Turner29 said:Thus, EPO was available to Greg Lemond in 1989. Many believe the "vitamin injections" that turned around his season were in fact EPO.
BroDeal said:Many people are idiots. An iron shot in the Giro does not an EPO program make. It does not work that way.
Turner29 said:Thus, EPO was available to Greg Lemond in 1989. Many believe the "vitamin injections" that turned around his season were in fact EPO.
Turner29 said:Thus, EPO was available to Greg Lemond in 1989. Many believe the "vitamin injections" that turned around his season were in fact EPO.
You don't do EPO by taking one injection during the Giro and then flying a month later at the Tour. It doesn't work like that. 1989 is also an extremely early date for EPO - it's just a very far-fetched theory. I could give you any illegal stimulant or whatever, but EPO? No way.Albatros said:Extremely likely. From an anemic cadaver a few weeks earlier in the Giro to 55 kms per hour in the last stage of the TdF, a record that took many years to best by the most doped cyclists in the history of the sport.
Albatros said:Extremely likely. From an anemic cadaver a few weeks earlier in the Giro to 55 kms per hour in the last stage of the TdF, a record that took many years to best by the most doped cyclists in the history of the sport.
But anyway, if he doped, he did the same as his predecessors and his followers. Nothing to be ashamed of, although some people coming from very puritan cultures find it harder to accept and to live in peace with themselves, and that includes the athletes and their followers. A very interesting sociological phenomenon.
Albatros said:Extremely likely. From an anemic cadaver a few weeks earlier in the Giro to 55 kms per hour in the last stage of the TdF, a record that took many years to best by the most doped cyclists in the history of the sport.
BroDeal said:Giro d’Italia, May 21 - June 11, 8th in Stage 4, 2nd in Stage 22 (ITT), 39th Overall GC
BotanyBay said:"Many" like you, Oliver? Name some contemporaries of his that are willing to go on-record as believing that. Also, read Tillford's statement after I requested that he chime-in. I personally believe that most (if not all) of Greg's contemporaries would say something similar.
Sorry, I screwed up the approval date data on EPO.
Turner29 said:Yes, the best evidence is that it took years for doped riders with much better aerodynamic equipment and positions to equal his speed.
thehog said:More to the point the fact that Starr couldn't keep up would lead one to think he is wee bit FoS.
Jeremiah said:Positions? How does Armstrong's position compare with LeMond's? You've got to be effing joking? Anybody have any photos so we can Rotfloao?
131313 said:I love when the LeMond deniers trot out the whole "fastest TT ever" thing. They conveniently forget that such notable luminaries such as Helmut Wechselberger road the same TT @ 32.6 mph. With no aero gear... (I just picked him because he has a funny name. Some other lesser known guys went faster).
Folks need to chew on that one for a bit, then admit the reality that maybe, just maybe, the course had something to do with it.
Turner29 said:But where else have we seen a rider have a horrible Giro, save for one ITT, then have a very, very good Tour.
Keep in mind that during the Lemond era, EPO's introduction not withstanding, blood doping cannot be ruled out...
hrotha said:You don't do EPO by taking one injection during the Giro and then flying a month later at the Tour. It doesn't work like that. 1989 is also an extremely early date for EPO - it's just a very far-fetched theory. I could give you any illegal stimulant or whatever, but EPO? No way.
Also, you can't compare average speeds like that. There's a reason why road racing doesn't really have records, except vaguely on well-established climbs. That particular ITT was relatively short, it was downhill and with tailwind. Of course everybody went mighty fast there.
BroDeal said:Cadaver, eh?
1989
Het Volk, March 4, 17th
Tirreno Adriatico, March 9-15, 9th in stage 1 ITT, 6th Overall GC
Critérium International, March 25-26, 2nd in Stage 1, 8th in Stage 2, 16th in Stage 3 (ITT), 4th Overall GC
Ronde van Vlaaderen, April 2, 63rd
Tour of America, 3rd Overall GC
Giro d’Italia, May 21 - June 11, 8th in Stage 4, 2nd in Stage 22 (ITT), 39th Overall GC
Albatros said:An Injection? Several. By 1986 EPO was alredy used in clinical trials.
Regarding his ITT numbers. According to Channel 4 broadcasting the wind was minimal and the gradient 0.3%, almost flat. Being the last stage of a gruelling Tour where he had to fight all the way against Fignon and considering that he was clean it is unbelieveble that it took so long for the dopers that came after to better his record.
You don't have to be a professor too look at those two bold parts and realise you are contradicting yourself.Albatros said:I am going by what Otto Jacome, his masseur, said. That he was anemic and needed iron injections.
And in spite of his impressive result in the last ITT of the Giro, Lemond finished almost one hour behind Fignon.
I guess those iron shots started to take effect by the end of the Giro.
Albatros said:An Injection? Several. By 1986 EPO was alredy used in clinical trials.
Regarding his ITT numbers. According to Channel 4 broadcasting the wind was minimal and the gradient 0.3%, almost flat. Being the last stage of a gruelling Tour where he had to fight all the way against Fignon and considering that he was clean it is unbelieveble that it took so long for the dopers that came after to better his record.
Check the thread about first EPO users in the peloton. 1986 is a fantasy date for cycling.Albatros said:An Injection? Several. By 1986 EPO was alredy used in clinical trials.
Regarding his ITT numbers. According to Channel 4 broadcasting the wind was minimal and the gradient 0.3%, almost flat. Being the last stage of a gruelling Tour where he had to fight all the way against Fignon and considering that he was clean it is unbelieveble that it took so long for the dopers that came after to better his record.
hrotha said:Check the thread about first EPO users in the peloton. 1986 is a fantasy date for cycling.
Again, no such thing as records in cycling, except in climbs, because the courses are never the same. Slight as it was, it was still downhill. Was Thierry Marie on EPO too back then?
