MatParker117 said:It wasn't a lake it was rice fields where he hunted with his family.
Good one
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MatParker117 said:It wasn't a lake it was rice fields where he hunted with his family.
Ripper said:Good one
By then, the reason for much of Froome's early inconsistency had been discovered with a diagnosis of bilharzia, a debilitating tropical disease he had contracted while playing in Kenya's rice paddies as a boy.
RownhamHill said:
FoxxyBrown1111 said:The answer lies in this 27.000-posts-back-and-forth-thread: Everybody stopped doping, Sky started = Sky dominates
Nathan12 said:but Sky dominated, clean, because marginal gains and psychology and bilharzia.
RownhamHill said:What happened in 2008? Oh yes, that's right, a new longtitudinal blood testing system that may have had an effect on riders opportunity to transfuse and dope with impunity.
RownhamHill said:Yes, it would be great. Let's focus on the tour in that period.
What do we know for definite about the 2005/2006/2007 tours? Yes, that's right, the 'winners' (Armstrong/Landis/Ras) were all doing massive epo, transfusion programmes.
What happened in 2008? Oh yes, that's right, a new longtitudinal blood testing system that may have had an effect on riders opportunity to transfuse and dope with impunity.
Let's imagine (simply for the sake of argument) that you are a clean rider (forget Wiggins). Do you think, given the above, that there is a chane your 'relative' peformance might change between the 2007 and the 2009 tours (if so, in what direction?), or that your performance would remain consistent over that time? Do you think, given the above, your motivation as a clean rider, and the goals you set yourself might change?
More to the point, focusing in on Wiggins. Why - in your view (as someone who is convinced he started to dope in 2009) - did he decline to dope during the period of his pro-racing career (2001-2007) when doping was endemic, and essentially risk free, but then, after joining a 'clean' team and in the immediate wake of the blood passport being introduced (with all the uncertainty that would bring) did he decide to go 'all-in'?
Let me be clear - I have NO IDEA if he was ever clean, or ever dirty for that matter, or if he dopes when he started. But I'm interested in hearing a plausible answer to the above question re the timing of Wiggins doping/transformation, as I struggle with it.
FoxxyBrown1111 said:I didn´t said this. I just gave a super short summary of the thread...
Nathan12 said:I know. But that is the logic of those who defend them. And it makes zero sense.
red_flanders said:Why didn't anyone else who was formerly in the grupetto see similar gains in form. Why only Wiggins?
Benotti69 said:The idea that BP stopped doping has long been debunked. Dont kid yourself. BP is a joke.
6 riders have been popped by BP, all nobodies, even Pelizotti. Look at Contador's values from his TdF win where he tested positive for Clen. His numbers were worse than Armstrongs and no ban for BP irregularities. Joke!
UKAD did no ABP tests the year Wiggins won in 2012.
Hesjedals blood values showed a rise in the 3rd week of his Giro win, when they should've decreased. Vaughters blamed machine error! Same for Wiggins in 2009, values up in 3d week and Vaughters blamed machine error.
BP is not to catch doping, it is to help teams manage their doping.
Doping is still the de riguer in pro cycling, which means Sky are another doping team. Get over it.
red_flanders said:Why didn't anyone else who was formerly in the grupetto see similar gains in form. Why only Wiggins?
RownhamHill said:You tell me - you're saying focus on this period, so when I ask you questions about that period it seems only fair for you to answer them?
That said, it's a pretty sweeping statement you've made. Didn't, for example, Pinotti (who I gather is pretty well regarded as clean) move from being mid-pack fodder to top tenning GCs in a similar time period? Is that because he started doping as well?
And actually, with a bit more thought, wasn't Wiggins top-tenning in his chosen road discipline in 2005-07 (TTs?) - given what we absolutely know about the time period, if he was clean at the time (which seems to be your working theory) that's pretty stellar performance against opposition with a 15% drug fuelled performance boost, isn't it? And just how many members of the grupetto were actually clean at the time anyway?
I don't know the answer to any of these questions, but I'm not presenting any beliefs as fact here either.
RownhamHill said:Yes, it would be great. Let's focus on the tour in that period.
