Re:
In fact most of those questions have been answered. His illness has been discussed at length in these threads so now to plead ignorance of it is BS. The likely origin of the EPO rumours has been explained to you several times also, but you choose to ignore it. PDM were most likely pissed that LeMond didnt perform for them but a year later won the Tour which was their big aim. EPO was coming into the peloton from the US at that time so like many they put 2+2 together, came up with 5 and the the rumour started. Gisbers and Dhaenans are the earliest stated source so it makes sense. The rumour about Landis having his blood poured down the toilet wasnt true either but clearly it was a rumour in the peloton. Somehow it started as well, didnt make it true.
Montgomery was an investment company was it not? a successful one, so an athlete investing their money in a successful investment company is hardly unusual. Could be as Weisel was already in the small US cycling community, that is how they were acquainted. I think it was LeMonds father Bob who looked after his finances. My personal GP is also in our cycling club, does that mean he is doping me too?
Steve Tilford already answered what happened at the OTC but you have of course dismissed it. It was also pointed out that in one of your links, that over 200 athletes attended the OTC per year from a variety of sports so multiply that over a number of years and that is a lot of athletes who would have been theoretically doped. For nobody to have ever come forward if there were doping happening seems unusual in a democratic and free country, unlike say the USSR or East Germany. Also with that many athletes involved, how much contact would LeMond have had with people at the OTC, I would imagine very little contact other than for testing.
Despite Eddie B and the 84 scandal, many of those who rode for Eddie B had respect for him as a trainer. Simple really. Roy Knickman who was later named by Matt DeCanio as a coach who believed in clean cycling was also a big fan of Eddie B. Inga Thompson didnt like Eddie B but he never told her to dope, that is her own personal interpetation but then people often take different meaning from the same situation. Also care to explain how Inga could beat all the Eddie B disciples and most of the top female cyclists in the World including the Top Soviets and East Germans.
You have yet to show who all these blood dopers were during the 80s. Based on the climbing times from that era, if there were blood doping happening, it clearly was not very beneficial. I will also throw in Giles Delion as always, a rider who had a Bassons reputation and is the one rider who Bassons actually admired, top 15 on his debut Tour in 90 and White jersey winner along with a host of other successful results. Pretty good for a totally clean rider. Oh thats right, you say Delion is somehow not relevant. I want to know why not as we are talking about clean athletes beating dopers.
All of the above has been addressed before but as I pointed out, you are only interested in ont thing so choose to ignore the answers.
Would also like to add Eddie B was in charge of Postal in 96 when they first went to Europe, Tyler Hamilton described how they were so naive compared to the Euro teams and were not using EPO even though it had been on the scene for 6 years. The team doctor was Steffen Prentice who was famously anti-doping and was fired along with Eddie B at the end of that season in favour of Johnny Weltz and the Spanish Doc. The Postal team of Eddie B does not sound like a major doping team.
sniper said:I think we all want to know how/why lemond couldn't finish races anymore and his immune system wasn't working properly anymore. We also want to know how he was able to win three tours, beating known dopers and blood dopers. We also want to know where all those doping and epo rumours about lemond come from. And, we want to know why he invested in Montgomery securities. We also want to know what happened to him at the OTC and why he threw a fundraiser for blood doper Eddie B. We want to know the answer to all that.
There is an answer. In fact there is an answer which answers them all.
You don't have an answer to any of those questions.
Simples, really.
In fact most of those questions have been answered. His illness has been discussed at length in these threads so now to plead ignorance of it is BS. The likely origin of the EPO rumours has been explained to you several times also, but you choose to ignore it. PDM were most likely pissed that LeMond didnt perform for them but a year later won the Tour which was their big aim. EPO was coming into the peloton from the US at that time so like many they put 2+2 together, came up with 5 and the the rumour started. Gisbers and Dhaenans are the earliest stated source so it makes sense. The rumour about Landis having his blood poured down the toilet wasnt true either but clearly it was a rumour in the peloton. Somehow it started as well, didnt make it true.
Montgomery was an investment company was it not? a successful one, so an athlete investing their money in a successful investment company is hardly unusual. Could be as Weisel was already in the small US cycling community, that is how they were acquainted. I think it was LeMonds father Bob who looked after his finances. My personal GP is also in our cycling club, does that mean he is doping me too?
Steve Tilford already answered what happened at the OTC but you have of course dismissed it. It was also pointed out that in one of your links, that over 200 athletes attended the OTC per year from a variety of sports so multiply that over a number of years and that is a lot of athletes who would have been theoretically doped. For nobody to have ever come forward if there were doping happening seems unusual in a democratic and free country, unlike say the USSR or East Germany. Also with that many athletes involved, how much contact would LeMond have had with people at the OTC, I would imagine very little contact other than for testing.
Despite Eddie B and the 84 scandal, many of those who rode for Eddie B had respect for him as a trainer. Simple really. Roy Knickman who was later named by Matt DeCanio as a coach who believed in clean cycling was also a big fan of Eddie B. Inga Thompson didnt like Eddie B but he never told her to dope, that is her own personal interpetation but then people often take different meaning from the same situation. Also care to explain how Inga could beat all the Eddie B disciples and most of the top female cyclists in the World including the Top Soviets and East Germans.
You have yet to show who all these blood dopers were during the 80s. Based on the climbing times from that era, if there were blood doping happening, it clearly was not very beneficial. I will also throw in Giles Delion as always, a rider who had a Bassons reputation and is the one rider who Bassons actually admired, top 15 on his debut Tour in 90 and White jersey winner along with a host of other successful results. Pretty good for a totally clean rider. Oh thats right, you say Delion is somehow not relevant. I want to know why not as we are talking about clean athletes beating dopers.
All of the above has been addressed before but as I pointed out, you are only interested in ont thing so choose to ignore the answers.
Would also like to add Eddie B was in charge of Postal in 96 when they first went to Europe, Tyler Hamilton described how they were so naive compared to the Euro teams and were not using EPO even though it had been on the scene for 6 years. The team doctor was Steffen Prentice who was famously anti-doping and was fired along with Eddie B at the end of that season in favour of Johnny Weltz and the Spanish Doc. The Postal team of Eddie B does not sound like a major doping team.
