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roundabout said:2010 was a guy riding his first GT versus a guy who had been pro for longer than Porte had been focusing on the road.
It's only logical that one of them would have a lot more room for improvement than the other.
In 2012 one of them was a helper. And Nibali will probably still beat Porte ceteris parebus in just about any GT.
They do? Peraud was known as a talent for years before he turned pro. Ultimately it's individual circumstances that decide.
Nobody is doubting that Nibali was much better than Porte in 2010. The question is what is the point of comparisons between a rider who had been a pro for 5 years and the guy who raced small amateur races in Italy.
Fair enough - I always maintained Porte to be the least suspicious of the 2012 quartet. However his step up 2012-13 has raised more alarm bells and looks like being another amazing Sky story backed by this incredible science that has totally undone the work of 30 years of doping doctors.
But what about the other 3? It's the usual "each tree is explicable" formula. Placing Porte's crazy improvements on their own, you can explain them. Put them alongside everything else, and it's a lot harder. The convergence of all of these factors to enable Team Sky's wholly clean team to dominate a season (and continue to do so the following year) leaving a trail of known dopers and riders who have no more against their name than the Sky bunch (less in Rogers' case) but who are still likely to be doping trailing in their wake... it's heading towards statistical anomaly territory.
As before: Team Sky have either, in the course of a few months, shat all over the careers' work of some of the most devious, clever and cutting-edge doping docs, scientists and teams, all while employing people involved in said devious, clever and cutting-edge practices... or they couldn't beat them so they joined them.
