- May 26, 2010
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blackcat said:was his son representing JTL?
that mighta been a problem.
inverted oedipus
I think McQuaid just lost it and wanted to hurt those who he felt completely betrayed by.
blackcat said:was his son representing JTL?
that mighta been a problem.
inverted oedipus
Benotti69 said:JTL was a parting shot from McQuaid. McQuaid obviously wants to stay in sport so didn't open the whole box of worms.......
Those were/are my thoughts as well.Benotti69 said:I think McQuaid just lost it and wanted to hurt those who he felt completely betrayed by.
deviant said:...or maybe he just doped and got caught.
Seriously....happens all the time in cycling.
I know that doesnt fit in to the 'Brailsford is the dark overlord of cycling' narrative but it might just be true!
Benotti69 said:JTL was a parting shot from McQuaid. McQuaid obviously wants to stay in sport so didn't open the whole box of worms.......
blackcat said:was his son representing JTL?
What peoblem?
that mighta been a problem.
inverted oedipus
DirtyWorks said:If there are so many positive warnings going out, then how is it JTL is the one struck by lightning? How come more letters aren't made public? We all know how bad the sport is at keeping secrets.
No need to reply. I'm probably looking at it too hard.
thehog said:You're not looking to hard at all.
It's all right there before our eyes. The Verbruggen system of calling riders in for a chat has been replaced by the passport and a letter. The latter exonerates the UCI if the *** goes down.
"What are your recyltes so high?"
"Altitude Sir and I was sick".
"No problems, be careful out there".
Dear Wiggo said:Altitude / sickness, etc details are captured at sample collection time for specifically this purpose.
I don't think there are that many letters going out, to be honest.
thehog said:Your first passport test upon returning to altitude is disregarded from your profile.
Dear Wiggo said:Returning to or returning from?
And where have you read this? Sounds a bit illogical.
The complicated part seems to be the manipulation of blood values so the rider can fool the bio-passport. Bertagnolli says Ferrari advised him on the timing, to extract blood just before going on an altitude training camp and then to re-infuse upon return, this way any swings in the values can be attributed to the the training camp rather than a bag.
Is the blood module reliable?
Somewhat. For the passport to trigger a ban, testers like to show a pattern of manipulation. One instance of a high reticulocyte percentage could point to EPO, but also a recent trip to altitude; likewise, a higher-than-normal red blood cell percentage might mean a transfusion or that an athlete is dehydrated. To avoid these problems, athletes are instructed to say whether they’ve recently trained at altitude, and testers are not supposed to collect samples within two hours of a training session or a race. In an email, Dr. Wolfgang Jelkmann, Director of the Institute of Physiology at Germany’s University of Luebeck, who has studied the blood module, called these “methodological weaknesses,” that result in “a relative high risk of false-positive results.”
In response, passport analysts use a complicated formula to account for altitude, the athlete’s genetic background, and other environmental factors when parsing passport data. But given the risk of false positives, the analysis is made deliberately insensitive. The current standard is a 1-in1,000 sensitivity, meaning the passport will only result in a false positive in 1 out of 1,000 analyses (over a series of samples, that means the risk of false positive becomes very, very low) but it will also yield many false negatives. A more sensitive analysis—a standard that would yield 1 false positive in 100 tests—would catch more cheaters. Testers may use this standard when deciding which athletes to target with drug tests, but it is the 1-in-1,000 sensitivity that is used to enforce doping bans. Since 2011, three cyclists have challenged the accuracy of the blood module in front of the Court of Arbitration for sport, and in each case the court upheld the cyclists’ bans.
thehog said:
The blood sample is cooled and then rushed to a testing lab for analysis. If samples aren’t analyzed within 36 hours of collection they become useless. (This has made testing in places like East Africa, which is far from all of WADA’s labs, quite a challenge.)![]()
Granville57 said:Huh.
I hate to say it but Bradley's result from the 2nd Tour rest day looks funny. Hemoglobin should fall during the Tour but his rose. Here's whatantidoping expert Michael Ashenden had to say about Floyd Landis' hemoglobin results from the 2006 Tour:
"Going from 15.5 to 16.1 (in hemoglobin) is not that unusual when not competing," Ashenden said by phone from Australia. "But it is very unusual to see an increase after a hard week of cycling. You’d expect it to be the reverse. You’d expect that to fall in a clean athlete. An increase like this in the midst of the Tour de France would be highly, highly unlikely.
"There’s nothing where I could point to one value and say, ‘This guy definitely doped.’ But it raises red flags for me. I would definitely recommend to anti-doping authorities that an athlete presenting these values should be target-tested for blood doping."
Wiggins' hemoglobin result rose from about 14.4 on the first rest day to about 15.2 on the second rest day.
"Brad is an exceptionally talented athlete and it was great to see him do so well in the Tour de France. He’s always been an outspoken advocate of clean cycling. He requested that we release his results after the Tour and his decision makes me and the entire team proud," said Jonathan Vaughters, CEO of Slipstream Sports.
The results of the testing noted that, "the trend during the 2009 Giro d'Italia and the 2009 Tour de France was downward, indicating a drop in blood parameters over the course of each race," an encouraging sign that professional cycling may be making a transition to cleaner times.
hiero2 said:And Froome has turned into one of the most unlikeable characters I've seen in some time. Wiggo is no treasure, especially when he starts going on about ****ers and "fruit 'n" stuff. But at least Wiggo seems honest and to have a basic respect for others - mostly.
Dear Wiggo said:I wonder if the teams being fielded for Wiggins and Froome are constructed based on relationships between the riders selected or not. If Wiggo goes will he get a couple of riders loyal to him or does Froome have more say / weight in terms of who gets selected.
Froome was quite clearly smacking Wiggo in the 2012 climbs, but Wiggo buried Froome in that final TT.
OGE is talking about Wiggo.
If Alonso got his act together before / by the Tour and both Wiggo and Froome are there, we might see some real efforts.
I'd like a power meter free, radio free Tour. Let's see real racing and may the best prepared rider win.
JimmyFingers said:Then Wiggins to OGE, personally I think that's a great move, linking up with the Yates brother's, who are both precocious talents.
JimmyFingers said:Then Wiggins to OGE, personally I think that's a great move, linking up with the Yates brother's, who are both precocious talents.
Tinman said:Wiggins to OGE is like an old world pommy crim to the new colony.
JimmyFingers said:And yet again the debate degenerates into nonsense
thehog said:You got it. And the constant returning to and from altitude would make it a very hard passport to bring a case against.
Except say JTL who only has his first passport test in late September and didn't get the advantage of building a screwy profile like the rest of Sky.
A very good explanation here on youtube of Armstrong profile explaining the use of altitude to mask a bag/EPO/CO doping:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fck_OZDBE_o&sns=em
And a nice comparison to Wiggins blood profile which looks a lot like Armstrong's:
http://justcycling.myfastforum.org/archive/wiggins-vs-armstrong-blood-values__o_t__t_3430.html
Apologies wouldn't be complete without a statement from Vaughters which is contradictory to what is presented:
http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/wiggins-values-point-to-cleaner-peloton
JimmyFingers said:And yet again the debate degenerates into nonsense
Will Carter said:Well if you look at the graph TECHNICALLY Vaughters is right - the trend line shows a downward slope (as it does on all of the graphs) even though there is that spike. Does anyone know which day that corresponds to in the Tour? ie flat or mountain, or a few days after (I will look it up but I'm sure someone on here will know the info and post it quicker than I can find it)