Bicycle said:
zebedee said:Spanish doctors don't really get busted by the authorities there because no political will exists to bust their national sporting heroes who are doping, Davis Cup winners all. What happened after the Fuentes scandal? Nothing much. No national enquiry that I know of. Nor any general consensus for a clean up.
Benotti69 said:I hope USADA goes after tennis next and before the Williams sisters retire. They turn up for major tournments pumped after playing very little tennis since the last one and more than not reach the finals.
avanti said:I work at a major tennis tournament in California and some of the players were tested for drugs in each of the last two events. As I recall it was UCLA people who did the testing.
mp4-4a said:I sure hope that Goran Ivanisevic didn't dope. Does anyone know anything about that?
sniper said:you mean the usual urine testing in search of traces of marihuana, coke, and other recreational drugs?
sniper said:Interesting to see how Murray has upped his game and winning quota since he started working with Ivan.
LauraLyn said:The public also finds the use of recreational drugs far more reprehensible than the use of PEDs by athletes.
good points. i tend to agree.LauraLyn said:Interesting to see how Murray upped his game since the Olympics became a priority for the Queen to save a desperate economy.
I think some athletes and teams in the UK got the very best training and medicine on offer in the UK.
[I can't remember Murray ever playing five sets and looking like he did yesterday.]
nice revealing stats. goodness me.sheenyp said:According to their website, so far in 2012 USADA have carried out 14 tests in Tennis (all out of competition).
That compares with cycling 544, Swimming 544, Track and Field 1564, Paralympic Volleyball 16, Curling 15 and Cheerleading 10!
sheenyp said:According to their website, so far in 2012 USADA have carried out 14 tests in Tennis (all out of competition).
That compares with cycling 544, Swimming 544, Track and Field 1564, Paralympic Volleyball 16, Curling 15 and Cheerleading 10!
avanti said:I work at a major tennis tournament in California and some of the players were tested for drugs in each of the last two events. As I recall it was UCLA people who did the testing.
Thasp Blog said:Can you recall which rounds the testing took place? Having looked at the ITF's anti-doping statistics for 2009 (when the ITF still posted testing statistics by tournament), doping control for non-Grand Slam events typically stopped 4 days before the end of the tournament (i.e., on average, no doping controls were conducted for the quarterfinals onwards.): http://tennishasasteroidproblem.blogspot.ca/2012/01/dont-look-now_23.html
Also, a huge weakness in the ITF's doping controls is the out-of-competition testing. In 2011, the ITF only conducted 216 out of competition tests (195 urine; only 21 blood): http://www.itftennis.com/antidoping/news/statistics.asp
The ITF's International Registered Testing Pool includes (but is not limited to) the ATP top 50, WTA top 50, top 10 doubles players and top 5 men, women and quad wheelchair players. That's about 150 players, which means the ITF is conducting less than 2 out-of-competition tests per year per IRTP player.
sniper said:it's remarkable not a single tennis player has ever tested positive for EPO.
do they test for EPO at all?
Amélie is a spokesperson for the Institut Curie, a leading cancer hospital. They maybe should have chosen someone else with a cleaner image - like Jeannie Longo for example.babastooey said:I've always wondered about Amelie Mauresmo, her big forehead, and her man-shoulders. I always thought she could win a Fabio lookalike contest.