martinvickers
BANNED
- Oct 15, 2012
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thehog said:I think he's right. You do need to school up.
...(facepalm, deep sigh...)
oh hoggie, hoggie, hoggie...what to do with ye, at all...
thehog said:I think he's right. You do need to school up.
Not Pat McQuaid said:If you don't think Aicar is an issue, ask members of pro peloton who are diesels who are getting killed by "skinny guys" and shouldn't be.
jeffvolkmer said:@UCI_Overlord Remember Cadel's tweet, 'These skinny guys can sure TT...'
Not Pat McQuaid said:@jeffvolkmer Ah yes, Cadel's veiled tweet ... wasn't it during the Olympics?
Cadel Evans said:Froome in quickest, these 'skinny' guys have transformed TT'ing this year. Wiggo still unbeaten in '12
Froome19 said:When you were so soundly put to bed by a force from nowhere (ok maybe not) then you will be a tad bitter.
http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/italian-judge-says-doping-is-still-a-problem-in-cycling
"Riders have recently told me that there are substances in use that can't be found by anti-doping tests. One is Erythropoietin Z by Retacrit, it's known as EPO Z. There's a Chinese EPO that has been released, I don't know its name but it can’t be found (in tests) and was definitely the queen of the Olympics. There's also AICAR, that is brought in from the East as a powder and is apparently a kind of genetic doping. In simple terms, it helps reset muscle fibres after huge efforts. It can't be found in anti-doping tests either."
http://www.cqranking.com/men/asp/gen/cqRankingTeam.asp?current=1
1. [Gbr] Sky Professional Cycling Team PRT 15070
2. [Rus] Katusha Team PRT 11754
3. [Bel] OmegaPharma - Quick Step PRT 10770
4. [Esp] Movistar Team PRT 9995
5. [Lux] Radioshack - Nissan PRT 9673
6. [Ita] Liquigas - Cannondale PRT 9427
7. [Usa] BMC Racing Team PRT 9062
8. [Usa] Team Garmin - Sharp PRT 8802
Tyler'sTwin said:
Dear Wiggo said:Please explain.
martinvickers said:Are you suggesting that 'chinese' epo and other varients can evade the blood passport? Surely if they have similar effects to 'standard' epo, the blood passport would fluctuate in similar ways?
peloton said:You are giving way too much belief for the blood passport. Just sayin'
Dear Wiggo said:I think we worked out, based on UCI testing data, that the chance of being caught for EPO in an OOC test was 5%. Introduce new EPO products that are not detectable and the probability of being caught for EPO reduces to ... 0%.
It's always a risk vs reward equation. If the risk approaches 0, or the reward approaches infinity (or more money than you could spend in an hour), the likelihood that people will take the risk is high. Combine 0 risk with infinite reward and you'd be silly not to take the risk.
Noone here actually knows the detail of how the ABP works. Noone. A sample set as small as Ryder's from the 2012 Giro shows how sensitive it can be to minor discrepancies.
eg: does anyone know how much of a rider's data is used for calculating the average values for biomarkers? There's 5 year's data now. Is it all used?
All the BP does is alert testers as to who should be targeted for subsequent extra testing. If that extra testing cannot detect the substances being used... we're back to the IQ test. Are you being ridiculous with your doping, or massaging it to manipulate your average biomarkers over time so they are acceptably within your "biological fingerprint mean" +/- 3 SD? Add in a non-verifiable claim that "everyone tested high", some handling anomalies and you can pretty much get away with anything, imo.
martinvickers said:I think that's an overly pessimistic take, DW, but I can't deny it's a plausible one - I believe you're wrong, I hope you're wrong - but I've no faith you're wrong...
Tinman said:DW is right. Bar one unknown. We don't know yet whether Epo Z can be picked up by the current Epo test. Epo Z is likely to have a lot of similarity in structure to currently tested EPO, and its pick up will depend on how the Epo assay works. I would think it quite likely it will be picked up also. I would think most EPO variants would likely be picked up by the current test.
Tinman said:Very opinionated comment Martin, not a lot of fact in there.
It's been interesting to see your character development in The Clinic as you discover/learn more.
DW is right. Bar one unknown. We don't know yet whether Epo Z can be picked up by the current Epo test. Epo Z is likely to have a lot of similarity in structure to currently tested EPO, and its pick up will depend on how the Epo assay works. I would think it quite likely it will be picked up also. I would think most EPO variants would likely be picked up by the current test.
" There's a Chinese EPO that has been released, I don't know its name but it can’t be found (in tests) and was definitely the queen of the Olympics"
peloton said:That's probably the first time I've ever seen a Pro "question" others performance in public. Cadel has a new fan.
martinvickers said:Are you suggesting that 'chinese' epo and other varients can evade the blood passport? Surely if they have similar effects to 'standard' epo, the blood passport would fluctuate in similar ways?
Ferminal said:We know from Ashenden et al that large doses of EPO are irrelevant in terms of the passport, at least in a clinical setting. Testing > biopassport in terms of limiting the ability to use EPO.
Tyler'sTwin said:
peloton said:That's probably the first time I've ever seen a Pro "question" others performance in public. Cadel has a new fan.
martinvickers said:Are you suggesting that 'chinese' epo and other varients can evade the blood passport? Surely if they have similar effects to 'standard' epo, the blood passport would fluctuate in similar ways?
thehog said:TeeJay had a pop as well. Basso said his piece.
Mellow Velo said:Whereas, immediately post Lance, the GTs were transformed by ex-mountain bikers, Landis, Rasmussen and yours truly.
Yeah, much more solid ground.![]()
Libertine Seguros said:Of course, we also have the fact that the blood passport is almost totally worthless in certain cases, such as Chris Froome, because the fact that he had a disease that would affect his blood values means that representative values they could assess his Vuelta/Dauphiné/Tour values against are hard to come by.
Dear Wiggo said:I was about to post something similar. There are 4 recent items re: bio passport / doping in the pro peloton now:
1. Ashenden leaves UCI's BP panel due to restrictions on being critical of it or its processes. He is no longer part of it, so won't know what's going wrong, but if something was going wrong, he would not have been allowed to say things like what he found out in
2. Ashenden's study which showed you can boost your Hgb pretty much to similar levels of doping as before and not get pinged by the BP. He has also spoken to people in the scene and
3. Ashenden claims there are pockets of sophisticated dopers even within the "new age" teams. This is finaly backed up by our friend
4. Benedetto Roberti, who says not only is doping ongoing, but there are new EPO products in use that are undetectable, AICAR is being used as some kind of genetic doping, and Michele Ferrari is still doing training plans - only - for riders, for 10s of 1000s of dollars each, despite being banned.
With all this being affirmed by experts / people with their finger firmly on the pulse, Sky pull off one of the most dominating displays at the TdF in years (14 days straight in yellow?) and one of the most dominating displays for the 2012 pro tour + Olympic calendar.