Motor doping thread

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Oct 16, 2010
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We will have Lance at one end - evil, corrupt worst ever liar - we can expect him to be at the cutting edge of this deception, and we have U23 girl Femke from a family that can't even pull off a heist of a parakeet from the local pet store properly at the other.
So what is missing between ? Anyone with a brain will ask that and even if the european scene is of no interest to the makers of 60 minutes and their American audience, surely there are some European journalists who can pick up the phone and get the information and then start to add to it.


One thing's for sure, the whole build up to the program has given the guys at the top, who have facilitated it, time to put their ducks in a line and pretend that they are on top of a minor problem. Get ready for another cringewhorthy PR campaign from UCI.
 
Jan 30, 2016
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CBS also interviewed Jean Pierre Verdy who was the head of French anti doping until 2015.
http://www.sportschau.de/weitere/radsport/motor-doping-tour-de-france-100.html
No, quite the opposite, "said Verdy in the interview to the question whether the journalists of France 2 had exaggerated." They only said the minimum. The problem is much bigger. I was just wondering why it is now causing a stir all over the world. Motordoping has been around for years - it has become increasingly strong, "said Verdy.
Last year, he had received so many references to motor doping on the Tour 2015 as never before. "There was total alarm before the start. Many team managers have talked to me that you have to do something at last." However, he has no evidence. "I have not seen the manipulated bikes myself, because I never look at bikes," claimed the former AFLD Director. "The police can not do anything and I informed the UCI, but it has focused on weighing the bikes, we were there and could do nothing," he added.



Lance worked with the mechanics Julien De Vriese and Jean-Marc Vandenberghe.

http://www.volkskrant.nl/archief/de-mecanicien~a626963/
Bjarne Riis and Jan Ullrich, strong riders to whose court Vandenberghe belonged before the American bought him from Telekom

Who knows but Riis and Ulrich swapped their bikes in time trials. Could be an explanantion for the TT in disneyland where Riis lost minutes because he did not want to take his spare bike.

https://www.texasmonthly.com/articles/lance-armstrong-has-something-to-get-off-his-chest/
Lance may be paranoid, but that doesn’t mean the French aren’t out to get him. Leery of sabotage, the team’s mechanic slept with Lance’s bike in his room.

Vandenberghe started working at quick step in 2003.
 
Oct 16, 2010
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Tienus said:
CBS also interviewed Jean Pierre Verdy who was the head of French anti doping until 2015.
http://www.sportschau.de/weitere/radsport/motor-doping-tour-de-france-100.html
No, quite the opposite, "said Verdy in the interview to the question whether the journalists of France 2 had exaggerated." They only said the minimum. The problem is much bigger. I was just wondering why it is now causing a stir all over the world. Motordoping has been around for years - it has become increasingly strong, "said Verdy.
Last year, he had received so many references to motor doping on the Tour 2015 as never before. "There was total alarm before the start. Many team managers have talked to me that you have to do something at last." However, he has no evidence. "I have not seen the manipulated bikes myself, because I never look at bikes," claimed the former AFLD Director. "The police can not do anything and I informed the UCI, but it has focused on weighing the bikes, we were there and could do nothing," he added.



Lance worked with the mechanics Julien De Vriese and Jean-Marc Vandenberghe.

http://www.volkskrant.nl/archief/de-mecanicien~a626963/
Bjarne Riis and Jan Ullrich, strong riders to whose court Vandenberghe belonged before the American bought him from Telekom

Who knows but Riis and Ulrich swapped their bikes in time trials. Could be an explanantion for the TT in disneyland where Riis lost minutes because he did not want to take his spare bike.

https://www.texasmonthly.com/articles/lance-armstrong-has-something-to-get-off-his-chest/
Lance may be paranoid, but that doesn’t mean the French aren’t out to get him. Leery of sabotage, the team’s mechanic slept with Lance’s bike in his room.

Vandenberghe started working at quick step in 2003.

Great post.

Team managers coming up to Verdy to complaint. It must have been pretty bad.

Who won it again that year?
Swart with his "had the engine all along" is gonna go down as a visionary.
 
