It's a hundred times faster to appeal to CAS once suspended, than to appeal a decision directly to UKAD. UKAD advise athletes to appeal to CAS for speedy decisions and when the athlete wants privacy.
MatParker117 said:Libertine Seguros said:And Coe was not in his current position when the British athletic success began. They are but one part of the reason that many question the narrative.
Back to Armitstead: like I say we don't have any actual evidence of any doping. But the fact that the World Champion being banned was kept under wraps not just from us but from the rest of the péloton and the quick speed with which she received her reprieve (regardless of whether or not it was the right decision) doesn't sit well with many and leaves a sour taste especially at the same time as many athletes, organizers, officials and pundits are trying to deprecate the perception of sport as dirty.
A major issue is that while it may be a fair policy to keep it anonymous until a decision has been made, therefore the suspension was not publicized until the reprieve was, it also makes it look like things are being deliberately hidden, which also creates suspicion and unease amid the calls for greater transparency in the wake of the Russia fallout.
Because they are allowed there day in court and unfortunately people don't understand that being charged is not the same as being guilty. Naming everyone who has a positive test prior to there hearing risks ruining the reputations of athletes who may turn out to be clean.
samhocking said:It's a hundred times faster to appeal to CAS once suspended, than to appeal a decision directly to UKAD. UKAD advise athletes to appeal to CAS for speedy decisions and when the athlete wants privacy.
samhocking said:UKAD haven't seen the reasoned decision but Nicole Sapstead has already said they respect the outcome of the CAS hearing against Elizabeth Armitstead in their statement.
Remember, the athlete can't appeal to CAS until 3 strikes, so other than the letter Armistead wrote to UKAD just after strike 1, Armistead would have had to have gone public to take it further. After strike 2 she would have had to have taken it public. Only after strike 3 can she then appeal strike 1 without going public. I can't say I blame her, innocent or guilty and sure UKAD advised her too. In fact they pretty much confirmed, they advised Armistead on how to proceed through CAS after British Cycling got involved due obvious Olympics coming up.
thehog said:kwikki said:More supposition.
We don't know she was even aware there had been an attempt to test her. My understanding is that the first she knew of it was 13 days after the fact.
This rather makes the previous two posts look at little presumptuous.
From the Daily Mail article:
..he then attempted to contact Armitstead on a mobile phone that the cyclist had put on silent while she slept.
So where are we now?
kwikki said:thehog said:kwikki said:More supposition.
We don't know she was even aware there had been an attempt to test her. My understanding is that the first she knew of it was 13 days after the fact.
This rather makes the previous two posts look at little presumptuous.
From the Daily Mail article:
..he then attempted to contact Armitstead on a mobile phone that the cyclist had put on silent while she slept.
So where are we now?
He attempted to call.
She says she wasn't aware of the missed test until the letter arrived 13 days later. We have nothing to suggest she was aware of the missed call.
If we want to make suppositions we could instead suppose that a world champion athlete might have a very active phone with journalists, sponsors, team staff, friends, family, etc phoning all the time.
She probably had lots of missed calls, but being a world champion athlete probably isn't too fussed about responding to an unknown telephone number.
Therefore, why assume she knows. And why then build a whole tale on the back of an unlikely assumption?
So we are exactly where I said we were.
Tonton said:When you know that you got strike one, strike two, you would want to ensure that there's no way that strike three will kick you out.
I don't know if Wilco is the new Eddy, but Lizzie is looking like the new Jeannie. And the decision, after Froome's decision, clearly shows that politics are involved.
kwikki said:Tonton said:When you know that you got strike one, strike two, you would want to ensure that there's no way that strike three will kick you out.
I agree, and if you believe Armistead's statement then so does she. She claims to have tried to set up a system to avoid missed tests by seeking clarification from UKAD and using staff from BC to help manage her whereabouts. She claims that the staff member moved on, and nobody told her, which caused a missed test.
Now, whether you believe that is up to you, but knowing the lack of interest in women's cycling at BC I can well believe it. It is, at least, not impossible.
For the third test she claims a family crisis. Again, not impossible...we all have them, and when they come nothing else matters.
What we are left with is UKAD being forced to accept that their tester was incompetent on the first test, but whilst acknowledging the circumstances of the next two missed tests they are actually saying tough sh*t.
