- May 26, 2010
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Fearless Greg Lemond said:Sincere question: how long are you a follower of cycling?
Since Sky gave him a job
Fearless Greg Lemond said:Sincere question: how long are you a follower of cycling?
Joachim said:I'm suggesting real evidence, not self-generated supposition. We'll let it slide that your above sentence doesn't actually make any sense in the context of my previous post.
Spot the problem with the two sentences above.
thehog said:Alas there is 'real evidence'. The hiring of a nerafious and known doping Doctor to be the principle MD at the team is evidence of doping.
It is not 'self generated' as Sky hired the Doctor in question not myself.
The action was iniaiated by Sky. Myself and other members are commenting on that action.
If he wasn't hired there wouldn't be comment.
The evidence stands. Sky hired a known doping Doctor.
Thus it's my belief that they are doping.
thehog said:Personally, I'm in shock. It's 2002 all over again.
To be fair, this conlcusion should have been made when a certain Chris Froome suddenly rocked the boat on la Covatilla, pardon me spelling. That was sickening to see. Laughed my *** off.BroDeal said:Let me see. After a season with results inline with the capabilities or the team's riders, the team relaxes its doping policy, hires a dope doctor, and suddenly it is getting crazy performances out of its riders. Men who spent most of their career struggling to get through mountain stages in the autobus are magically winning stage races, no-hopers who were having difficulty finding a new contract are transformed into top three GT contenders, and riders with a long history of working with the shadiest dope doctor in the sport are riding better than ever. After the season, the sponsor decides that it is all a bit to obvious, so the team desperately chucks all the doping riders and staff that the public knows about overboard. Nope, nothing suspicious to see here at all. Move along.
Fearless Greg Lemond said:To be fair, this conlcusion should have been made when a certain Chris Froome suddenly rocked the boat on la Covatilla, pardon me spelling. That was sickening to see. Laughed my *** off.
King Of The Wolds said:There's no evidence, unless you believe that any organisation who hires somebody with a rumoured, past misdemeanour, is then automatically guilty of that said, rumoured misdemeanour, just be the act of hiring itself.
So the lack of evidence stands, and, thus, it's my belief that they may or may not be doping, given the lack of any evidence.
Exactly as predicted in the late 70's by Paul Weller inBroDeal said:after 2010 there was a definite change in attitude and by the end of 2011 the results showed it.
thehog said:This is not a court of law. This is the real world.
There is direct evidence of doping.
Fact: Sky hired nerafious doping doctor.
Conclusion: team-wide systematic doping program.
Shall I go on?
Rogers, Yates, Ternerife, power levels, weight loss, unrealistic performance levels.
Sentence: lifetime bans.
King Of The Wolds said:There is no evidence re: Leinders and The Clinic is only the real world in your world.
And it would really help in these Sky threads if, when somebody produces a counter argument to a specific allegation, that all other, general arguments aren't then thrown back at them which, in turn, have also been countered at some point. If I have to reply to each and EVERY point, for every time you make an individual point, it's going to add exponentially to the overall length and make life very difficult for anybody who wants to read through the complete content.
thehog said:Why get personal? This is a discussion not an inquisition.
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King Of The Wolds said:You're right, of course, there's no need, and I take that back.
What is even more frightening are the words of thethehog said:doping is frightening
MatParker117 said:Sky audited expenses last year for those interested:
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thehog said:There is direct evidence of doping.
Fact: Sky hired nerafious doping doctor.
Conclusion: team-wide systematic doping program.
Rogers, Yates, Ternerife, power levels, weight loss, unrealistic performance
Fearless Greg Lemond said:Sincere question: how long are you a follower of cycling?
Joachim said:They may be doping, they may well be. I find it entirely plausible.
But none of that is evidence. Real world, and most definitely not in any court of law. Rogers and Yates can be discounted out of hand...most likely have previous on the doping front but find me a top 100 tour rider or a former pro DS who doesn't. The other stuff is just baa.
Joachim said:They may be doping, they may well be. I find it entirely plausible.
But none of that is evidence. Real world, and most definitely not in any court of law. Rogers and Yates can be discounted out of hand...most likely have previous on the doping front but find me a top 100 tour rider or a former pro DS who doesn't. The other stuff is just baa.
Libertine Seguros said:Pierrick Fedrigo was 48th, and comes with good references.
Joachim said:..But none of that is evidence.
This is a failed argument for many countries. For most countries, sporting decisions are non-judicial.Joachim said:Real world, and most definitely not in any court of law. .
Joachim said:but find me a top 100 tour rider or a former pro DS who doesn't.
There is no evidence Ivan Basso doped in the 2006 Giro. No evidence Contador doped in any of his GT wins except the 2010 Tour. No evidence Cunego doped in 2004 except what Cunego himself has said with a nudge and a wink. No evidence any of Alejandro Valverde's results were ill-gotten - he's never failed a test.Joachim said:They may be doping, they may well be. I find it entirely plausible.
But none of that is evidence. Real world, and most definitely not in any court of law. Rogers and Yates can be discounted out of hand...most likely have previous on the doping front but find me a top 100 tour rider or a former pro DS who doesn't. The other stuff is just baa.
