VeloGirl said:Scott Pelley on Late Night with David Letterman (video, not sure about geo-restrictions)
Talks about Hamilton interview around 3:55. Pelley says at least a dozen former riders from Postal have told their story to the GJ.
frenchfry said:Maybe he is reserving the high flying legal types before Strauss-Kahn gets to them.
I see a lot of parallels between the 2 cases. Wonder what DSK's mother looks like, might explain a lot.
Mestre said:Now, memory is not so hot, but...
I do remember following Armstrong's 1998 season and being very impressed, especially with his 4th place in La Vuelta. He wasn't making a great deal of noise and the press, as I remember, wasn't really paying much attention to him, but I went to see a couple of stages and he was up there and I thought that had its merit after what he'd been through. And I remember seeing him in Valencia.
I'm less sure about him having competed in the 1998 Vuelta de Valencia and I can't find any info about him being there, but I do have this idea that he crashed on the ascent/descent of Eslida - I can remember thinking that was the last thing he needed. It stuck in my mind because I was curious about him coming back to racing and how he would perform and I've climbed Eslida a lot of times myself. That would have been at the beginning of the season, if he was there and my memory isn't playing tricks.
But apart from that, I can't recall him having been in Valencia other than on those occasions. After his cancer treatment, I mean. And I don't mean the Region - Denia, Altea, etc., - which is a standard location for late/early season training camps. I'm referring to the city of Valencia. Once he got into his Tour mode he made a big noise wherever he went - he still does - and I'm pretty sure that if he'd visited for anything even remotely related to his Foundation, never mind a bike race, he would have been all over the media.
Those of you who follow these things, which is all of you, know that Valencia is where Luis del Moral, he of [add d***ng scandal of choice] operates from. And Valencia is where Tyler Hamilton claims he flew to, accompanied, to have blood extracted for a later transfusion. For those of you with ropey memories like mine, it is also where Jesus Manzano claims he had to be dragged from a train following a transfusion with someone else's blood.
After watching Hamilton on 60 minutes, I remembered that Armstrong himself has said that he has been to the city. Many times. I had to search it out, but he said it:
"I've been to Valencia (Spain) many times over the past 15 yrs. I gotta say they have really taken gr8 care of this city. It's beautiful."
He didn't take part in La Vuelta again after 1998, did he? I don't think he raced in the Vuelta a Valencia. after 1998, if he was there. And when he was based in Spain he was in Girona.
So, despite being a Class A media star wherever he goes, the guy's been hanging out in Valencia off the radar. Anybody got any plausible reasons as to why he was there, apart from the obvious?
It's an innocent question.
Exactly. 80% basic isoforms is not longer the criteria used. See WADA tech document, under Identification Criteria on page 4. It's quite likely that identical results now would be deemed positive.
We learned in the years 2002 and 2003 that the urine can change benefits or by improper storage so that even tests with more than 80 percent of typical bands of epo may be false positive.
sniper said:-Accuses Tyler and Floyd of "seeking publicity".
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Merckx index said:The CN article on Saugy’s interview clarifies some important points. The test was the urine/gel test. I hadn’t been sure of that. But he also says that then—as opposed to now—it was not unusual to notify riders about borderline results, because the test was new and their was some confusion about what should be called positive.
No. Saugy claimed it was 70-80%, so by today’s standards it would not be positive, and it would not even rate a notification of suspicion. That doesn’t mean it wasn’t positive, just that it didn’t make the official criterion. It was in what today is considered a gray area, very likely positive, but not called as such.
I said before I don’t think this is going anywhere as a charge against LA, and after reading Saugy’s latest, I’m more convinced of that. But he said something a lot more damning, and less supportable:
This is probably the most critical point that has come out. He is implying (is he on LA’s payroll?) that the ’99 samples could have been false positive, that storage could result in an increase in basic bands. I doubt this very much, though, and he or LA’s team would have to provide evidence of this.
richtea said:I'm not sure this is correct, based on the translation - more that the new accusations have had a lot of publicity.
He seems to me to be saying that his lab had to use a lot of resources to defend their cases against Landis and Hamilton when they challenged their results, and is a bit miffed they now admit they were not innocent at all - meaning all the money and effort they put in to defend their original case was a waste, and dragging them into second wave of negative publicity. And I don't think you can blame him to be honest.
