V3R1T4S said:
Yep, but there is also something omertà-ish about making the comment in the first place. Suppose I am a rider and I have heard rumors about JV's doping and then I hear him publicly put down another doper/rider on race radio. That sends a mixed message, if anything. Dog eat dog? At the very least, the base case is for everyone to just clam up more for fear of being mis-represented and/or attacked. This is what happens when people take cheap-shots. Just crack open any intro Psychology textbook and start reading about groupthink.
It's also just a giant time-suck. Some of the things that are said are indeed funny precisely because they p*ss off people who don't have a sense of humor. At the same time, if that single comment about Hamilton wasn't made, it wouldn't have become a story and then having to be explained about and apologized for years later; if some emails were actually read instead of impulsively dismissed, perhaps the whole TL thing would have never happened. I think everyone can agree that that was a giant cluster that did not help anybody in any way. Fearless Greg Lemond mentioned the coincidence of stories like this popping up - is it coincidence though or a pattern that could easily be broken by thinking over things for a microsecond before typing or saying? This is what I was getting at with my last post.
I think JV understands these things and would do things differently now. Again, I only mention these things as constructive criticism because I think now if ever is the time for something to potentially - if only minutely - change a century of cycling culture.
Hold on. Please try to understand, I am being asked a million questions by random anonymous people on the board. I try to get to most. But occasionally my shorthanded answers get misunderstood. And then I get put on the fry pan for making a statement about Hamilton when I meant Dekker. Would it be possible for you guys to stop analyzing every last word? I am in an MBA program, running a team, raising a child, and trying to change a sport. It's not a short day.
So, apologies if some things get misinterpreted. I do my best.
Also, has anyone ever thought of how Trent Lowe behaved in order to get me to the point I just stopped responding? I respond here a lot. I'm not a hard guy to find. So, why in the hell would I just give up on a rider like that? Think about that.
I'm not going to get in to a tit for tat with Trent Lowe. He's a good guy. But just think about what I said above. I don't regret how the situation unfolded. Did it make me look like an ashore? Sure. But that is better than having a guy sent to Del Moral and never having it discovered. I'm fine with being the bad guy, if the result is better, as a whole, in the long term.
If that's my fingerprint. then damn, I am proud of my fingerprint and would like it to be even bigger.
None of you have ever managed 30 high profile athletes before. It isn't always pretty. And there are two sides to every story.
As with the rest of life, criticizing management is easy. Actually doing a better job yourself? Not so easy.