I questioned the content of their remarks - post, not poster.red_flanders said:Stop debating the poster, debate if you must the post content. Some posts have been deleted.
Libertine Seguros said:So you agree that there is evidence Mick Rogers should not pass the Team Sky 'Zero Tolerance' test and should be jettisoned like the expendable DSes were?
martinvickers said:I'm afraid you'll have to clarify the evidence you are referring to for me - though in principle, i've no problem with giving him the boot.
slowspoke said:So we have Working with Ferrari
http://www.theage.com.au/sport/cycling/rogers-regrets-coach-link-20121011-27fom.html
and eyewitness accounts of blood doping
http://www.smh.com.au/news/sport/tm...inkewitz-claims/2007/11/01/1193619042013.html
Krebs cycle said:Calls for publishing biopassport data are meaningless and not revealing that data also isn't a sign of non-transparency because the biopassport data already gets reviewed by an independent panel of experts. Allowing the lay public to view that data won't achieve anything because the lay public doesn't know how to analyse biopassport data since they are not experts.
Krebs cycle said:The problem doesn't reside with the teams being non-transparent, it resides with the UCI, who as we know are corrupt.
What needs to happen is that the process of sanctioning riders on the basis of biopassport data must not be left in the hands of the UCI. Those riders who are deemed positive by an independent panel should have a ban put in place by some other body such as WADA, and the UCI must comply with that ban or face expulsion from the olympics or some other consequence such as the formation of breakaway leagues that support "clean cycling" and do comply with WADA.
Maybe I should have explained this differently. It's less about the science and more about due process. Should there be a system where evidence is reviewed anonymously by a panel of experts whose recommendation then gets presented in a court or tribunal overseen by a non-corrupt regulatory body or should we just allow mob rule, with all its emotional bias and predjudice? Same concept applies to any legal matter. For example, why don't we just release evidence to the public regarding crimimal cases and then let mob rules decide what the sentencing should be as opposed to judges? Its a slippery legal slope to go down and the risk is that you let dopers off the hook because it could be argued that they were previously tried in the court of public opinion, which would thus lead to a mistrial.Tinman said:I disagree entirely. As one familiar with the process of peer review I thought you would argue differently. Publication of blood data (note the word 'public-ation'), will allow discussion and validification. The concepts you refer to are not rocket science (not wanting to diminish your PhD at all) and quite accessible by many enthusiasts and other public experts not currently on the independent panel. And hence it will shift the emphasis of false positives away to a more rational level, where the onus is on the athlete to explain the abberations, not the panel. Restricting data use to an 'independent panel' will always be challenged by external critics, as currently happens.
Krebs cycle said:Maybe I should have explained this differently. It's less about the science and more about due process. Should there be a system where evidence is reviewed anonymously by a panel of experts whose recommendation then gets presented in a court or tribunal overseen by a non-corrupt regulatory body or should we just allow mob rule, with all its emotional bias and predjudice? Same concept applies to any legal matter. For example, why don't we just release evidence to the public regarding crimimal cases and then let mob rules decide what the sentencing should be as opposed to judges? Its a slippery legal slope to go down and the risk is that you let dopers off the hook because it could be argued that they were previously tried in the court of public opinion, which would thus lead to a mistrial.
Krebs cycle said:If you have a proper system untainted by UCI corruption, then what would it achieve if you released the biopassport data, say in the event that an athlete has already been cleared any blood manipulation? How will you discourage doping moreso by doing that?
Ferminal said:UCI has more control over ABP data than the independent panel of experts.
They may be experts and they may be independent, but nothing happens without the blessings of the highly incompetent UCI.
Tinman said:Already covered. Onus is now on the athlete to explain, not the panel. And not only to the panel, but more broadly - indirectly - to the fans. Repeat feeble excuses no longer possible.
Tinman said:As with several of these UCI panels, I seem unable to find out who is on them. Anyone familiar who is on this "independent biopassport data analysis panel"?
Likewise the 'disciplinary committee', who presumably discuss/conclude on rule infringements and penalties. Anyone know who is on there?
