Don’t know about Bert, but I could eat my weight in honeys, for sure. More than my weight.
First, and simply as I've lost track, is the 1 in 10,000 you're using above an example probability for the sake of argument, or has it been derived from the EU meat statistics?
Both to some extent. The WADA estimate was apparently about one in 17,000, but ten thousand is what the poster July threw out, and is a round number easy to work with and close enough for purposes of a rough calculation. The purpose of my calculation was not to provide more evidence for or against Bert, but just to show that having more test data could improve Bert’s odds.
As far as I can understand the two things are just different mathematical ways of expressing the same base probability, and yet in one expression you conclude its vanishingly low probability, but in the other you consider it high enough to consider carefully against transfusion. So I'm not sure why that would be. Am I missing something here?
It shouldn't get a rider off, since the odds that a particular rider would test positive are unchanged at 1/10000.
Yes and no. The odds that Bert tests positive are one in ten thousand, correct. But the odds that someone tests positive are one in a hundred, so Bert can now argue that his positive is not that unlikely. It’s very unlikely to happen to him, yes, but not nearly so unlikely to occur, and that’s all that really matters here. IOW, what Bert has to prove is that the event, the incident, is of reasonable probability. From a scientific point of view, and a legal one, it’s the occurrence that has to be accounted for, not the fact that it occurred to this person rather than that person.
Think of a murder trial, where a key witness just happened to be in the right place at the right time to observe the murder. One might argue that it is extremely unlikely that this particular person happened to be at this particular place at this particular time. What are the odds that you walked past this alley, say, at this time, when you were in fact walking all over the big city that day? But there were hundreds of thousands of people walking about in the city that day, so the odds were not at all remarkable that someone could have been in that place at that time. That is all that matters, not who that particular person was.
Contrast this with the situation if the city were deserted that day. There was a holiday, very bad weather, or some other constellation of events such that very few people were out and about. Now it becomes very pertinent to question the witness’s story. It does seem very unlikely that, even if he were out that day, he would be in that particular place at that particular time. It seems to be too much of a coincidence.
Or think of a lottery. The odds against any particular person winning the lottery are astronomical. But given the large number of people who play it, the odds are not at all high against someone winning it. So when someone does win it, we don’t say that it’s impossible, that there was fraud or cheating. We just say that that person was extraordinarily lucky.
In fact, every day things happen to people that, applied to that specific individual, are wildly improbable, but which we accept because we know they have to happen to someone. Very low probability events happen all the time, they have to happen given the large number of people and activities that are constantly in play. We can predict that they will happen, we just can’t predict who they will happen to.
The fact that WADA has to prove anything to disprove an astronomically low statistical likelihood makes this whole deal a farce.
I tend to agree with you, Chris, but this is a remarkable turnaround for someone who a while back said Bert should get off because “stuff happens”. What stuff happened to you to change your mind?
i have noted several times that too much abstract reliance on the clen testing statistics, however telling and relevant to the case, has the potential of misleading.
You probably won’t believe this, Python, but even I find this discussion too abstract. Yes, we are getting off the realities of the case here. I can only emphasize that I raised this point not because I think it has a lot of relevance to Bert’s case, but because in the future, if enough riders are tested with high sensitivity technology, we might expect to see a positive, even if the meat tests are accurate.
for ex, in contador's case, as i argued so many times, they must consider if the entire story of the steak purchase is true and what is the probability of it (as a cover story) coinciding with the transfusion or the probability of it coinciding with the positive on the 21st.
This is a good point. I have always given Bert credit for having in fact eaten steak the day of or day before the positive. Of course, he had plenty of time before the positive became public to fabricate a story, but as you and others have discussed earlier, a lot of people would have had to be in on the lie. A big question for me, though, is how often do riders eat steaks during a GT? I know they can consume as much as 8000-9000 calories a day, some of that presumably is always meat (and remember, not just beef but chicken and pork can be CB-contaminated). If it turns out he ate meat frequently during the Tour, this point might not help much.