ScienceIsCool said:
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Sniper, I think you might have a misunderstanding of some of the facts you posted above.
1. - Greg was not an anemia patient. Had had low iron stores and took a total of three iron injections. One from Van Mol with journalist Wilcockson in the room. Two from Otto Jacome over the next two weeks as directed by Van Mol.
He suffered anemia in 1989. Period. 'Patient' or no 'patient' has no bearing on the issue.
What I find interesting is the fact that Vanmol diagnosed two riders from his 1988 ADR squad with anemia...what are the odds...Makes Lemond's claim that Jacome diagnosed his anemia seem somewhat unfortunate at best.
2. - He's not missing a kidney or anything silly like that. In Greg's own words, he developed his fear of needles because when he was a kid he had recurring kidney infections (a urinary tract infection) and had to get antibiotics injections.
answered by blutto.
3. - His "entourage" didn't seem to exist.
well it did exist, and it's been written about plentifully, as it was typical of Lemond at GTs. NLLemondfans can tell you more about that. Or I can post a link about it later.
I've yet to see anything that would place David Morris at one of Greg's races.
here you go, tdf 1991:
Un jour sans, the French call these things—an off day. Every rider's greatest fear is to have one in the mountains. In a scene that looked like a wartime evacuation, a helicopter airlifted LeMond from the mountaintop. "This Tour is far from over," he said before the door shut and the chopper took off.
For him, alas, it was over. That night team doctors took blood samples that revealed that LeMond's white blood cell count was elevated to nearly twice its normal levels. Dr. David Morris, Kathy LeMond's immunologist father, saw the open sores on his son-in-law's feet and diagnosed an infection. In a way, the news gave LeMond comfort. "It's not normal that I should be in such good condition before the race and so good through the first part of the Tour and then suddenly have such a bad day," he said.
Indeed, antibiotics helped tide LeMond through the three flat stages before the Alps. But he was now riding just as the grunts in the peloton do—to survive. For the first time in his life he approached the base of the storied climb up l'Alpe d'Huez without any nervousness. The next day, on the way to Morzine, he faltered on the very first ascent. "It'll pass," Gilbert Duclos-Lassalle, a Z domestique, told LeMond, while riding beside him. "You'll do better next year."
http://www.si.com/vault/1991/08/05/124658/tour-de-courage-greg-lemond-fought-sickness-and-adversity-in-the-78th-tour-de-france-and-finished-a-hero-though-not-a-winner
Kathy was around because they moved to France in 1981 when he got his first contract. Not sure how she could've worked at her dad's practice in the US after that...
indeed i don't think she did.
There's a fantastic interview that would clarify these points further:
https://www.facebook.com/2Rmag/posts/534227359949423
cheers, will look at this.
One one hand you have Armstrong, Dhaenens, Esofosfina (rode for ADR and said 'A - team' went to clinic and everyone was on an anti-depressant/upper), and Echoes who heard a rumor from the manager of an amateur Belgian team.
add Boogerd, Gisbers, Floyd, the anonymous whistleblower (1990 newspaper article posted by FGL) and the blogger who said the proriders he knew from the early 90s all thought Lemond used EPO (and who, btw, also put forward rumors of Greg being a Freddy 'pot belge' Sergeant client, but that as an aside).
And most of these people have said 'the peloton they rode in', so yes, it's fair to say the rumor ran through the peloton at large, not just small groups of racers who allegedly wanted to smear Greg.
That in itself is of course no evidence that he used EPO, a claim some posters are desperate to put in my mouth. The rumor itself is not necessarily true. But
the existence of the rumor in the peloton is a fact. And it's a fact that needs to be accounted for. I see three possible accounts for the rumor:
a. one big misunderstanding
b. a huge smear campaign
c. Lemond used EPO
Take your pick.
On the other hand, I'll quote Race Radio who says it best:
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Like Phil Anderson who said
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I'm sorry but that's all stuff from the horse's mouth, you can't expect me to take that seriously in a discussion about whether or not a given rider doped. If we'd go there, Lance would still have his yellow jerseys and everybody would think he's clean and Floyd would've been locked up in jail or a mental hospital facing various libel suits.
Ow, and Voet said Mottet was clean? b..b..but Mottet admitted to doping in 1995:
http://www.dopeology.org/incidents/Mottet-admission/
In 1988, Vanmol said Planckaert was clean, that he didn't need any 'preparates' because he was so good. Planckaert later admitted to using EPO.
Just goes to show, these "Lemond did it clean" statements have little meaning either way. I can think of tons of reasons why people close to Lemond would want to keep that myth alive.
edit: and we should not forget that epo wasn't illegal before 1991, transfusing blood not before 1986.
So the idea of Lemond transfusing in the early stages of his carreer and/or using epo in the latter stages is compatible with the view of Lemond being clean.