- May 24, 2011
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Oldman said:Lance wasn't the only one paying for protection-he just got more of the information needed to do the job. Hein was happy to do it-for pay.
Berzin said:Who else are you implicating besides Armstrong in paying for and receiving protection from drug tests?
Or is your presumption just another attempt at obfuscation?
Because I do not recall an other rider puling out a back-dated TUE after a positive test became public and the rider in question gets to go on his merry way prancing around France while in the yellow jersey as if nothing happened.
ChrisE said:WTF Skippy? I will try to type it slowly for your benefit.
It was of zero benefit, and probably much to his financial detriment, if his competition tested positive. His PR would take a huge hit if an alleged clean rider was beating dopers soundly. Thus, it was to his benefit that didn't happen. Perhaps this was a stipulation of his "donations". After all, he could beat their azz anyway, as history has shown. So why not let them stick around by not going AAF, making his PR easy and money for everybody? One could conclude his "donations" to the UCI gave everybody cover for this reason.
Now, that being said I doubt LA was the only one giving "donations" either.
ChrisE said:WTF Skippy? I will try to type it slowly for your benefit.
It was of zero benefit, and probably much to his financial detriment, if his competition tested positive. His PR would take a huge hit if an alleged clean rider was beating dopers soundly. Thus, it was to his benefit that didn't happen. Perhaps this was a stipulation of his "donations". After all, he could beat their azz anyway, as history has shown. So why not let them stick around by not going AAF, making his PR easy and money for everybody? One could conclude his "donations" to the UCI gave everybody cover for this reason.
Now, that being said I doubt LA was the only one giving "donations" either.
Velodude said:Pat McQuaid is a person of high moral valuesand he said in 2010:
"The President of the UCI Pat McQuaid has revealed that Lance Armstrong is the only rider ever to have made a donation to UCI and has admitted that in hindsight, the decision to accept $100,000 while the Texan was still racing was regrettable"
ChrisE said:WTF Skippy? I will try to type it slowly for your benefit.
It was of zero benefit, and probably much to his financial detriment, if his competition tested positive. His PR would take a huge hit if an alleged clean rider was beating dopers soundly. Thus, it was to his benefit that didn't happen. Perhaps this was a stipulation of his "donations". After all, he could beat their azz anyway, as history has shown. So why not let them stick around by not going AAF, making his PR easy and money for everybody? One could conclude his "donations" to the UCI gave everybody cover for this reason.
Now, that being said I doubt LA was the only one giving "donations" either.
skippythepinhead said:So your theory is Lance paid money to the UCI to keep the lid on all positives during the Tour de France. No matter how doped the other riders were, Lance knew no one was going to get popped. Since Lance was the one who paid for the blanket immunity, the other riders still had to try to keep their doping below the level of detectability as they had no way of knowing they were in the clear, right? Or did everyone know that Lance was taking care of them?
MarkvW said:Do you really believe that, or are you just exploring what is logically possible?
ChrisE said:Just exploring what is logically possible; I have just laid out facts about what didn't happen during those years publicly. Who really knows WTF was going on? We do know from FL/TH that they started blood doping, and Ferrari warned them from EPO in 2001. If that is true, how could anybody conclude he or USPS had blanket immunity, and TH/FL have never insinuated he/USPS did? I have asked this question upthread but nobody can seem to answer that.....
Hey, we are just a bunch of clowns on an internet forum....
One thing to take into consideration here is how many times his competitors were tested. We all agree the tests can be beaten.
If yellow wins a stage, do they test the 2nd place rider on a stage? Each day they test the yellow, the stage winner, and a random, correct? What happens if yellow wins the stage?
I think it would be interesting to look at how many times he vs his main competitors got tested during those years (excluding the possibility of randoms), during the race. I cannot think of an instance that Beloki, for example, ever got tested, unless randomly, if I've got the rules right. I don't have time but I plan to count that up later.
Oldman said:I think the podium 3 got tested each stage and then the gc 1st. As for the idea that Ferrari's warning about Epo testing would reduce the use....Skippy's playing naive. The Bio passport is just a new angle on the old shakedown and it's been testified to by riders that a payment at the venue level made test results evaporate during that time.
Let's get on to something new like: does Lance drive a Nissan pickup or Leaf?
ChrisE said:I think it would be interesting to look at how many times he vs his main competitors got tested during those years (excluding the possibility of randoms), during the race. I cannot think of an instance that Beloki, for example, ever got tested, unless randomly, if I've got the rules right. I don't have time but I plan to count that up later.
DirtyWorks said:Your ideas are too complicated for them to have much potential for being true.
Examining test results is an exercise in futility. I don't have the link handy, but in order to get a positive I recall values in some cases have to be something like two, maybe three standard deviations out. On top of that, a study intentionally put a number of subjects on EPO and sent test to WADA certified labs only to have most tests come back negative. Don't get me wrong, I'm glad for a WADA. But, it's early days yet as dope testing is not living up to their promise.
