Fantastic. So now the new fanboy defense is "if you bring Lance down, EPO use will INCREASE."
LOL.
LOL.
Moose McKnuckles said:Fantastic. So now the new fanboy defense is "if you bring Lance down, EPO use will INCREASE."
LOL.
Polish said:ps....a failboat poster is not a intelligent rebuttal lol
Moose McKnuckles said:Thinking that cracking down on doping will actually INCREASE doping is quite possibly one of the dumbest things posted on here..
theswordsman said:The Ignore List is useless again due to quotes in replies to fantasy writers, and the thread has been successfully derailed.![]()
Merckxfan said:and should continue to be as long as he is on a crusade to bring everyone better than him down!
scribe said:I'd keep my mouth shut to the investigators, keep it open to the press, ride in the tour, and wait and see what nowinsky comes up with.
MacRoadie said:If you follow the Aussie link, the "announcement" will be by SI on their online site, not the US Gov.
Regardless, it's still not a "new" scandal...
Polish said:Doping and cheating will undoubtedly INCREASE.
Lots of people will copy cat Lance.
"If Lance can cheat, so can I" as a justification.
"Doping will win ya 7 TdF's? Sign me up" numbskulls.
If Doping in Pro Sports ever becomes "legalized", the Lance Bust might just end up being viewed as the start of the process. Lance as a current day "Norma Rae" for the bread and water Grand Tour Workers of the World.
Expect to see/hear some articles/discussions about "why don't we just legalize sports doping" after Lance gets brought down....maybe even before he gets brought down...
kurtinsc said:This is silly.
Doping won't decrease because of Lance getting busted... well it won't outside the US unless a lot of OTHER riders go down as well. Maybe if Lance and other Floyd targets, Contador, Valverde and other Puerto targets and all those connected with Ferrari get busted... THEN we'll see an actual slacking in doping.
But an increase because of it... that's not likely.
thehog said:Reported again this morning:
These sources, who have longstanding ties within the big-money cycling world, contend that an investigation is being mounted by government officials and will be launched, possibly as soon as next week. It would culminate what's hardly been a stellar time for the 38-year-old star athlete.
Cal_Joe said:Reported on Eonline. The same article states "It's a process called EPO, which is essentially transfusing a rider's blood with performance-enhancing drugs."
I think a more credible cycling news outlet with something beyond unnamed "sources" would better qualify as news.
scribe said:I'd keep my mouth shut to the investigators, keep it open to the press, ride in the tour, and wait and see what nowinsky comes up with.
issoisso said:I wish Joe Papp would come in here and tell us if that's it or not.
Moose McKnuckles said:Frankly, I cannot remember an investigation where a 7-time TdF champion was investigated by the federal government in his country. In addition, I can't remember a case where an investigation into UCI bribery was involved. Anyone?
I think Lance is such a pivotal figure in doping that bringing him down would finally send a message to riders. If McQuaid also goes down, that would be even better.
Is there a chance that doping will continue? Sure. Will doping increase if Lance and others go down? I think that's actually unlikely. As for the Festina affair, I'd argue that has led to cleaner cycling in France. Well, at least during the times of the year when US Postal wasn't training there.
Mrs John Murphy said:I think things will only change if the power behind the throne goes. McQuaid is Hein's placeman. HV has placemen in every area of the sport. So if McQuaid goes, he'll be replaced by another Hein-boy.
Likewise, it doesn't matter if Armstrong does get bounced, it is far more important that the administrators and team management - the enablers if you like, are removed from the sport.
What hope is there for the sport when old dopers like Riis and Hog are running the two biggest teams and the various doping docs can carry on juicing people?
Andy Rhis could run Phonak - one of the worst teams ever for doping, get bounced and then come back a couple of years later with a 'new' team. T-Mob can change their name, talk about in-house programmes, but still employ the likes of Zabel and Aldag.
Getting rid of McQuaid and Armstrong is a start, but any change needs to be deep rooted at every level of the sport and with everyone involved in the sport.
Moose McKnuckles said:Frankly, I cannot remember an investigation where a 7-time TdF champion was investigated by the federal government in his country.
patricknd said:an amazing statistic, given the large number of 7-time tdf winners.........
johndouglas said:so, whats the NEXT scandal then?
Green Tea said:
johndouglas said:so, what was the scandal then?