- May 27, 2012
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andy1234 said:Right you are, squire.
We can continue this, the next time you wash my car.
You misspelled "rack."
andy1234 said:Right you are, squire.
We can continue this, the next time you wash my car.
ChewbaccaD said:I don't really know how to go any further with the "mom" jokes. I'll go ask my 10 year old and get back to you.
Past that, please provide proof Lemond doped.
oldcrank said:Maybe the real question isn't if Greg has a needle aversion,
or if you have a cockroach aversion, or if D-Mas has a
dentist aversion. Maybe the real question is how, why,
when, where Greg learned to draw his own blood? Let's
for a moment think what the uproar would be if say Dear
Wiggo found out BMW was taking his own blood samples
in Tenerife (and to my knowledge Sir Brad has not claimed
to be needle adverse). The Clinic would jump to all sorts of
conclusions and want to know how long he has been taking
his own blood samples and who taught him to take those
samples and why did he learn how to take those samples.
It is common knowledge that Greg's father-in-law Dr. David
Morris accompanied Greg and his family at some races
and perhaps he taught Greg to take his own blood
samples to monitor his health and fitness in a totally
ethical and legal manner. However, if this was the case,
it would be most honest and transparent to mention it in
an interview where Greg's aversion to needles was
discussed. It would also make sense to mention it so
no one would try and make a connection to other
American cyclists and coaches that employed blood
doping and intravenous administration of steroids.
andy1234 said:I have no proof LeMond doped.
I don't even believe he did.
I just think, that if the current riders deserve the scrutiny, so does LeMond.
If he's done nothing wrong, it will never come out.....
Do you really have a 10 year old? I sure hope he knows how to conjugate his verbs![]()
ChewbaccaD said:Lemond deserves the same scrutiny of riders who are actually riding in the peloton today or even 10 years ago? When the massive doping scandal of the 80's is revealed, we will get right on that.
EDIT: He is much smarter than his father, so I tread lightly in critiquing him.
andy1234 said:Just as much dope was floating around the 80s peloton.
It just wasn't as effective.
Does that make it less of a scandal?
I think not.
oldcrank said:Maybe the real question isn't if Greg has a needle aversion, . . .Maybe the real question is how, why,
when, where Greg learned to draw his own blood? . . .
it would be most honest and transparent to mention it in
an interview where Greg's aversion to needles was
discussed. . . .
andy1234 said:Just as much dope was floating around the 80s peloton.
It just wasn't as effective.
Does that make it less of a scandal?
I think not.
ChewbaccaD said:When you read the accounts of the riders in the 90's you see stories of guys who were forced to dope or find another profession. That was not the case in the 80's. EPO changed everything and ignoring that fact weakens your argument severely.
andy1234 said:So the unrelenting scrutiny of current riders in the clinic, isn't because of doping, but because of the type of doping?
Donkey steroids, and black bombers are not worthy of scrutiny, but blood doping is?
If Wiggins could potentially only get access to steroids and HGH, 80s style, but not blood doping, would the scrutiny become less?
I don't think so, somehow.
So why should the scrutiny be less for LeMond?
andy1234 said:So the unrelenting scrutiny of current riders in the clinic, isn't because of doping, but because of the type of doping?
Donkey steroids, and black bombers are not worthy of scrutiny, but blood doping is?
If Wiggins could potentially only get access to steroids and HGH, 80s style, but not blood doping, would the scrutiny become less?
I don't think so, somehow.
So why should the scrutiny be less for LeMond?
pmcg76 said:I think this is more about the fact that you don't like SKY and Wiggins being scrutinized than it is about LeMond.
If LeMond had rode in an era where blood doping was the norm and had underwent a transformation like Wiggins or Froome, then yes there would be more comparable scrutiny.
Perhaps you will point to LeMond's 89 turnaround as evidence of a transformation but LeMond had shown beforehand that he had that talent and that it was health problems holding him back. LeMond was never the same rider he was pre-shooting.
I think the big think here is the fact 23 years have passed since LeMond won his last Tour and there has still never been a wisper about him doping. Compared to most of his rivals of the time who nearly all have links to doping. But you already know all of this.
You have said in the past that you had ties with Chris Boardman who was of course team-mates with LeMond at GAN so if anyone on here is likely to have heard stuff, it would be you so let's hear it if there is something to know.
If 20 years pass and none of the SKY boys are ever implicated in doping, then I am sure they might be afforded the same level of respect.
andy1234 said:So the unrelenting scrutiny of current riders in the clinic, isn't because of doping, but because of the type of doping?
Donkey steroids, and black bombers are not worthy of scrutiny, but blood doping is?
If Wiggins could potentially only get access to steroids and HGH, 80s style, but not blood doping, would the scrutiny become less?
I don't think so, somehow.
So why should the scrutiny be less for LeMond?
