BroDeal said:
The price the doctors can charge is a good indicator. Even riders like Virenque were astounded by the cost to hire Ferrari. Fuentes charged Hamilton 35K euros a year. Ferrari was charging Armstrong many times more than that.
"If Ferrari agreed to work with you, and you could afford him-he typically charged between 10 and 20 percent of a rider's salary-it would make your career."
http://www.bicycling.com/article/0,6610,s1-3-12-13773-1-P,00.html
"For the next decade, [Ferrari] was a hunted man-pursued by investigative reporters and law enforcement on the one hand and, on the other, by riders seeking his services. Erwann Menthéour, a French ex-pro who was one of the first athletes to be suspended for EPO use, in 1997, writes in his book, Secret Defense, of going to visit "il dottore." In the waiting room, Menthour says, he saw "some of the greatest athletes in the world sitting there, like a virgin on her first visit to the gynecologist. It almost made me laugh out loud." In the fall of 1994, Ferrari helped Swiss rider Tony Rominger break cycling's sacred hour record. Twice. The following spring, his riders swept the top five places in the Giro d'Italia, led by Rominger and the Russian Evgeni Berzin, a burly pursuit rider who'd somehow become a climber."