- Sep 29, 2012
 
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Dr. Maserati said:Am, where were the first "factoids"?
English is my first language and its nuances are obvious to me. Sorry you are struggling but I can't help you, Doc.
Dr. Maserati said:Am, where were the first "factoids"?
Dear Wiggo said:English is my first language and its nuances are obvious to me. Sorry you are struggling but I can't help you, Doc.
Dr. Maserati said:So, they were not facts. Thanks
MatParker117 said:Sky's a unique situation as the Pro Team and National team are pretty much interchangeable bar David Millar and Steve Cummings.
sittingbison said:A common fallacy:
Wiggo England
EBH Norway
Cav Isle of Man
Eisel Austria
Vroome Kenya
Knees Germany
Porte Oz
Dodger Oz
Sivtsov Bulgaria
In fact, there is only a single ENGLISH rider on the team![]()
The other main talking point at the Tour was more serious. It was only when Wiggins came to appreciate that the questions about doping were the legacy of the race’s dirty past that he began to deal with the issue coherently, and, ultimately, convincingly. But the more recent revelations concerning Lance Armstrong have underlined how much work there remains in convincing people that it is possible to win the Tour clean.
“I’ve been thinking a lot about it,” says Brailsford of the case against Armstrong, and the US Anti-Doping Agency’s decision to strip him of his seven Tour titles. “You’ve got the past, the present and the future. I’ve seen it referred to as generation EPO. You can’t deny that happened. The more you read, and the more that comes out, and you sit there and your jaw drops, you think: let’s accept there was a past; let’s not try to deny it. There definitely was a past. And the tentacles of that past impact on the present.
“We set this team up to be a clean team and to try and use coaching and science. Our job is to try to make people go faster, and when you’re good at it, [some people] use that to substantiate that you’re doping. It’s unfortunate, but it is understandable that people will question it.”
Brailsford said during the Tour that at the end of the season he would invite the doubters to Manchester, where he would explain his methods. Does he still intend to do that? “Yeah, but we’re not at the end of the season yet. There’s this group out there, anonymous people who keep banging on, using pseudo science. It’s totally understandable why they have their opinions, and draw the conclusions they do, but I’d like to meet them and say, ‘right, fire away, what do you want to talk about?’
“The thing is, we’ve still got to win,” he continues. “We’re in a competitive environment. So on the one hand, you think, we’ll open ourselves up and show people what we do. On the other, we’d then be educating everybody else, who we’re competing against.”
It presents a dilemma. And yet there is only one answer, and Brailsford knows it. “Trying to be transparent is the only way we’re going to get rid of the tentacles of the past and get to the future we want. We want to be at the forefront of the drive towards clean cycling, and so it’s incumbent on us to not duck and dive and say, ‘Here we are, this is where we’re at'.
thehog said:One correction.
Froome is an alien. He's not human. Not sure from which planet he is from.
JRanton said:I posted some Brailsford quotes the other day but there are some more included in the interview below that touch on a few other issues, the Manchester post-season meet-up for instance. According to Richard Moore, cycling journalist, we're also due a Leinders update imminently.
http://www.scotsman.com/sport/inter...n-t-ruling-out-a-move-into-football-1-2564587
Reads to me like Dave B wants to meet the 12 apostles of the clinic, face to face in Manchester.![]()
thehog said:I'll eat my tin foil hat if he holds said conference. Won't happen.
thehog said:I'll eat my hat if he holds said conference. Won't happen.
Dear Wiggo said: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.
Bannockburn said:In terms of the evolution of doping, there is much emphasis placed and effort spent on the chemical and physical components, and they seem to end up overshadowing the organizational components. The latter has evolved just as the others have and must be taken into account when we see a phrase used such as "highly sophisticated."
It's not a free-for-all anymore, which makes the concept of plausible deniability among team directors and certain others all the more important.
If he'll pay for my trip to Manchester, I'm game.Ferminal said:Apparently no one is interested?
Maybe a group of these anonymous people using pseudoscience can put their hands up and take Dave up on the offer.
The real question about Dave - is he is a JV, or a Theo de Rooij? In either case, you wouldn't take anything he says too seriously.
hrotha said:If he'll pay for my trip to Manchester, I'm game.
Benotti69 said:If Brailsfrod was game and had nothing to hide he'd come in here and answer every question put to him
But he gets paid millions not deal with this crap.
I also guess Sky Corp dont give flip how SkyCycling gets its results as long as they get them.
There's no place for drugs in the sport and we like to think that we're at the forefront of promoting clean cycling," insists Brailsford.
"That philosophy will always stay. If we thought it wasn't possible then I'd be out. However, when you're trying to lift performance, and you look at the staffing side, if you want experience of professional cycling you have to go back a long way to find people over 40 who haven't been tainted in some way.
Wiggins finished fourth in the 2009 Tour; and that wholly unexpected result has continuing ramifications for Team Sky
The Hitch said:I don't get why they are delaying with lienders. Its not like this their fans are going to stop believing if they find him guilty of past shadyness. .most won't even know about it unless they release the information in July.
Once they find him.guilty, admit that they were wrong to take him on and give him some nice cash to.keep his mouth shut, the likes of Kimmage are not going to call attention to it so why has bailsford been waiting so long to do that.
Dear Wiggo said:Not. Normal.
Wallace and Gromit said:I have to say, this repeated use of "Not normal" to make a point is getting effing annoying. Like all catchphrases, it was good once, but that time has long since passed.
However, is "Not. Normal" more or less not normal than the usual "Not normal"?
Dear Wiggo said:My
Now, they can out Leinders and even pay him off but if they out him, there goes your omerta pass. Imagine you're a doping doctor prepared to work with Team Sky. Team Sky out their current doping doctor. How happy are you to now sign a contract with Team Sky?
Methinks Brailsford is stuck between a rock and a hard place.
looking for the "like" buttonDear Wiggo said:"Not. <adjective>" is a mechanism that causes the reader to change the cadence of their internal dialogue, emphasising the NOT, rather than subvocalising it.
Dear Wiggo said:My theory...
... between a rock and a hard place.
Dear Wiggo said:"Not. <adjective>" is a mechanism that causes the reader to change the cadence of their internal dialogue, emphasising the NOT, rather than subvocalising it.
Dear Wiggo said:My theory: he has a contract. We have no way of knowing its details. I am guessing it's not the downward (Brailsford --> public) disclosure that's the problem, but the upward (Brailsford --> BSkyB) disclosure that's the problem.
