Have to agree with noddy here.
Time and again we see clear indications that where there is a will there is almost always a way.
Before the Games the Rio lab(!) tested a brazilian cyclist positive for no less than 14 substances. Easy.
Or take Astana's recent flood of positives. UCI wanted to set some kind of example, or put some pressure on Astana to pay the bills, et voila...four or five positives out of the hat. Piece of cake.
Or Contador. Somebody wanted him popped (be it to get rid of him or to blackmail him), and so his samples were sent to the Cologne lab for target testing. Not so straightforward perhaps, but still a fairly easy catch.
Jamaica's sprinters, yet another case in point.
Almost all tested positive, no big deal apparently...except that one man.
All goes to show that if there's an appetite to catch cheats, then there are multiple ways to catch cheats.
The appetite just isn't there most of the time.
btw, UKAD at present is providing several clearcut cases in point for the lack of appetite, for instance by not going after Bonar, clearing Sky wrt the jiffy bag, giving athletes advance notice of testing through twitter, etc.
As for Froome's heartrate, to suggest it doesnt matter, imo that's an odd stance to take, from a scientific pov.
Well of course, if we don't have all the numbers to compare off against each other then it will not matter.
But if we'd have the full numbers from the testing, who knows what they may have shown in comparison to the Ventoux file.
As for the Fax, no, it's not immaterial either. If it were immaterial, Froome/Cound, Swart and Moore would not have made such a fuss about it in the Esquire article.