Benotti69 said:Sky blue train up mountains, who would've guessed..........Bet Bruyneel/Armstrong regret not taking a patent out on it!
The Hitch said:You must have missed last years TDF where he climbed PDB faster than Armstrong.Fergoose said:Sky's GC man GT gets dropped on a mountain top finish by a couple of Canondale lads and a bunch of others who were crawling up the mountainside. Doesn't really fit in with the narrative that some here would peddle. I guess maybe the Tour de Suisse isn't a big enough race for the team to risk doping? Or maybe there just isn't any data or results to suggest GT has ever doped?
Froome says he knew Ricco was doping in 2008 because his performance was too good but GT's 2015 2nd week made Ricco look like an amateur.
No serious person can say with a straight face that was clean
bikinggirl said:The SKY team looks more and more like the US Postal team a decade ago...They are all doped no question about it...sad sad!!
We Might As Well Win: On the Road to Success with the Mastermind Behind Eight Tour de France Victories Paperback– Bargain Price, June 3, 2009
Mastermind: How Dave Brailsford Reinvented the Wheel (90 Minutes Shorts Book 3) Kindle Edition
bikinggirl said:The SKY team looks more and more like the US Postal team a decade ago...They are all doped no question about it...sad sad!!
Benotti69 said:‘Froome’s bike has been tested more than everyone else’s’
Brailsford really did read all the Bruyneel/Armstrong books.
Benotti69 said:‘Froome’s bike has been tested more than everyone else’s’
Brailsford really did read all the Bruyneel/Armstrong books.
CheckMyPecs said:Why would Thomas risk prison time for a one-week stage race?
Depending on what exactly happened, and in which country you are, it can be.What prison? Doping isn't a crime.
MartinGT said:Vayer I think posted something about Brailsford getting an email saying thanks for being the best cooperated team in terms of bike checking controls.
Probably signed off 'See you soon for a pint Bri'
Broken_Leg said:Depending on what exactly happened, and in which country you are, it can be.What prison? Doping isn't a crime.
For example, in France, the use of some drugs is a penal/criminal offense (basically, it's the same set of laws that they use against dopers than when hunting people smoking/selling pot/cocaine... : "infraction à la législation sur les stupéfiants". Mild cases are droped, severe ones end in jail).
That's why in 1998 it was the police who took the matter in its hands and not an anti-doping agency - they were dopers, but more than that, from a legal PoV, they were commiting penal offenses.
Now it depends what drugs are used, how they came into possession of the dopers and if it's "organized" or individual doping. But there is no doubt that what Bruyneel/Armstrong did could (from a theoretical/legal PoV) have sent them in a French jail.
That does definitely not mean that TdF is clean - just that there is a bit more risks than in other countries.
That's why I really, really dislike the fact that this year both rest days are outside of France.
spiritualride said:Sorry to backtrack so far but what happened to Wiggins? Is it normal for a rider to dominate a TDF and then basically disappear from pro cycling afterwards? I assumed that he was just too stressed out from the whole experience (doping, having to lie) as it was so clear how frustrated and unhappy he was. Is it basically common knowledge here that he gave up on the Tour due to all the stress?
Broken_Leg said:Depending on what exactly happened, and in which country you are, it can be.What prison? Doping isn't a crime.
that's possible, I don't know the details, but I'll check.ebandit said:...is it correct he was never charged........sanctioned....?
Mark
sniper said:that's possible, I don't know the details, but I'll check.ebandit said:...is it correct he was never charged........sanctioned....?
Mark
Fact is, Brailsford just *loves* guys who've been taken into custody.
Knaven, De Jongh, Sciandri, Millar. And wait, wasn't he taken into custody himself, too? Jeez. What are the odds.
