- Aug 30, 2010
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TomasC said:I was talking about ABP panel experts, not RK's experts.
Ahhh, very good.
TomasC said:I was talking about ABP panel experts, not RK's experts.
neineinei said:Still my problem with this case is how Cookson is handling the case. In May he said he couldn't and shouldn't comment on ongoing doping cases. This is completely forgotten by August. He has also said that CADF is independent now. The independence only lasted until he read in the news that Kreuziger was going to race again.Then CADF wasn't independent anymore and the UCI president was the one deciding what they were to do again.
neineinei said:CADF should be independent. Give them the resources, staff and rules they need to be able to do their job, and then let them do that job without intervention and overruling. If the UCI rules are so useless that they can't stop riders from raceing even when CADF are certain that they have a fool proof doping case against him, the rules needs to be changed.
Dear Wiggo said:Hmmmm. I dunno. Oleg is pouring a lot of money into the sport and relying on the multi-million dollar riders whose salaries he's paying to get some runs on the board for sponsorship ROI.
No formal charges (?) have been laid. RK hasn't been suspended. Therefore racing him is the most logical, $1M p.a. thing to do.
To have someone arbitrarily jump into the process and suspend RK out of the blue, make comments about the case that essentially declare RK guilty, just weeks after calling Team Sky, "my friends", where his son is employed. Team Sky, who also had weirdness going on with Henao, but managed to reinstate him no worries...
He's a drunk. I think he's acting inappropriately, yes. But not like a 3 year old.
I think he has valid grievances, and whilst I personally would prefer to have him walk softly and carry a big stick, I don't see responding publicly to a very public indictment from the UCI as childish.
TomasC said:Yeah that was cr*p. I was mainly reacting to Martina's post where she seems to take Romans' words for granted.
Of course there are more serious problems in RK's ABP than one value approaching some limit if three independent ABP experts flagged it as most likely doping.
JimmyFingers said:UCI and Cookson got slammed for not saying enough about Menchov, they talk about Kreuziger and get slammed. Sky gets brought up. Cookson's son gets mentioned. The agenda is showing through...
JimmyFingers said:Yes, lets involve Sky in some way with what is going on here.
Tinkov-Saxo should have acted in a reasonable way and kept a rider with a suspected passport violation off their roster. In the same way you suspend a employee for gross misconduct pending a full investigation, a rider under investigation for doping should not be racing. The UCI may have acted outside of the rules as they are written, but if they are not written that way then they should be changed, and riders with anomalies like Kreuziger's sufficient enough to have procedures started against them should be off the road.
Oleg wants him to race. He's paying him to race, so he puts him back on the roster and creates this conflict. As you point out he's doing to get results because he's paying a large wage, rather than what is good for the sport.
UCI and Cookson got slammed for not saying enough about Menchov, they talk about Kreuziger and get slammed. Sky gets brought up. Cookson's son gets mentioned. The agenda is showing through...
IndianCyclist said:They are getting slammed for doing the right thing in the wrong way
JimmyFingers said:UCI and Cookson got slammed for not saying enough about Menchov, they talk about Kreuziger and get slammed. Sky gets brought up. Cookson's son gets mentioned. The agenda is showing through...
JimmyFingers said:It is highly likely Kreuziger doped, so quite frankly I don't care too much in the procedure, but the outcome is correct: he is off the bike.
So instead of being pleased that a probably doper has been prevented from competing, this is being used as a stick to beat Cookson with.
JimmyFingers said:Agenda? Anti-Sky, anti-British, anti-Cookson. Why bring Sky into at all? What the hell do they have to do with Kreuziger. Is the suggestion they are in cahoots with Cookson to disrupt a rider from another team. Why drag Oli Cookson into it? He has precisely zero to do with it.
It is highly likely Kreuziger doped, so quite frankly I don't care too much in the procedure, but the outcome is correct: he is off the bike. I wonder what the reaction might be if this was a Sky rider the UCI was doing this to: I am certain the general reaction in this forum would be very, very different.
So instead of being pleased that a probably doper has been prevented from competing, this is being used as a stick to beat Cookson with.
Enough detail?
Journey Man said:Can't you see the irony of your statement? "Highly likely", "a probably (sic) doper"; "I don't care too much in the procedure, but the outcome is correct".
If the sanction is going to be just, the process must be correct.
Netserk said:"If the riders break the rules, it's okay the UCI does as well"
kingjr said:I can only speak from my perspective as a fan, but if it turned out that Kreuziger was indeed cheating, then it wouldn't bother me at all if the UCI didn't stick to the rules. The only thing that matters to me is the cheater not being able to compete.
Everybody's a fan of waterboarding, right?BYOP88 said:Would it bother you if for example, someone was guilty of a crime but the court didn't stick to the rules in order to get a conviction?
kingjr said:I can only speak from my perspective as a fan, but if it turned out that Kreuziger was indeed cheating, then it wouldn't bother me at all if the UCI didn't stick to the rules. The only thing that matters to me is the cheater not being able to compete.
Netserk said:Everybody's a fan of waterboarding, right?
If the bottom line is that the criminal gets locked up in the end for what he did (or whatever punishment would be adequate), I sure as sh!t won't bother asking how the court made it happen.BYOP88 said:Would it bother you if for example, someone was guilty of a crime but the court didn't stick to the rules in order to get a conviction?
kingjr said:If the bottom line is that the criminal gets locked up in the end for what he did (or whatever punishment would be adequate), I sure as sh!t won't bother asking how the court made it happen.
Netserk said:Everybody's a fan of waterboarding, right?
JimmyFingers said:Agenda? Anti-Sky, anti-British, anti-Cookson. Why bring Sky into at all?
DirtyWorks said:Because it is interesting to compare the way RK's case is being handled as opposed to Sky's last positive.
-Cookson plainly states RK had irregular values.
-UCI (not Cookson) gives strange explanation that doesn't quite fit facts regarding Henao's positive-like scores. Henao takes break.
How about JTL? General silence.
All positive cases, all handled differently.
del1962 said:In JTL case, withdrawn from racing thus not putting UCI on the spot, Tinkoff kept putting RK racing for almost a year (if anything it was unfair on JTL).
 
		
		 
		
		 
		
		 
		
		
 
				
		