What do we know for definite about the 2005/2006/2007 tours? Yes, that's right, the 'winners' (Armstrong/Landis/Ras) were all doing massive epo, transfusion programmes.
What happened in 2008? Oh yes, that's right, a new longtitudinal blood testing system that may have had an effect on riders opportunity to transfuse and dope with impunity.
Let's imagine (simply for the sake of argument) that you are a clean rider (forget Wiggins). Do you think, given the above, that there is a chane your 'relative' peformance might change between the 2007 and the 2009 tours (if so, in what direction?), or that your performance would remain consistent over that time? Do you think, given the above, your motivation as a clean rider, and the goals you set yourself might change?
More to the point, focusing in on Wiggins. Why - in your view (as someone who is convinced he started to dope in 2009) - did he decline to dope during the period of his pro-racing career (2001-2007) when doping was endemic, and essentially risk free, but then, after joining a 'clean' team and in the immediate wake of the blood passport being introduced (with all the uncertainty that would bring) did he decide to go 'all-in'?
Let me be clear - I have NO IDEA if he was ever clean, or ever dirty for that matter, or if he dopes when he started. But I'm interested in hearing a plausible answer to the above question re the timing of Wiggins doping/transformation, as I struggle with it.
Nathan12 said:You cannot compare Pinotti to Wiggins- and you yourself have answered why. Pinotti went from mid-pack to top tens. Wiggins went from grupetto to enjoying one of the, if not the single most dominant season of any professional stage racer, ever.
RownhamHill said:You tell me - you're saying focus on this period, so when I ask you questions about that period it seems only fair for you to answer them?
That said, it's a pretty sweeping statement you've made. Didn't, for example, Pinotti (who I gather is pretty well regarded as clean) move from being mid-pack fodder to top tenning GCs in a similar time period? Is that because he started doping as well?
And actually, with a bit more thought, wasn't Wiggins top-tenning in his chosen road discipline in 2005-07 (TTs?) - given what we absolutely know about the time period, if he was clean at the time (which seems to be your working theory) that's pretty stellar performance against opposition with a 15% drug fuelled performance boost, isn't it? And just how many members of the grupetto were actually clean at the time anyway?
I don't know the answer to any of these questions, but I'm not presenting any beliefs as fact here either.
The Hitch said:Well the blood passport was introduced in 08 but it is incorrect to suggest that it had any notable immediate impact because afterall speeds did not fall, dopers (contador, basso, do luca, menchov, Valverde) continued to dominate the sport, people like Armstrong beat the passport etc. I'm surprised to see you, being a clinic regular, suggest that it would. You may disagree with me saying it was one of the most doped gts of the decade, but I think we cam agree that as a doped gt it certainly holds it's own weight.
As to your second point, why would Wiggins start doping in 09 not 05 or 06, well I dont know, I can speculate is all, same as people can speculate how Wiggins achieved his transformation without doping.
It could be anything. Maybe he was only introduced to doping then through friends.
But even theories that explain wiggos transformation can include. For instance the idea that he only discovered be could climb 2 months before the 2009 tour. That could very well be true. It's still unlikely that he would be able to acheive the level he ultimately did on that alone, doubly unlikely that he would do so a few weeks into the discovery.
Same goes for froome, maybe there was an element of only finding out he was good in sky and gaining confidence etc. But even if that's true it's more likely that he took drugs, even a small amount to get where he is at, than that he took no drugs at all.
That's the problem with believing sky are clean. To believe sky are clean, you have to believe every piece of the story. Froome has to be 100% clean and Wiggins has to be 100% clean and brailsford has to be 100% telling the truth and he can't have known who lienders really was etc.
I don't need to propose a single theory for why Wiggins only got his transformation in 2009 because almost every theory out there accommodates doping. Sky and their defenders do however need concrete theories for wiggos transformation and froomes transformation, and Leinders involvement and wiggos relationship with LA and the weight loss, the performances etc.
Because a story is only as good as it's weakest link.
We don't have a story and don't need one. All we say is that the sky story don't make sense. same as scientists reject certain religious theories on grounds that they don't make sense, even if they don't have 1 unchallengable theory of their own.
