Official Alberto Contador hearing thread

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May 4, 2011
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He was always going to do the Tour and a 2nd GT, though. Be it the Giro, or the Vuelta. He needed a new challenge. The deal he struck with Zomegnan may have included an appearance fee.
 
Aug 5, 2010
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18-Valve. (pithy) said:
He was always going to do the Tour and a 2nd GT, though. Be it the Giro, or the Vuelta. He needed a new challenge. The deal he struck with Zomegnan may have included an appearance fee.

from what i have read there was no appearance fee but he and zomegnan had made a deal for him riding the 2011 giro during april 2010
 
Sep 30, 2011
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scullster46 said:
Hitch is just a fanboy of exciting cycling, nothing more, nothing less

he is accused of being a fanboy of every tom, **** and paolo its getting ridiculous. Lol.
 
Oct 30, 2011
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RobbieCanuck said:
The comments on this thread are interesting, but the bottom line since July 19, 2010 when the sample was taken, is that everything is speculation. There has not been one article, comment, or opinion on this case in any form of reputable world-wide media that is not based on sheer speculation or hypothetical theory.

The fault for this speculation is the secrecy in discilplinary proceedings at the national level and in the CAS. There is absolulely no justification for the CAS to hold closed proceedings. The secrecy only breeds distrust in the process and cynicism among cyclists and fans everywhere.

From a stricly legal point of view the secrecy is the antithesis of every reputable legal system in the world where courts are open to the public and to public scrutiny. Of what is the CAS afraid?

The CAS would do themselves and sport a huge favour if they abandoned their nonsensical and fundamentally flawed approach to these cases. The secrecy can only breed contempt toward the CAS and serves to diminish their credibility.

Secrecy allows people to testify without subjecting themselves to a trial by media. Sometimes you might get a testimony in private that no-one would make in public. It's a tough call, and I do agree that the secrecy doesn't help [the appearance of the trial], but at least there is a trial.
 
Jun 18, 2011
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Caruut said:
Secrecy allows people to testify without subjecting themselves to a trial by media. Sometimes you might get a testimony in private that no-one would make in public. It's a tough call, and I do agree that the secrecy doesn't help, but at least there is a trial.

Agreed, especially with Omerta. People would be much less likely to testify against someone if they knew that the entire peloton would find out.
 
Sep 25, 2009
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RobbieCanuck said:
The comments on this thread are interesting, but the bottom line since July 19, 2010 when the sample was taken, is that everything is speculation. There has not been one article, comment, or opinion on this case in any form of reputable world-wide media that is not based on sheer speculation or hypothetical theory.

The fault for this speculation is the secrecy in discilplinary proceedings at the national level and in the CAS. There is absolulely no justification for the CAS to hold closed proceedings. The secrecy only breeds distrust in the process and cynicism among cyclists and fans everywhere.

From a stricly legal point of view the secrecy is the antithesis of every reputable legal system in the world where courts are open to the public and to public scrutiny. Of what is the CAS afraid?

The CAS would do themselves and sport a huge favour if they abandoned their nonsensical and fundamentally flawed approach to these cases. The secrecy can only breed contempt toward the CAS and serves to diminish their credibility.
i quoted your entire post b/c i agree with its spirit entirely.

where i feel you may have simplified things is in blue.

far from being a lawyer, i feel blaming cas is not proper on legal grounds. one of the litigating sides is to blame, i'm not sure at this point which one...

they, the cas, have typically had closed-door hearings. but the final ruling has been made public in the absolute majority of cases i followed.

in my educated guess, the secrecy and a ban on any leaks comes from one of the litigating sides whilst the cas rules simply respect those rights...

who has most to hide ? that's the party to blame !
 
Jun 14, 2010
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airstream said:
I see nothing offensive to call a man a fan/fanboy if someone is sensitive to every attack in the direction of its riders. If it hurts someone personally, well, I'm sorry. All the more so I saw that the only my disagreement enraged people on the thread about GC riders in 2011.

Calling someone a "fanboy" is an insult and you know it. It is intended to mock and slander.

Moreover trying to discredit someones argument every single *****ing time by accusing them of being biased is ****ing annoying.

PS thanks to Zam and Scullster.
 
