acoggan said:
Apparently you were asleep when I emphasized how piss-poor all of pro cycling is with respect to what it would cost to influence an entire academic institution.
i don't think anybody (except you) is talking about 'an entire academic institution'. You're making unwarranted, strawman-ish, leaps.
The question is, could Sky exert some sort of influence on the UCT.
You seemed to discard all possibility of any sort of influence from Sky, which is naive at best.
Nobody's saying it's happening. The question was: could it be possible?
The answer is clearly: yes, even if only on a microlevel.
We've seen several examples of scientists whose independent thought process seemed to be influenced by (members of) the cycling community.
Olaf Schumacher acquitting Hayles, that Dutch scientist acquitting Dekker in 2000, Vrijman Lance. Coyle Lance. etc. It's a long list.
Add guys like Bermon, Saugy, Swart etc.
Many of these guys (e.g. Swart, Bermon) have trifold occupations:
- managing athletes
- antidoping
- sports science
Correct me if wrong, but you seem to be rather insensitive to the fact that there is an inherent conflict of interest there (arguably even multiple). A CoI is not evidence of wrongdoing, we all know that. But it means a degree of skepticism is warranted.
Ow, and obviously, influence can range from microlevel influence (asking people for favors, subtly influencing the reviewing process, etc.) to more blatant forms of influence (bribery, see e.g. Vrijman).
But regardless, the bottom line is: skepticism should be default once you observe a CoI.