Libertine Seguros said:
Got to say, while I've always had my reservations about Garmin, and have had my disagreements with Vaughters' opinions over the years, he certainly comes out of this looking an awful lot better.
A few questions:
1. Is professional soccer dirty, as in doping?
2. Dr Carlos Gonzalez was Garmin's team doctor for 2010. He was previously the head physiologist at Real Madrid. One of his qualifications come from Spanish Olympic committee. He got his phlebotomist quals before / while heading to Garmin.
In my mind, this is no different to Leinders @ Sky, except JV dodged a bullet coz noone on his team had managed to win a GT.
Now that Ryder has won a GT on "team clean", the ABP and its mostly ineffective value to anti-doping is made apparent by JV releasing Ryder's blood values.
JV has also made a number of claims that are clearly WRONG but made in an attempt to "explain away" performance numbers that reek of "not normal". These include: skinsuit claim and anaerobic contribution to climbing claim. He has also said Dekker is going to lose 4kg of weight and
increase his total power - not his power:weight, his
absolute power.
Here's my final factoid:
1. JV claims Brad came 4th at the Tour in 2009
clean. But Brad trained with Sky's Rod Ellingworth, in Manchester and Girona. There was little to no contact between Brad and JV in 2009. How do you know someone's clean? Via their passport numbers?
2. JV claims Ryder was clean when winning the Giro in 2012. Imagine this: your brand new, 4 year old team are winning their first ever GT and you are not there to witness it. How does that even make sense? How the hell do you know your rider is clean? Because he looks you in the eye and tells you?
3. Look at the rider-boss interaction for the Lowe incident. Emails with no replies for weeks at a time.
Perception is reality.