zlev11 said:
how does it strengthen the arguments of those who say he has a motor? i say it blows it up completely. both he and Garmin would be complete idiots to go out and win today with a motor on their bike, there's no way in hell they would get away with it.
Did the UCI inspect his bike at the finish?
I'm not trying to be Capt. Conspiracy, I just wonder if they did or not.
But I think the point being made is that to those who think Ryder is up to something nefarious, winning the hardest stage in dramatic fashion won't ease those suspicions. Would anyone in their right mind put a motor in their bike after being suspected of putting a motor in their bike, and then draw the attention of the cycling world by winning a grueling stage of a GT?
I can't imagine they would (and in this case, I can't imagine that they did). But I also couldn't imagine how a rider would blood dope in the past, and then go and make a spectacle of themselves by winning some ridiculously hard stage with ease, only to be busted for blood doping later. And that happened.
More to my initial point though:
I'm not sure how winning TODAY has any bearing whatsoever on whether or not Ryder had a motor in his bike on a PREVIOUS day. Hence my own confusion at JV's gloating over the matter.