the big ring said:Due to error, or due to actual changes in new blood cell %? If due to changes in new blood cell %, does that "bounce" occur within same-day readings, for a rider doing a TT to win a GT, given neither of the other parameters changed AT ALL?
Did the team owners know their riders had all tested higher than usual at the start of the Giro, or just their team medics?
You said this in 2010: http://velonews.competitor.com/2010...he-tour-of-california-and-win-it-clean_117464
Is it still true today, or did your willingness to be placed under more scrutiny only apply to that one race?
Would you prefer I not repeat the questions I have asked, and you still have not answered?
Wait! sorry! missed the retic question. I have no idea why retics would bounce a bit before and after the final TT. We could hypothesize that hypoxia created due to the effort of the TT caused some retics to show up. It could also just be the pulsitile nature of all human hormones... it could be a lot of things.
I don't know.
What I do know is that it would do nothing for performance to have a few more retics, short term, so we can eliminate a doping technique from the possible explanations.