Merckx index said:The CN article on Saugy’s interview clarifies some important points. The test was the urine/gel test. I hadn’t been sure of that. But he also says that then—as opposed to now—it was not unusual to notify riders about borderline results, because the test was new and their was some confusion about what should be called positive.
No. Saugy claimed it was 70-80%, so by today’s standards it would not be positive, and it would not even rate a notification of suspicion. That doesn’t mean it wasn’t positive, just that it didn’t make the official criterion. It was in what today is considered a gray area, very likely positive, but not called as such.
I said before I don’t think this is going anywhere as a charge against LA, and after reading Saugy’s latest, I’m more convinced of that. But he said something a lot more damning, and less supportable:
This is probably the most critical point that has come out. He is implying (is he on LA’s payroll?) that the ’99 samples could have been false positive, that storage could result in an increase in basic bands. I doubt this very much, though, and he or LA’s team would have to provide evidence of this.
Dr. Maserati said:To get to that you are ignoring that both Landis & Hamilton said it was a 'positive' test.
You don't need to get anyone to 'sort it out' for a borderline, even by the standards of 2001. You don't need to pay anyone for a borederline.
This looks like LA's A sample was above 80%, it was referred to the UCI who identified the rider. Either the A was viewed again (or the B) and put in the 70-80% category and it is no longer a 'positive'.
Mestre said:So, despite being a Class A media star wherever he goes, the guy's been hanging out in Valencia off the radar. Anybody got any plausible reasons as to why he was there, apart from the obvious?
It's an innocent question.
Not surprised to hear that so many Posties have talked, but it does again raise the question of where Pelley/CBS are getting their info from - someone with insider info must have told them that. Starting to sound to me like they've got a "friend" somewhere in Novitzky's camp.VeloGirl said:Scott Pelley on Late Night with David Letterman (video, not sure about geo-restrictions)
Talks about Hamilton interview around 3:55. Pelley says at least a dozen former riders from Postal have told their story to the GJ.
Dr. Maserati said:To get to that you are ignoring that both Landis & Hamilton said it was a 'positive' test.
You don't need to get anyone to 'sort it out' for a borderline, even by the standards of 2001. You don't need to pay anyone for a borederline.
This looks like LA's A sample was above 80%, it was referred to the UCI who identified the rider. Either the A was viewed again (or the B) and put in the 70-80% category and it is no longer a 'positive'.
Martial Saugy said:Saugy, who was the lab's scientific director at the time, told Swiss newspaper Neue Züricher Zeitung that he remembered four "suspect" samples from the 2001 Tour de Suisse but did not know whether they belonged to Armstrong.
Mambo95 said:He may well of gone there for doping reasons on occasions*, but he may also have just gone for a weekend away with the wife.
Merckx index said:T\
No. Saugy claimed it was 70-80%, so by today’s standards it would not be positive, and it would not even rate a notification of suspicion.
sniper said:Interesting.
By the way, Saugy says LA's TdS suspicious peepee does no longer exist. Is that normal? Shouldn't those be stored?
Cimacoppi49 said:It will take a while for her to accept the reality that she was lied to repeatedly for years. Gunderson is such a tool.
RdBiker said:Why do you believe Landis or Hamilton more than the Lausanne lab director? If Saugy says that he only remembers four suspicous (=no positive) tests I find it more believable than Landis/Hamilton saying the UCI hid a positive test.
Dr. Maserati said:Why?
Simple - do you expect a lab director (even if he wasn't the lab director at the time) to implicate his own lab in covering up a test.
Saugy probably had little to do with the analysis of the '01 TdS samples and is relying on the paper trail to back up his memory of events.
Why can't they all be telling the truth? Maybe it was a borderline positive but Armstrong told both Landis and Hamilton that it was a "positive" that they "made go away" either out of convenience or, more likely, exaggeration. So as far as Landis and Hamilton knew, it was a "positive".RdBiker said:Why do you believe Landis or Hamilton more than the Lausanne lab director?
VeloGirl said:Scott Pelley on Late Night with David Letterman (video, not sure about geo-restrictions)
Talks about Hamilton interview around 3:55. Pelley says at least a dozen former riders from Postal have told their story to the GJ.
patricknd said:Gotta agree with my buddy python, you can't just go by the "smoking gun" it's the weight of the evidence in the case that matters