Whether the reason for that is because sky are blood doping, steroid doping, gene doping, motorizing their bikes, aliens masquerading as humans or sucking out climbing skills from the schleck brothers, it doesn't matter. So long as the sky story don't make sense, and wiggos and froomes transformations didn't happen for the reasons sky said they happened, we are right.
RownhamHill said:Armstong beat the BP (well maybe, for a while) but he didn't win the tours - could have been age, could have been a reduced opportunity to dope to the same degree, no?
RownhamHill said:You can, and I just did.
If it's possible for one clean rider to improve their performance in that timescale (presumably because of a reduction in the overall level of the peloton), then why - if you assume Wiggins was clean pre 2008 - can the same explanation not be applied? I think (haven't checked) that Wiggins was top-tenning time trials in 2006-07 - if that was clean, maybe he's just a more talented rider than Pinotti, so when (if?) the race cleaned up his results improved more?
You could discuss the possibilities, or you could just reject the discussion outright.
RownhamHill said:You tell me - you're saying focus on this period, so when I ask you questions about that period it seems only fair for you to answer them?
That said, it's a pretty sweeping statement you've made. Didn't, for example, Pinotti (who I gather is pretty well regarded as clean) move from being mid-pack fodder to top tenning GCs in a similar time period? Is that because he started doping as well?
And actually, with a bit more thought, wasn't Wiggins top-tenning in his chosen road discipline in 2005-07 (TTs?) - given what we absolutely know about the time period, if he was clean at the time (which seems to be your working theory) that's pretty stellar performance against opposition with a 15% drug fuelled performance boost, isn't it? And just how many members of the grupetto were actually clean at the time anyway?
I don't know the answer to any of these questions, but I'm not presenting any beliefs as fact here either.
Pinotti was never as truly woeful in the mountains as Wiggins though (42nd on Alpe d'Huez back in 2001, winner of the GPM in País Vasco 2003, 6th on Brasstown Bald and top 40 over Finestre in 2005) - he wasn't a climbing king or anything, but he wasn't a total mug. David Harmon nearly had a coronary when Wiggins rode past Garzelli and Cunego on Alpe di Siusi in the 2009 Giro, and Wiggins had barely made the top 100 of a GT mountain stage before that. On the Finestre stage in 2005 he finished 87th, 24 minutes behind Pinotti, and in the 2007 Dauphiné (which of course isn't a GT, but I'm mentioning it because it's a proper mountain) he was 79th on Mont Ventoux. His best mountain performance to Siusi was probably 29th in the Volta a Catalunya ITT to Arcalis in 2005.RownhamHill said:You can, and I just did.
If it's possible for one clean rider to improve their performance in that timescale (presumably because of a reduction in the overall level of the peloton), then why - if you assume Wiggins was clean pre 2008 - can the same explanation not be applied? I think (haven't checked) that Wiggins was top-tenning time trials in 2006-07 - if that was clean, maybe he's just a more talented rider than Pinotti, so when (if?) the race cleaned up his results improved more?
You could discuss the possibilities, or you could just reject the discussion outright.
red_flanders said:What statement did I make? I thought I just asked a question.
In 2008 we had Valverde, Piepoli, Ricco and a host of other dopers at the fore. Leipheimer and Contador not invited IIRC. The next year we had Armstrong, Contador, the Schlecks, Klöden, Nibali and Wiggins in the top places. All know dopers other than Wiggins.
Looks like a DNF for Wiggo in 2007? No participation in 2008 to focus on Beijing. In 2006 he was 124th place, 3 HOURS and 25 minutes down.
So you have a guy who improved his time from 3 years before by about 3.5 hours in a completely doped field. This is because people were doping less?
The field as a whole did not change in this way. Sure a couple riders improved their results and a lot lost time. But from almost coming in last amongst the finishers or a DNF to 4th?
I don't care what happened in the peloton, that's ASTOUNDING. Let me re-iterate for those who seek to diminish what happened. 3.5 HOURS difference in time. How is that remotely possible clean? It's not.
Libertine Seguros said: