- Feb 6, 2016
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Re: Re:
At the start of the 84 tour, ie before the Tour started, ie before anyone without gifts of prophecy knew the results yet.
blutto said:Cannibal72 said:If I remember correctly, the original contention was that LeMond was the first adopter or one of the very first adopters of EPO in the pack. That can't have been before 1986, because EPO wasn't around, or in 1987/88, because LeMond wasn't around. I seem to remember Bugno's 1990 Giro victory is taken as EPO-fuelled, and LeMond fell off a cliff after 1990, so the only plausible date is 1989 (and sniper's already referenced the 1989 Giro.) this offer 3 possibilities.
a) Both LeMond and Fignon were on EPO
This is unlikely for three reasons.
1) The two were on roughly the same level as before EPO was even invented; I imagine that a survey of cycling fans at the start of the 1984 Tour would have seen the two prodigies - one the yellow jersey, the other in the rainbow bands - as overwhelming favourites to dominate the Tour for years to come.
(Proving they were on roughly the same level as before is the final name on the podium. Delgado finished 3'34" down, which is not remotely implausible in itself, and is made even less implausible by the fact that 2'40" of that is down to how he bizarrely missed his start time for the prologue. Fignon +8, Delgado +54...that's a far, far tighter race than any in the EPO era, and shows precisely no miraculous improvement for three gifted Tour winners. Looking at the results sheet alone, there's nothing that would make you think that there is anything up with this race - or that EPO was even around, given the dominance of proven and talented pre-EPO riders.)
2) It's highly unlikely a highly experimental PED in its formative stages would have been introduced to the pack simultaneously by the two number one GC cyclists in the world.
(And when you consider how close Delgado would have been, you've got to make it the top three.)
3) i consider the visceral revulsion Fignon wrote about with regard to hormones and blood doping as plausible.
b) LeMond, not Fignon, was on EPO
When two riders pretty much equal in ability and palmares are separated and just one is given EPO, the juiced one does not scrape the narrowest win in GT history thanks to a very slightly more aerodynamic helmet. He crushes the other guy.
c) Neither were using
The one plausible option.
If LeMond was blood doping prior to '89, then my arguments above still stand, I would suggest. (The 1984 Giro adds a bit of interest, though, maybe leaning the other way.)
....the 84 Tour?....the one where Fignon rode to one of the most dominating victories of all time ...in which he crushed Hinault by over 10min....
http://www.bikeraceinfo.com/tdf/tdf1984.html
....and just for fun check the TT placings ....
Cheers
At the start of the 84 tour, ie before the Tour started, ie before anyone without gifts of prophecy knew the results yet.