Oct 16, 2010
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And remember Brailsford downplaying the issue as fiction in 2015 and/or 16.
With teammanagers warning Verdy, how could he possibly not be aware.
 
Apr 3, 2011
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sniper said:
And remember Brailsford downplaying the issue as fiction in 2015 and/or 16.
With teammanagers warning Verdy, how could he possibly not be aware.

well, dear Watson, if all the other possibilities are proven wrong... and here we have just two groups: those warning Verdy, and those they were concerned about

even Ms. Hudson could solve it, and remember, she comes from PED selling background (the new one)
 
Mar 25, 2013
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Re: Moto-fraud: first rider caught

Reading more about this, I echo more what others have said, it just seems CBS are bringing it more to people's attention than anything else. Lemond has contributed to it as well.

“This is curable. This is fixable,” LeMond said. “I don’t trust it until they figure out . . . how to take the motor out. I won’t trust any victories of the Tour de France.”

There doesn't look to be any inside info in relation to the prevalence of it or who is using it.

I'm not sure yet about this Vargas guy. I will reserve judgment for the time being.
 
Aug 3, 2016
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Tienus said:
I cant speak for Lemond but I'm drawing similar conclusions by looking at race footage.
Your (and his) line of reasoning is certainly very reasonable.
My point is: You always document very well how you get to your conclusions. It's transparent and easy to follow. And therefore it's also obvious that it's an outsider's view that works with secondary information only. That's perfectly fine.
Lemond on the other hand gets a lot of official airtime to talk about the topic. I doubt that he puts in a similar amount of effort to dissect race footage and collect other evidence as you do. But I would assume that he has access to insider information and knows a lot more than we all do. But does he? He makes kinda bold but quite generic statements and seemingly always refuses to go into specifics. I'm not sure whether he's not (yet) willing to or not able to present more tangible evidence.
It always bothers me when people are given the opportunity to voice their "expert opinion" just because of their reputation and not their actual knowledge. I hope that's not just another one of these cases.


Tienus said:
I realise there could well be legit changes amongst them.
I guess this is the crux with the arguments about bike changes. First it's not always clear from the outside whether there is a good reason for a change or not. And secondly, even if there is indeed no real reason to change the bike it's not unanimous proof for motorization either. Just because something makes not much sense doesn't mean people aren't doing it. People tend to do stupid stuff all the time when it's in fashion or just to copycat someone they look up to. Leading to some sort of strange groupthink that is hard to grasp for outsiders. And the more "detail-oriented" people want to be, the more susceptible they usually become to do things that are objectively nonsense but they firmly believe in because it appeared to have helped them a lot once or twice in the past. Always having the bike that you feel most comfortable with on a given terrain might be one of thoses cases. So when retired riders tune in to say that nobody changed bikes for fun during their careers I don't give this too much weight. It's a general fact of life that the next generation does stuff differently and the older generation doesn't always like it..
Therefore I doubt that every single bike or wheel change that has no obvious legit explanation is related to a motor. So for me there needs to be additional evidence to make such a bike change suspicious. Like for example a bike change followed by an extrodinary performance. Or a consistent pattern of bike changes that always lets the presumably dodgy material vanish in the end. There have been quite a few such cases for sure.


Tienus said:
CBS also interviewed Jean Pierre Verdy who was the head of French anti doping until 2015.
http://www.sportschau.de/weitere/radsport/motor-doping-tour-de-france-100.html
No, quite the opposite, "said Verdy in the interview to the question whether the journalists of France 2 had exaggerated." They only said the minimum. The problem is much bigger.
Just for completeness and to add a number as the meaning of "widespread" has led to discussions here before: The claim that Verdy is referring to is that about a dozen riders used a motor in TdF 2015.
That's what he said in the original interview:
Question: Who has used motors?
Answer: It's just a minority, but probably more than a dozen riders. Many more than in 2014 and the years before that. The hungarian engineer (i.e. Varjas) was openly walking around at the start of TdF and has visited his riders.
 