Jul 27, 2010
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There is actually a lot of information we have about this case:

1) the dates of Bert’s CB positives, and the level on each date; from these data, one can estimate how much CB Bert had in his system, and the actual range of estimates that WADA calculated were provided in the RFEC report.
2) the date and probably the level of the DEHP positive. Based on the leaked information, WADA has basically confirmed the date first given in the internet story last year, and since this date seems to be correct, my guess is that the amount is, also. At any rate, the level can’t be too much lower than what was originally reported, or WADA wouldn’t have a good case.
3) The prevalence of contaminated meat in Spain, as based on testing results.

It seems to me that the most critical piece of information we don’t have—assuming Bert has not managed to identify the exact source of the meat he ate—is the details of his passport and other tests. WADA has to show that Bert could have taken CB as well as withdrawn blood without being flagged. In fact, as Ashenden’s studies have shown, one can withdraw blood and probably still pass the passport, but as some have argued on this forum, WADA does not want to be in the position of implying that the passport is ineffective. At a minimum, they need to show that the blood could have been withdrawn during a period when Bert was not tested for the passport. The offseason scenario helps them here, because he could have withdrawn blood just once and frozen it, rather than going through repeated withdrawal-transfusion cycles during the season. It’s probably easier for the arbs to imagine beating the passport on a one-time withdrawal then doing it several times, even though in the latter case, withdrawal is always followed immediately by transfusion. It would look even better, of course, if WADA can point to a suspect passport that might in fact be interpreted as resulting from blood withdrawal. Again, this possibility is something we can’t evaluate—there was that rumor of the very high HT/Hb in May--but could have played a critical role in the hearing.

IMO, though, tests for CB are actually more important. One thing clear about the transfusion scenario is that Bert had to take a fairly large dose of CB—to account for the CB levels detected--and probably do so daily over a period of several days or more (since CB as a single dose probably wouldn’t have much of a beneficial effect). So it’s critical to show not simply that there was a period when he wasn’t tested, as I assume there frequently was, but that the gaps between tests are long enough so that he would not have felt it was a major risk to have a detectable amount of CB in his body for some length of time. Though I don’t believe that arguments about the mental state of an athlete should carry much weight in a doping decision, personally I have always wondered why Bert would take CB when he could probably accomplish the same thing without it. In this respect, the offseason scenario is a little weaker than the June scenario. If he needed to lose weight after the DL, he might have felt he couldn’t do it in time for the TDF without chemical help. Whereas in the offseason, there wouldn’t be any big hurry.

Barring direct proof of the contaminated meat, Bert’s only chance is to cast as much doubt on the transfusion scenario as possible. To this end, I expect Bert’s team focused a lot of their efforts on the passport and other tests, painting him Mr. Clean.
 
Oct 30, 2011
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Good post, pretty much summarises everything WADA has, though you sort of skip over the mountain Contador has to climb to prove any sort of contamination.
 
Sep 30, 2010
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Caruut said:
Good post, pretty much summarises everything WADA has, though you sort of skip over the mountain Contador has to climb to prove any sort of contamination.

Actually MI's summary was fairly spot on this respect imho.

AC doesn't have to prove contamination as has been discussed over and over again. He has to make contamination the most likely explanation and instead of proving just that he seems to have chosen the other way by showing that all others including transfusion are less likely. I think that is exactly the strategy AC's legal team have used. I still also think that WADA has taken a huge leap of faith in constructing such a detailed transfusion theory. As MI indicated that means making some pretty tricky assumptions along the way on timing of CB-intake, amount of CB-intake, timing of withdrawal of the blood, the exact treatment of the blood (splitiing it or not), the timing of reinfusion of the blood and/or plasma (basically doing two infusions), the pharmokinetics of AC (a.o. his weight during competition), his urination level during competition, the fact that he apparently managed to use large amounts of CB over a prolongued period of time undetected, a blood passport without any major anomalies apparently, etc.

But still we have to wait and see how much we really know of both sides' strategies. Oh well, it keeps the forum busy, doesn't it?

Regards
GJ
 
Jul 4, 2011
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Sorry, can't resist it any further.

The Hitch said:
Sad to see this thread go down the drain with people posting pictures of just about everyone but themselves.

Ditto, in context of this thread.:D

The real discussions are interesting.
 
Sep 30, 2011
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ramjambunath said:
Sorry, can't resist it any further.



Ditto, in context of this thread.:D

The real discussions are interesting.

it because somefolks called someone a 'fanboy'
 

Dr. Maserati

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Jun 19, 2009
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GJB123 said:
Actually MI's summary was fairly spot on this respect imho.