Krebs cycle said:The athlete has been cleared by the panel. What do they need to explain exactly to the public?
worst they will ever get with the current regime is Rob Hayles crit suspension for health reasons. no Christine Ohrogu for Sky. No Siree. Uncle Rupert will be wielding his power from his twitter throne.thehog said:I don't what you say. No one on Sky has ever tested positive. Ever. Period. Without doubt. No re-runs, do-ins, love-ins.
Clean.
I want Rogers in the sport. This is getting Salem witch trials. No doubt he doped. No doubt Wiggins doped. No doubt Froome doped. there is no doubt.Tinman said:Come on Vickers, do you want guys like Rogers in your sport? Y/N.
And then, do you want them in your team Sky, screwing your/its reputation? Y/N
Should be pretty simple really.
Should also be simple to resolve for Rogers, ie. to either sign and declare himself clean, or explain himself otherwise and find another team or retire.
But no need for you to defend the man, he can do that quite simply himself in public. As a high profile rider and quite chatty to the media should be no problem.
blackcat said:I want Rogers in the sport. This is getting Salem witch trials. No doubt he doped. No doubt Wiggins doped. No doubt Froome doped. there is no doubt.
There is no doubt it was not confined to Sky, that the peloton will still be on it.
A tenet of justice is the universal application of justice. Cant cherrypick riders like Ricco and Kohl and Landis. They make easy marks. But ultimately, all riders are hurt, not just the riders serving the suspension. If you think no one has every won the Tour on bread and water, tho I will make a Lemond exception, he proves the rule prior to the blood and O2 vectors dominating the sport, if you think that no one has won the pinnacle of the sport on bread and water, just how does that redefine the sport?
And just how does it play out to throw Dodger to the wolves with Rory Sutherland. Its BS. You will see you cannot hold one person to a standard and account when the rest of the peloton go on their merry way. /sarcasm
I think it would be hypocrisy in extremis to let Frodo Mavendish to ride while he spews invective at Ricco. sorry, does not work that way. All are complicit. Some may indeed not take a thing now, but they will not utter a word, unless it is the accepted mark like Ricco or Landis. Bascially like the next UCI prez Dave Millar says. muppettryTinman said:For me the whole lot of tainted ones can go. Start with a clean slate. Plenty of untainted riders out there, just that we may not yet know of them. I'm also comfortable with an amnesty concept. It's about how the stakeholders (incl. sponsors) want the sport to go forward. And that's why I like the concept of 'clean' declarations by riders and teams. But it needs to be backed up with transparency... on the past, on the bloods, on the UCI process, etc etc. And that's what is holding this back. Via UCI leadership. Just not there.
Tinman said:For me the whole lot of tainted ones can go. Start with a clean slate. Plenty of untainted riders out there, just that we may not yet know of them. I'm also comfortable with an amnesty concept. It's about how the stakeholders (incl. sponsors) want the sport to go forward. And that's why I like the concept of 'clean' declarations by riders and teams. But it needs to be backed up with transparency... on the past, on the bloods, on the UCI process, etc etc. And that's what is holding this back. Via UCI leadership. Just not there.
the concept of declarations is the most absurd muppetry known to man.Tinman said:For me the whole lot of tainted ones can go. Start with a clean slate. Plenty of untainted riders out there, just that we may not yet know of them. I'm also comfortable with an amnesty concept. It's about how the stakeholders (incl. sponsors) want the sport to go forward. And that's why I like the concept of 'clean' declarations by riders and teams. But it needs to be backed up with transparency... on the past, on the bloods, on the UCI process, etc etc. And that's what is holding this back. Via UCI leadership. Just not there.
Tinman said:Come on Vickers, do you want guys like Rogers in your sport? Y/N.
And then, do you want them in your team Sky, screwing your/its reputation? Y/N
Should also be simple to resolve for Rogers, ie. to either sign and declare himself clean, or explain himself otherwise and find another team or retire.
But no need for you to defend the man, he can do that quite simply himself in public. As a high profile rider and quite chatty to the media should be no problem.