Dear Wiggo said:FTFY. Thanks for the contribution.
Thanks for the edits. Yet, the bottom line is 'what does the public want'? If they want WWF, well, nothing will change.
Dear Wiggo said:FTFY. Thanks for the contribution.
Tonton said:Thanks for the edits. Yet, the bottom line is 'what does the public want'? If they want WWF, well, nothing will change.
Dear Wiggo said:Really quickly, and I don't mean to insult and write the following without prejudice, but
I don't care what the public wants.
If I project my own desire onto the sport of cycling, and empathise with the single most important aspect of the sport, which is the riders, then I believe riders wish to compete clean.
I do not believe a new cyclist who shows some ability is looking forward to being old enough to purchase EPO and cortisone and AICAR so he or she can inject that cocktail to beat the other riders.
It's a beautiful sport in its own right, and the self entitled attitude of Hein and anyone else saying the riders have to do XYZ to make it a spectacle can jam itself where the sun don't shine.
Dear Wiggo said:Really quickly, and I don't mean to insult and write the following without prejudice, but
I don't care what the public wants.
If I project my own desire onto the sport of cycling, and empathise with the single most important aspect of the sport, which is the riders, then I believe riders wish to compete clean.
I do not believe a new cyclist who shows some ability is looking forward to being old enough to purchase EPO and cortisone and AICAR so he or she can inject that cocktail to beat the other riders.
It's a beautiful sport in its own right, and the self entitled attitude of Hein and anyone else saying the riders have to do XYZ to make it a spectacle can jam itself where the sun don't shine.
blackcat said:Before all you folks in the Clinic get real, you cannot even understand the problem. P'raps, just p'raps, pro cycling and the UCI is not sport, its entertainment. And the ideals and preconceptions you have over sport, has no relation to pro cycling
Dear Wiggo said:It's so easy to pick flaws in things. Simple. So much easier to tear something down. Much more difficult to create something, to grow something. To innovate. See beyond the obvious.
In this thread, I really don't care for or about the, "that won't work because" responses. It's not helpful, or useful. Pretty sure OP is saying the same thing. If you can't see something, then great. But if the possibility is not even allowed to be entertained, due to constant negativity, there's no avenue for discussion at all.
blackcat said:blackcat said:Before all you folks in the Clinic get real, you cannot even understand the problem. P'raps, just p'raps, pro cycling and the UCI is not sport, its entertainment. And the ideals and preconceptions you have over sport, has no relation to pro cycling
Abstract
Aim
This study aims to examine the circumstances which athletes say affect their (hypothetical) considerations of whether to dope or not and explore the differences between athletes of different gender, age and sport type.
Methods
645 elite athletes (mean age: 22.12; response rate: 43%) representing 40 sports completed a web-based questionnaire. Participants were asked to imagine themselves in a situation in which they had to decide whether to dope or not to dope and then evaluate how different circumstances would affect their decisions.
Results
Multiple circumstances had an effect on athletes’ hypothetical decisions. The most effective deterrents were related to legal and social sanctions, side-effects and moral considerations. Female athletes and younger athletes evaluated more reasons as deterrents than older, male athletes. When confronted with incentives to dope, the type of sport was often a more decisive factor. Top incentives were related to qualified medical assistance, improved health or faster recovery from injury, the low risk of being caught and the threat posed to an elite career.
Conclusions
Our results reveal that numerous circumstances affect athletes’ thoughts on doping and athletes of different gender, age and sport type reacted differently to a variety of circumstances that may potentially deter or trigger doping. Particularly notable findings were the potential role of doctors in athletes’ doping and that the current punitive anti-doping approach seems to deter athletes, although the fear of social sanctions was almost as great a deterrent.
Implications
Anti-doping prevention strategies should be diversified to target specific groups of athletes.
mrhender said:For me all sports has always been entertainment..
Labelling cycling and UCI as entertainment doesn't change much regarding the task at hand.. If I should entertain the idea of cycling beeing "just" entertainment I would say that pro-cycling is under-performing at best..
You know why..? The answer is doping..
Remove doping as much as possible and the SPORT will flourish and reach new hights...
Even Field Hockey has more wiewers than cycling.... I don't by the notion of doping increasing revenues on the long term.......
mrhender said:It's a purchase article, so for now only the abstract... Worth a buy?
mrhender said:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211266913000273
It's a purchase article, so for now only the abstract... Worth a buy?
alcedo said:1. First non-negative test: The rider is sanctioned with a lifetime ban.
2. A non-negative test: The riders team (all other riders and ALL team employees) are sanctioned with 6 months ban from races and all other activities in cycling.
3. All employees of the teams must have a personal license to work with cycling.
4. All tests to be conducted by an organization independent of UCI.
5. All teams and their employees must sign a legal binding document that states, that they have no past involvement in doping or doping related activities.
6. Sanction if it is proven without doubt, that their statement was false: Lifetime ban and a fine of one year salary.
7. No past (or present) doped rider or people related to doping in any way allowed to work in cycling (managers, riders, soigneurs, cleaners, mechanics, chefs etc.)
I believe this will change the "culture" in cycling.
if you consider cycling a team sport, you could perhaps retrospectively strip all results obtained by the team in races in which the positive rider participated.the sceptic said:I think 2 is too harsh. You cant sanction people that might have had no knowledge or involvement in the doping.
the sceptic said:I think 2 is too harsh. You cant sanction people that might have had no knowledge or involvement in the doping.