Andynonomous said:
Don't insult my intelligence by saying "some lawyers wrote a long report, and they know law, and you don't, so this is the correct decision.".
The decision states that blood doping is unlikely, and meat ingestion is likely. THE EXACT OPPOSITE IS THE TRUTH.
You can write ANYTHING in a verbose report to come to whatever conclusion you want. This is the problem ! It is CLEAR as glass the RFEC WANTED to clear Contador, and they spent a LOT of time figuring out a way to do it. Any "legal report" justifying their pre-arranged decision is MEANINGLESS.
Whoa Nelly! Sorry, I didn't know I was insulting anything... Are we reading the same post here?
I've said no such thing that you want to turn it into - all I said was that someone in a position of knowledge and in a position of fighting doping in sports in general commented that the decision was not a white wash, that the decision was based on proper judicial work. He based that on a) being a professor at law that b) has read the report.
I also said you (and others) are free to feel different, but mainly posted it because I myself (along with most punters on here) have a) NOT read the report and b) AREN'T professors at law - hence his evaluation could be considered useful.
Look mate, I'm very, very sorry for apparently having made the deadly sin of "insulting your intelligence" by posting a link with information that some people might find interesting - Going forward I will make sure to do as told and only post aggressive dribble...
FWIW I'd agree that the UCI's handling of the case prior to it going to Spain is very open to criticism for being corrupt - by the looks of it they tried to cover it up. There might be other explanations for not making the test public, but it looks like a good explanation.
As for the process in Spain it's far from perfect, but let's not forget that:
a) Dealing with the case in Spain itself is NOT the Spaniards decision. It's a silly system that does nothing more than open the process up to this type of criticism - warranted or not.
b) The outside comments from politicians and so on were not helpful at all and, again, will open the process to the above criticism - warranted or not.
If the only way the Spanish federation can free itself of "guilt" of being corrupt by giving a rider a two year ban, does that make it a fair process?
If the federation is NOT corrupt and they did NOT succumb to the pressure from outside, they are still entitled to make the decision they did - in fact if that is the proper decision it would be difficult to see how they should decide differently.
That is why I posted the link, as it is a comment from a completely unbiased review from a professional in the field of law AND anti doping.
If you don't like that people point at other possibilities than your own "truth", then that's fine - but your ridiculous, aggressive attack on me for merely posting a link and noting why is way out there... Sorry, but I don't need to insult your intelligence - you seem quite capable of that yourself.