So you just want to be LeMonds 'Dear Wiggo' type?oldcrank said:Maybe the real question isn't if Greg has a needle aversion,
or if you have a cockroach aversion, or if D-Mas has a
dentist aversion. Maybe the real question is how, why,
when, where Greg learned to draw his own blood? Let's
for a moment think what the uproar would be if say Dear
Wiggo found out BMW was taking his own blood samples
in Tenerife (and to my knowledge Sir Brad has not claimed
to be needle adverse). The Clinic would jump to all sorts of
conclusions and want to know how long he has been taking
his own blood samples and who taught him to take those
samples and why did he learn how to take those samples.
Or perhaps he didn't mention it because it didn't happen? Crazy I know.oldcrank said:It is common knowledge that Greg's father-in-law Dr. David
Morris accompanied Greg and his family at some races
and perhaps he taught Greg to take his own blood
samples to monitor his health and fitness in a totally
ethical and legal manner. However, if this was the case,
it would be most honest and transparent to mention it in
an interview where Greg's aversion to needles was
discussed. It would also make sense to mention it so
no one would try and make a connection to other
American cyclists and coaches that employed blood
doping and intravenous administration of steroids.
andy1234 said:So the unrelenting scrutiny of current riders in the clinic, isn't because of doping, but because of the type of doping?
Donkey steroids, and black bombers are not worthy of scrutiny, but blood doping is?
If Wiggins could potentially only get access to steroids and HGH, 80s style, but not blood doping, would the scrutiny become less?
I don't think so, somehow.
So why should the scrutiny be less for LeMond?
hiero2 said:Well, now, I agree that there is a lot of heat in this forum for current riders when it comes to the possibility of doping. And I will agree that the level of scrutiny is unrelenting. I also don't agree that is necessarily deserved.
However, I still think you are overdramatizing the blood draw. It isn't that hard to learn to draw blood. And to expect it to come up in an interview? Sheesh, it was an interview, not a detailed biography.
hiero2 said:Well, now, I agree that there is a lot of heat in this forum for current riders when it comes to the possibility of doping. And I will agree that the level of scrutiny is unrelenting. I also don't agree that is necessarily deserved.
However, I still think you are overdramatizing the blood draw. It isn't that hard to learn to draw blood. And to expect it to come up in an interview? Sheesh, it was an interview, not a detailed biography. Because the question occurred to you does not automatically mean it was logical, or that it would occur to the interviewer, or even that it would be of interest to the general public in an interview. "Honest and transparent", yes, it would have been. But, frankly, from my seat I don't think the question even crossed their minds. Doing a blood draw, even for someone who hates needles, is just not that big a deal.
As for your other point - that Lemond would have had the same level of scrutiny as Wiggins, if the internet had existed in the 1980's. Probably. But it is also quite true that Lemond participated in the sport before EPO was widespread. And, that the likely scrutiny would not have been as heated because of that small fact. I don't see you adding that little fact to your arguments, when it is, at least imho, a "game-changer" for this discussion.
pmcg76 said:I think this is more about the fact that you don't like SKY and Wiggins being scrutinized than it is about LeMond.
If LeMond had rode in an era where blood doping was the norm and had underwent a transformation like Wiggins or Froome, then yes there would be more comparable scrutiny.
Perhaps you will point to LeMond's 89 turnaround as evidence of a transformation but LeMond had shown beforehand that he had that talent and that it was health problems holding him back. LeMond was never the same rider he was pre-shooting.
I think the big think here is the fact 23 years have passed since LeMond won his last Tour and there has still never been a wisper about him doping. Compared to most of his rivals of the time who nearly all have links to doping. But you already know all of this.
You have said in the past that you had ties with Chris Boardman who was of course team-mates with LeMond at GAN so if anyone on here is likely to have heard stuff, it would be you so let's hear it if there is something to know.
If 20 years pass and none of the SKY boys are ever implicated in doping, then I am sure they might be afforded the same level of respect.
andy1234 said:I just think, that if the current riders deserve the scrutiny, so does LeMond.
If he's done nothing wrong, it will never come out.....
Race Radio said:Do you really think LeMond's career has not been scrutinized? For 10 years Wonderboy and his buddies probed every aspect of his career. They talked to dozens of former teammates, friends, staff, trying to find one who would say Greg doped. None would. They offered large sums of money to former teammates to say Greg doped, none would lie for the cash. They launched a well organized smear campaign against him.
Richard Moore wrote a great book called Slaying the Badger. He talked to dozens for former teammates and staff. He examied every aspect of Greg's career. He found story after story of Greg being vocally anti doping for his entire career.
If there was the internet back in the 80's then perhaps more people would have know how against doping Greg was then. Those in the sport certainly did
Big Doopie said:bingo.
can we now finally put this one to rest?
Race Radio said:Do you really think LeMond's career has not been scrutinized? For 10 years Wonderboy and his buddies probed every aspect of his career. They talked to dozens of former teammates, friends, staff, trying to find one who would say Greg doped. None would. They offered large sums of money to former teammates to say Greg doped, none would lie for the cash. When this failed they launched a well organized smear campaign against him.
aphronesis said:Perhaps, but the interview was posted with a distinct set of polemics. If you think that none would sift through and question, that takes away most of the useful sense of agora.
cycling1776 said:Source? Just curious
cycling1776 said:Source? Just curious