I don't know if Wilco is the new Eddy, but Lizzie is looking like the new Jeannie. And the decision, after Froome's decision, clearly shows that politics are involved.
It would be interesting to know if Sagan has missed any tests, and whether he has staff dedicated to ensuring his adherence to the Adam's system. I think you can probably imagine that a Sagan ban for 3 missed tests seems like an absolute impossibility.
Of course, we can all wonder why.
simoni said:kwikki said:thehog said:kwikki said:More supposition.
We don't know she was even aware there had been an attempt to test her. My understanding is that the first she knew of it was 13 days after the fact.
This rather makes the previous two posts look at little presumptuous.
From the Daily Mail article:
..he then attempted to contact Armitstead on a mobile phone that the cyclist had put on silent while she slept.
So where are we now?
He attempted to call.
She says she wasn't aware of the missed test until the letter arrived 13 days later. We have nothing to suggest she was aware of the missed call.
If we want to make suppositions we could instead suppose that a world champion athlete might have a very active phone with journalists, sponsors, team staff, friends, family, etc phoning all the time.
She probably had lots of missed calls, but being a world champion athlete probably isn't too fussed about responding to an unknown telephone number.
Therefore, why assume she knows. And why then build a whole tale on the back of an unlikely assumption?
So we are exactly where I said we were.
Do the rules require an athlete to be contactable by phone at the time they declare they're available for testing?
kwikki said:Of all the points she makes in her defence these are the few that I find understandable. She makes a valid point that in men's pro racing people are employed to help look after riders' organisation. She says she sought and gained help from BC employer to help manage whereabouts.
ebandit said:ffs...how hard can it be to be where ya say ya gonna be...and if ya plans change
..update the system?
Mark L
ps credibility is shot...lizzie should not be going to rio........................
ebandit said:ffs...how hard can it be to be where ya say ya gonna be...and if ya plans change
..update the system?
Mark L
ps credibility is shot...lizzie should not be going to rio........................
sniper said:if she goes, Vos's gonna have to 'save' womens cycling by beating her clean.
huge responsibility for Vos, having just been out for a year with a silent ban.
bewildered said:There must be a whole host of women cyclists missing 3 tests if they don't have the support of a third party to help them with their whereabouts. Where are the others? Where are the other female athletes up in arms supporting her on this? I've only seen other athletes say that 3 missed tests is absolutely inexcusable, which of course it is.
The buck stops with the athlete but she is blaming BC. I wouldn't feel comfortable putting the potential fate of my career in the hands of a third party even if I hadn't missed one test, never mind two. She even says in her statement that she was introduced to the Whereabouts system 9 years ago, but Thornton was only assigned to her in October 2015. So, presumably she didn't have a problem complying with Whereabouts testing for 8 years and then all of a sudden it became too much for her after 8 years experience of it? Computer says 'No'.
The last line of her statement is pathetic. It comes across as a thinly veiled 'people on twitter have never cycled a bike before and need to clear their heads of the crazy notion that I am not clean'. It's like Wiggins bone idle wnkrs comment written by a PR person or someone with more tact. And her Fiancee was as bad as any of them, as are some of those on twitter who think she's clean.
From her statement, I don't see that she is claiming to have tried to set up a system to avoid missed tests. It seems more likely that this "support plan" is protocol coming from one of BC or UKADkwikki said:Tonton said:When you know that you got strike one, strike two, you would want to ensure that there's no way that strike three will kick you out.
I agree, and if you believe Armistead's statement then so does she. She claims to have tried to set up a system to avoid missed tests by seeking clarification from UKAD and using staff from BC to help manage her whereabouts. She claims that the staff member moved on, and nobody told her, which caused a missed test.
Now, whether you believe that is up to you, but knowing the lack of interest in women's cycling at BC I can well believe it. It is, at least, not impossible.
Bearing in mind that it has to be done daily, I would have thought the chances of making a mistake are pretty big.
wrinklyvet said:.......... the fact of the matter is that the Court of Arbitration in Sport did decide that UKAD did not follow the procedure properly for it to stand. It follows that she was not negligently responsible. The tester fouled up and UKAD could not rely on that incident.
Therefore, whether posters like it or not, she now has two failures not three........
It's OK for people from other nations to *** about it (as they will) but it reflects badly on them................