Mrs John Murphy said:
No because that isn't what I am saying and I am not sure how you read that into my words.
Let me rephrase it.
There is a view that JV is essentially a very slick PR man. That all his actions and pronouncements have to be viewed through the prism of PR.
JV's anti-doping is merely a PR move. He makes statements, takes action when it will either result in favourable PR or reduce negative PR.
The extension to the view is that by making Dekker go through all these hoops to join the team (but not making unconvicted dopers go through the same hoops) shows that far from being concerned about doping, JV is more concerned about appearing to be tough on (but also forgiving of) dopers.
That in short doping is not what matters to JV but rather image.
This doesn't square with his comments about Dekker and how much work it was to get him to ride clean.
If busted dopers are less likely to dope again, unbusted dopers are more/less likely to dope again?
I agree that there are obvious safeguards such as testing. What strikes me as interesting is that when it came to Dekker and JJ, JV talked a lot about mental make up, about how they spent hours looking at their behaviour etc, to see what they would do if the going got tough. Which is great, but what about riders from dirty teams.
If he were signing someone from say Saxo, or the modern day RS, teams with reputations for doping, how does he make sure that when the going gets tough that they won't dip their hands in the cookie jar? Does he do the same kind of mental make up exams on all new riders or just those coming back from bans?
Especially with regards to the bolded above, I'm not sure how those things necessarily have to contradict each other. If I were running a cycling team and trying to go about the best, most high-profile way to make it possible to change the doping culture prevalent in the sport, I would certainly be concerned with both PR and doping. I mean, thinking of what the culture seemed to be in 2007 or so, riding the PR wave of 'we're against doping' while actually realizing that being too outspoken will get you tossed out of the sport would be the only way to proceed successfully. Baby steps, hopefully to a point where the tide will have turned and you're an established enough team to be more vocally critical and not worry about being turfed from the WT or something. The USADA case and the exposure it's getting must give the truly anti-doping people in cycling a little more leverage than they used to have.
Your question is still valid, and I agree we haven't really seen a comprehensive response. But the specific case you're citing, Dekker, is an interesting one. Yeah he had to take physical tests to see if he could compete at a WT level, but that doesn't necessarily mean other athletes do not, it's just that we don't hear about it because they're not a sensation like a publicly exposed doper. And in the press it's been evident that it was still uncertain over the year whether Dekker would get renewed. I don't know if that means other riders would be treated differently, just not publicly. Imagine Trent Lowe had been doping, for example. Before he came out with the Del Moral stuff, he had just been let go quietly - perhaps that would be what would happen to a Dekker-like rider if it wasn't such a high-profile signing who, it ended up, couldn't keep up clean. Dekker is a PR gem because he's had to shed his cockiness as well as 'reforming' on the moral level, I'm sure I'd take advantage of that if I were in charge.
With regards to taking riders into the team, that's what I'm interested in too. I mean, what the hell would you say to Nick Nuyens when you signed him (and, off topic, but why the hell would you sign Nick Nuyens?) 'hey Nick, I heard rumours you were doped to the gills at Cofidis, what's the deal with that?' You'd probably just say 'that's not cool at this team and we need to know you wouldn't do that again'. At some point you just have to believe riders, and I don't think that Dekker's essentially been asked anything more than that really, has he?
There's also the fact that there are wildly different personalities. With Dekker, okay he might deserve some extra questioning because you've gotta know if he can be humble, or if he's getting dropped in a French 2.1 race is he gonna start charging again to save his pride. I'd imagine that might be less of a problem (or at least something you'd approach differently) with someone like Vande Velde (who seems relatively easygoing for a pro cyclist) or Hesjedal (who seems like a stoned Ent most of the time) or whoever.
Anyway, your question deserves an answer better than my speculation, I just wanted to point out that I don't think anti-doping and PR are mutually exclusive goals.