Did you ever consider that positives look bad for ASO too? ASO's TdF leadership shifted away from a clean emphasis years ago. We know the Giro's leadership is promised to do CERA tests on samples and somehow no one has gotten around to it. Ever. Oldman's allegations just up from this post are a reflection of this. IMHO, Oldman is accurate.
Finally, I'm no clown. Often, quite a bit can be gleaned from having parts of a story. Small details are wrong at times, but the assembled general story is often not. I dedicate some time to it because cycling competitively is a great sport for competitive kids with enormous engines and not much else in physical gifts. There's been enough death and chronic illness as a result of doping in cycling already.
You are giving to much credit to the UCI and the anti-doping measures that were in place at the time (& pretty much that still are).ChrisE said:I don't "know" any of the things you are asking. I am just looking at the fact that nobody got busted at the TdF during those 7 years, and directly before and immediately after there were scandals in that race. From that, I am tossing this out there for discussion. Nothing more.
Definitely not a stretch - in fact it wouldn't suprise me. But for there to be a cover-up, the rider would first have to test positive.ChrisE said:FL and TH stated the UCI took care of an LA positive. Do you find it a stretch that he was the only one, and buy into the coincidence that nobody of substance screwed up in the TdF during those years with this "threshold" theory? Do you think it would look bad for LA if his competitors got popped while he was beating them?
The test was taken on the first day of the Tour at the prologue in Dunkirk, and Cyclingnews observed Del Olmo being ushered by his team manager through the crowds towards the medical control with a very distressed look on his face. At the time, it was put down to nerves, but this morning's news puts it in a different light.
This underscores my point - Ricco, Kohl etc were 2008 when the AFLD were at the Tour holding the UCI's hand.ChrisE said:"Directly after" I mean in the following years. FL, Chicken, Ricco, Kohl. This after 7 years of nothing. Chicken got caught up being AWOL, but I am not too sure that would have been too hard to cover up. Much easier than an AAF, so WTF?
Agree - and I will add that if a testing agency is truly independent than they actually would not require additional funds and wouldn't have the need for "donations".ChrisE said:Anyway one thing that would potentially stop all of this, and I think we all agree, is an independent body doing the testing and doling out the punishments. No more UCI, and no more national orgs. Of course, that would be great until we discover somebody giving that independent org "donations" lol.
ChrisE said:Chicken got caught up being AWOL, but I am not too sure that would have been too hard to cover up.
JMBeaushrimp said:Never discount Tommy V!
Wheels Go Round and Round said:you have to love the "grassy knoll" trolls in here.....![]()
Race Radio said:UCI did indeed try to cover it up, in order to inflict maximum damage to the Tour. The UCI's own rules at the time state that if you miss an OOC in the 6 weeks prior to a GT you could not start the GT. The UCI let the chicken's 4 missed OOC's slide, only to announce it on the eve of the Tour in order to cause maximum chaos.
What was their motivation to damage the Tour? Many people think it had to do with Verburggen and Armstrong's attempt to buy the Tour that fell apart because they could not raise enough $$$ to meet the ASO's price. Prudhomme at the time said “Verbruggen wanted to buy the Tour, but we said ‘No thanks,’ so now he wants to get the price down,”
The UCI used the Chicken as a tool to damage the Tour.....do you think they would have done that with Lance?
MarkvW said:Doesn't exclude the possibility of out-and-out (secret) bribes. I can't accept a theory that Armstrong was the only one to bribe/donate his way out of a jam.
UCI president Hein Verbruggen spoke to ‘Eurosport’ and divulged that the American “gave money for the research against doping, to discover new anti-doping methods," “He gave money from his private funds, cash. He didn't want this to be known but he did it". Armstrong did not make this knowledge public and when questioned about the contribution said that “If I've donated money to the UCI to combat doping, step up controls and to fund research, it is not my job to issue a press release. That's a secret thing, because it's the right thing to do.” Eurosport.com also reports that when questioned about the amounts of money involved there followed “(Laughter) It was a fair amount. It wasn't... It wasn't a small amount of money".
Velodude said:But I am inclined to believe ex UCI member Sylvia Schenk's statement in September 2005 that LA had "donated" about $500,000 and was receiving UCI preferable treatment.
That being the case LA might be considered be carrying the can for all the riders but I believe any money paid directly to the UCI or to line UCI decision makers' pockets was primarily intended to protect LA's vast potential endorsement income.
In the light of the release of LA Confidentiel in 2004 Verbruggen and LA were quotedin April 2005 of making statements that are consistent with Sylvia Schenk but inconsistent with only having paid $25,000 in May 2002 by personal check/cheque countersigned by his wife.