roundabout said:
No point in checking junior results without the appropriate context.
Depends how junior and u23 we're going. I believe Valverde when he was 11 years old and his string of unbeaten races as a kid began, was clean. I believe Valverde when he was 23 and he podiumed the Vuelta while riding for Kelme, was up to his eyeballs.
At some point in that progression he stopped being carried by talent alone. But where? Valverde's rise was almost continuous, but somewhere along that line doping happened. Therefore we know that Valverde was a talented guy but we don't have tabs on exactly where the limitations of his talent lie.
The problem is, people have been trying to make out like Valverde is doing something out of the ordinary, and ludicrously blatant, this week. He hasn't. One glance at his palmarès would tell you that. And his climbing performance was under the magic 6W/kg that we've been told to believe is a limit, whereas Froome's on Jebel al-Akhdar was far in excess of that. Piti has won a technical prologue, and sprinted away at the top of two climbs, one short and one medium in length. That's what Valverde does. It's kind of his thing.
The only thing that Alejandro Valverde is doing this week that suggests he is doping is having the name Alejandro Valverde, because that name is forever indelibly associated with doping. He's not doing something that Valverde wouldn't normally do, he's not outperforming expectations, he's just being Valverde, and that's enough for people to suspect him.
However, since more or less everybody would agree Valverde is doping, I don't really understand why any conversation has arisen on the subject, because it's not like Movistar have suddenly jumped up a level in megadoping from what we've seen this season; Nairo Quintana won a stage race against a mixed level field by being the best climber - big shock, he's only the 2nd best climber in the world. Malori won a mid-length ITT - not shocking, the field wasn't the strongest, and if Phinney didn't have a good day he was clearly the best TTer left in the field. Let's wait until they do something genuinely remarkably out of the ordinary for them before we leap on them. Something like having four left on the front when the bunch is down to single figures, perhaps. That isn't their calling card.