Oct 21, 2015
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Cloxxki said:
I always read the "something extra" thing as "artifical plasma" or something. Wheren't there serious allegation Lance has put his hands on some stuff from a medical trial? HemAssist I think it was.

There was Betsy's proxy, Race Radio, spreading rumors of super drugs no one else had access to. He wove tales of a dark conspiracy involving Amgen and Weisel's investment banking relationship with the company. Of course when everything came out the team was using the same drugs as everyone else and was much more conservative than other teams. No apology from Betsy on that one. Now she has switched to smearing Lance with allegations of motor use.
 
Aug 14, 2015
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And there you have it. Varjas delivered wheels to Beaulieu Sur Mer before Tour de France in 2015. Greg LeMond working secretly with French police with Varjas as informant. Bikes weighted before time trial. Team Sky were the only ones with heavy wheels - 800g heavier than others. Team Sky says wheels were cleared.

Nice work, Cookson.

"In the 2015 Tour de France, bikes in the peloton were weighed before one of the time trial stages. French authorities told us the British Team Sky was the only team with bikes heavier than the rest—each bike weighed about 800 grams more. A spokesman for Team Sky said that during a time trial stage bikes might be heavier to allow for better aerodynamic performance. He said the team has never used mechanical assistance and that the bikes were checked and cleared by the sports governing body."

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/60-minutes-investigates-hidden-motors-and-pro-cycling/
 
Jul 22, 2015
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TeflonDub said:
And there you have it. Varjas delivered wheels to Bailleu Sur Mer before Tour de France in 2015. Greg LeMond working secretly with French police with Varjas as informant. Wheels weighted before time trial. Team Sky were the only ones with heavy wheels - 800g heavier than others. Team Sky says wheels were cleared.

Nice work, Cookson.

60 minutes actually said the Sky TT bikes overall weight were 800g heavier, not the wheels themselves. They said they weren't allowed to remove the wheels in order to weigh them but didn't say the reason given, if any.

I don't know if the extra 800g was relative to what the Pinarellos were supposed to weigh or the rest of the peloton.

They said 800g is the additional weight for the rear wheel hub motor system.

Not a very good investigation overall. Was left with many more questions than I started with.
 
Aug 3, 2016
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TeflonDub said:
Wheels weighted before time trial. Team Sky were the only ones with heavy wheels - 800g heavier than others.
Are you sure about this? I understood that they only weighted the whole bikes and not the wheels seperately. But I might have heard it wrong.

This story is really the only thing that was somewhat new or interesting. But way too superficial. Not even close to revelations of Festina-like dimensions as Varjas announced.. In fact no revelations at all, just one new (although highly suspicious) piece of information that requires explanation.
 
Team SKy don't have 12 riders in their line up:

Verdy said he’s been disturbed by how fast some riders are going up the mountains. As a doping investigator, he relied for years on informants among the team managers and racers in the peloton, the word for the pack of riders. These people told Jean-Pierre Verdy that about 12 racers used motors in the 2015 Tour de France.

Why they don't have names
 
Aug 14, 2015
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Tom the Engine said:
TeflonDub said:
Wheels weighted before time trial. Team Sky were the only ones with heavy wheels - 800g heavier than others.
Are you sure about this? I understood that they only weighted the whole bikes and not the wheels seperately. But I might have heard it wrong.

This story is really the only thing that was somewhat new or interesting. But way too superficial. Not even close to revelations of Festina-like dimensions as Varjas announced.. In fact no revelations at all, just one new (although highly suspicious) piece of information that requires explanation.
No, I heard it wrong. Didn't realize they would publish transcript, was trying to type and half listen. Corrected my post.
 
Aug 14, 2015
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"According to Varjas the enhanced wheels weigh about 800 grams—or 1.7 pounds more than normal wheels."

So they only weighed TeamSky's full bikes, and the bikes just happened to be 800g heavier than the other teams. The excuse offered by Team Sky is that the heavier TT bike was for improved aerodynamic performance (isn't everything, including seated attacks on Ventoux in '13). Seems legit. They must have had a downhill TT in the 2015 TdF that I can't remember where this heavier bike would really pay off.