Libertine Seguros said:
And as I said about Brailsford before, I feel that to say that he had been naïve enough to believe Yates, de Jongh, Julich and Barry had never been involved in any doping ever, credits him with way too little intelligence for my liking, suggesting that Rogers had all the fairest intentions in the world when he used a guy who was banned from acting as a doctor or pharmacist due to abusing that position to dope professional athletes, and was simply unaware of the implications of that, credits Rogers with too little intelligence too.
The chances that Rogers didn't dope are minimal, and are unnecessary to bother debating IMO. But as I said, whether he did or didn't is moot, he shouldn't have been hired in the first place.
And therein lies the crux of the matter. Clearly Brailsford isn't stupid, and more so there are other people within the organisation that aren't stupid. Pragmatism meant they exploited the burden of proof: you can claim zero-tolerance and hire people that have never tested positive and bingo,you have zero-tolerance.
But that's a smokescreen for the ignorant, the informed know there are more than just questions marks over many in the pro-peloton, and Rogers is a proper example of that.
For me this is as close to as fact as we will get: Sky hired these people with knowledge of their suspect past and choose to give a blind eye to it. And here it is dependant on your level of cynicism as to why.
I think one reason is that they didn't see the whole USADA thing coming. If they had, not only do I think they wouldn't have hired those characters, I don't believe Sky would have happened at all. Reservations were strong IN BC about a road team because of doping taint, if they had seen Lance's outing coming that would had cemented their decision to stay away.
And without the USADA, they would have got away with it. Reliant on an ignorant public of a niche sport in the country of their target demographic, who you would struggle to get to name a proven doper like Landis, let alone suspect ones, they thought it wouldn't be noticed by the fans or the media. And without the USADA they would probably be right. I think in a nod to Garmin perhaps, while operating under a facade of zero-tolerance, the reality was they were hiring people with suspect pasts but those whom they were confident were clean and repentant. As I said, depends on your cynicism level.
And now they are caught out, dependant on staff's honesty and restricted by employment law to properly purge the organisation and try to move it closer to the original ideal upon which Sky was formed.
And yes they failed to uphold it, this much is clear. Again it boils down to your cynicism levels or personal bias whether you think this is forgiveable or not. I still think (so an opinion) that despite the mistakes they are trying to do the right thing.
Just not very good at it. But then, who is?