gillan1969 said:
...
i think the problem is he straddled the epo revolution with no change in performance levels......in fact he got worse...hardly what you would expect from someone at the heart of the revolution...
let's put this argument to bed, because it's way past its bedtime.
Problem? For you maybe. Certainly not for the hypothesis that Lemond used EPO.
Indurain: who knows what made him go backwards in 1996. Does the fact that you don't know pose any 'problem' to the hypothesis that he doped? Of course not.
Now, I could rest my case here, but I'll give some other examples:
Planckaert: a leg problem took him out of contention, just ask pcmg76. Certainly had little to do with PLanckaert being clean.
All the PDM'ers, where did they go in the early 90s? Again, cleanliness or a lack of EPO supplies had zilch to do with the issue. Health issues, more likely. In the case of Draaijer, 'health issue' is quite the understatement.
Or take Lance 2009 and especially Lance 2010, again, who knows why he declined.
You don't. I don't. Oprah don't.
And nota bene: rumor has it that in 2009 Lance was at the very heart of what some would call a revolution, allegedly being one of the very first users of aicar. Still couldnt keep up.
What happened to Riis?
Jan Ulrich?
Boris Becker?
Tyger Woods?
Just saying: there is always stuff we don't know or have trouble fully understanding, yet in most cases (such as the above mentioned cases) this has no bearing whatsoever on the question of whether these riders doped yes or no.
Furthermore, you fail to acknowledge what most observers - except perhaps Wilcockson, Hampsten and Lemond

- have acknowledged long ago, namely that EPO was already in use in the peloton in 88 if not 87. Now, Lemond didn't exactly suck in 89 or in 90, did he, nor was he that far behind in 91. And Hampsten, winning Romandy in 1992 and 4th in the TdF, with Max Testa doing his 'nutrition'. Clean? Gimme a break.
Now, as for why Lemond may have fallen behind, sure, one option is that he was clean.
But the point is: that's not even close to being the only option.
First, there was the hunting accident. You really want to trivialize the impact that shooting had on his performances and recovery? His lungs and kidney(s) got damaged. Yikes. He himself surely didn't trivialize the impact when he claimed that he'd have beaten Fignon by multiple minutes in 1989 if it hadn't been for the shooting. Even if he doped like it was 1999, what he pulled off after the shooting constitutes a small mircale.
And what to make of Max Testa, Hampsten's carreer-long coach and doc, who said Lemond had simply taken too much drugs. Far fetched? Not really. A top cycling&triathlon coach referenced by Nick777 said that at some point Lemond's blood was so thick his life was in danger.
Related: there was his mitochondria myopathy, which he himself has said put a fatal blow to his carreer.
Ow, and interestingly, albeit in the realm of speculation, his mitochondria myopathy was in some circles rumored to have been triggered by excessive steroid use. Far fetched? Again, hardly. Eddie B. we know for fact was drugging Polish and US juniors with hormones, amphetamines and blood transfusions. Steroids would not have been out of the question for Eddie. Lemond was, what, 14, 15, when Eddie took hi under his wings. 13 years later we arrive in 1991; that's plenty of time for drugs to have accumulative effect on his body.
None of that is proven, but it goes to show that there are so many possible factors that may have played a role in explaining Lemond's decline from 91 onwards.
So, no Lemond declining in 1991 doesn't pose any kind of obstacle to the hypothesis that may have used EPO.
In the end there are 'problems' (i.e. unknown elements/factors) in nearly every doping scheme. But hardly ever do these problems pose a threat to the very reality of that doping scheme.
We, Joe Public, don't have access to all the answers. Seldom does that mean that there is no doping.