course he should have been much better climbing and attacking la Loze.
A simpler explanation is that Pogačar should have been better on the time trial, maybe by as much as a minute, if he had been feeling better. And of course he should have been much better climbing and attacking la Loze.
well, what we do know for sure is that Fisherman was not a "generational talent", hell he wasnt even a talent to be a pro
The sport is quite definitely NOT doing much better keeping the sport clean. Two major GC riders got their hands slapped last year, one testing positive and the other being detained by police for potentially being involved in trafficking doping products. Try including the pre-'98 data to see how important that big bust of the Festina affair was in that graph, and look at the only time there was a spike in increasing the number of riders caught is between 2009 and 2010, when riders caught in the 2007-8 period when cycling was cleaning up its act and following Operación Puerto would be returning from suspension (so the likes of Basso for example).I'm with you about being skeptical about cycling, especially after the dark years, 1990s-2011 (or so). And many are unhappy with the widescale use of TUEs in recent years.
Doping is certainly down. For example, here is a chart that is suggestive, but I would not say definitive. We can't say this is low percentage is how many people in Pro Cycling were doping, but we can say what percentage has been caught, admitted to doping, or refused the controles.
![]()
![]()
Infographic: Has Pro Cycling Cleaned Up Its Act?
This chart shows the share of Tour de France riders that have been involved in a doping case at some point in their career.www.statista.com
So I think cycling is doing much better keeping the sport clean. I and (judging from crowds) many others are more confident in our enjoyment of the sport. But who knows, maybe Lucy will pull the football from us yet again.
of course nobody has "molecular" proof here, otherwise the Clinic wouldn't be the naughty section of the forum. Usually comparisons with historical performances and different eras generates some good discussions though. Attributing everything to natural Vomax2 and aero factors is a bit naive when talking about cycling, considering the history of the sport. Let's say that the clinic subforum is where people track weird "suspect" performances and have fun.Okay. I've been reading your comments the last few days and really enjoy the theories ranging from micro-dosing EPO to experimental mRNA-PED's and motor-doping. No real substance in the comments and i'm beginning to think it's just the same dozen of guys winding each other up and confirming crazy theories to one another.
Your biggest issue seem to be the fact that JV was 5% better on the ITT. That's a couple of standard deviations. Seems like much. There will always be outliers in sports. Guys that are better than the field. Look at this article.
![]()
Did Don Bradman’s cricketing genius make him a statistical outlier? - Significance magazine
The test career batting average of Australian cricketer Sir Donald Bradman of 99.94 runs per innings is one of the most famous and iconic sporting performance statistics in history. Bradman...www.significancemagazine.com
Tiger's dominance was unexplainable. Was he using experimental clubhead-PED's. What about Federer? Did he use mRNA-PEDs?
Fact is that riders in the Peloton does not believe JV is doping (at least the riders who have commented publicly don't):
1) Halland Johannessen to NRK (19/7): You look at the tempo, it's not just raw power, he (JV) is driving technically sound and doing everything else right. There's probably also some who say that i have been doping and i know that i havent touched anything. I don't belive he (JV) is doping i just believe he is in peak performance at the moment.
2) Bettiol as referenced several times earlier in this thread
3) Michael Rasmussen to EB 20/7: JV is the most aerodynamic rider in the field (...) We can't start to suspect someone just because they are fast, when there is no circumstantial evidence
I am personally not convinced and until there is some circumstantial evidence i will let him have the benefit of the doubt.
I hope time will not prove this wrong. Send me an e-mail when you get something concrete.