AC doesn't have to prove contamination as has been discussed over and over again. He has to make contamination the most likely explanation and instead of proving just that he seems to have chosen the other way by showing that all others including transfusion are less likely. I think that is exactly the strategy AC's legal team have used. I still also think that WADA has taken a huge leap of faith in constructing such a detailed transfusion theory. As MI indicated that means making some pretty tricky assumptions along the way on timing of CB-intake, amount of CB-intake, timing of withdrawal of the blood, the exact treatment of the blood (splitiing it or not), the timing of reinfusion of the blood and/or plasma (basically doing two infusions), the pharmokinetics of AC (a.o. his weight during competition), his urination level during competition, the fact that he apparently managed to use large amounts of CB over a prolongued period of time undetected, a blood passport without any major anomalies apparently, etc.

But still we have to wait and see how much we really know of both sides' strategies. Oh well, it keeps the forum busy, doesn't it?

Regards
GJ

WADA haven't taken a 'leap of faith', you have - by putting to much 'faith' in the current news reports. WADA will not be talking to the press during the proceedings - any reports are either speculation or coming from the defense, neither are reliable.

While AC does not have to "prove contamination", neither does WADA have to prove transfusion - CAS will rule by the balance of probabilities which theory is the most likely scenario. If WADA can show that the possibility of transfusion is there then Contador will struggle to show contamination as the likely scenario.
 
Oct 30, 2011
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GJB123 said:
Actually MI's summary was fairly spot on this respect imho.

AC doesn't have to prove contamination as has been discussed over and over again. He has to make contamination the most likely explanation and instead of proving just that he seems to have chosen the other way by showing that all others including transfusion are less likely. I think that is exactly the strategy AC's legal team have used. I still also think that WADA has taken a huge leap of faith in constructing such a detailed transfusion theory. As MI indicated that means making some pretty tricky assumptions along the way on timing of CB-intake, amount of CB-intake, timing of withdrawal of the blood, the exact treatment of the blood (splitiing it or not), the timing of reinfusion of the blood and/or plasma (basically doing two infusions), the pharmokinetics of AC (a.o. his weight during competition), his urination level during competition, the fact that he apparently managed to use large amounts of CB over a prolongued period of time undetected, a blood passport without any major anomalies apparently, etc.

But still we have to wait and see how much we really know of both sides' strategies. Oh well, it keeps the forum busy, doesn't it?

Regards
GJ

I should not have used the word prove - in my mind Contador has a mountain to climb to make contamination a likely scenario, which is what I should have said. As of now, he's had a positive, and just said "It was steak", as we all know very well. Would have thought he'd have sought to protect his repuatation by going public if he could actually demonstrate that this was the case (ie. tracing the meat, etc.).

Maybe in many years time we'll read a news reportnwhere he says "I genuinely have no idea how I got busted for clen, I wasn't taking it. I was on other stuff, but clen wasn't in my medicine box". A Floyd-like confession.
 
Jun 14, 2010
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The way I read the article, they wanted to take it into 2012 because Pat Mcquaid had got his brother to place a make your own bet at Ladbrokes that the Contador case would span 3 years, and got 100-1 odds.
 
Aug 8, 2009
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The CAS has changed the date of release of the Contador decision.

According to a spokesman for the panel members, the change in wording came about because, "We believe that we are all going to hell, but we are not certain we will be able to come back to render our decision after it freezes over."

The Contador decision will now be officially announced when the cows come home.
 
May 15, 2009
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He tested positive on both A and B samples. He broke the rules ! !

Michael Rasmussen was suspended. It DID NOT involve doping, but he broke the rules. And he got suspended.

So, you are going to suspend some riders for breaking the rules, but other riders get a pass because they broke the rules "only a little" or because "I didn't mean to". Pathetic ! !

If Contador doesn't get suspended, the general public's perception of cycling is going to go down to the depths it has never been.
 
Jun 14, 2010
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CosmicRocker said:
He tested positive on both A and B samples. He broke the rules ! !

Michael Rasmussen was suspended. It DID NOT involve doping, but he broke the rules. And he got suspended.

So, you are going to suspend some riders for breaking the rules, but other riders get a pass because they broke the rules "only a little" or because "I didn't mean to". Pathetic ! !

If Contador doesn't get suspended, the general public's perception of cycling is going to go down to the depths it has never been.


I think letting of Contador would help public perception of cycling because like with other obvious dopers like Pep Nandrolone they will say "OH but he was cleared" whereas if he is suspended then the biggest rider of the generation is suddenly a convicted doper and cycling goes all the way back to 0.
 
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