Froome19 said:
So the Zero tolerance policy is working after all..
The new affirmation of zero tolerance, only brought in because their hand was forced by some people involved in the "clean team" being mentioned in a scandal so big it transcended the cycling press to make the international headlines, is working to an extent.
However, I still would like to point out that we were told right at the start that Team Sky would have a zero-tolerance policy on doping and would be transparent. I still see some guys with history in the team and I still see no transparency. So while this purging is a positive sign, I am forced to remember that this is the result of claiming to have that policy in the past and being proven to be either stupendously naïve or have been lying, so as a result, I am forced to take every pronouncement of zero tolerance with an entire shaker of salt.
Again, Sky backed themselves into a corner with their rhetoric, so when they're shown to have been either lying or overly naïve, they take much more criticism for it than other teams who have not made the untenable promises that Sky made. It is mighty difficult to get a zero tolerance policy going in today's péloton with so many DSes, staff and so on that were around in the EPO era. Riders may be easier to come by, but if you've compromised on the staff, you may as well compromise on the riders and buy in guys like Mick Rogers. I mean, why not? In for a penny, in for a pound, as an overly affected English caricature like Wiggins might say. The problem is, of course, that by doing so you run the risk of a major fall if one of those guys' pasts catches up with them, and that has happened.
Regardless of whether Team Sky are clean or dirty, these purgings were always going to be an inevitable consequence of the corner their rhetoric forced them into, because while they may have wanted to retain all these guys, and these guys may have done nothing wrong while at Team Sky, specialist press would not let them forget their insincerity.