- Aug 9, 2012
- 2,223
- 0
- 11,480
thehog said:Thanks Hog. Good post.
You forgot to use your sockpuppet for that one dude.
thehog said:Thanks Hog. Good post.
Not really, this is a common misunderstanding. A lot of those awfully bad days are due to doping, not due to the lack of it. E.g. a blood transfusion that went wrong. See Landis, Vino etc. Having those huge variations in form from one day to another with no logical medical explanation is simply not normal.Benotti69 said:Sky never once looked uncomfortable in the tour. In a clean race a rider should have at least 1 bad day. No one on Sky seemed to have a bad day.
ToreBear said:You forgot to use your sockpuppet for that one dude.
maltiv said:Not really, this is a common misunderstanding. A lot of those awfully bad days are due to doping, not due to the lack of it. E.g. a blood transfusion that went wrong. See Landis, Vino etc. Having those huge variations in form from one day to another with no logical medical explanation is simply not normal.
Small variations are expected on one's daily form if you're clean, but how do you know none of them had those? There were days when Porte and Rogers were dropped early as well, for example on the stage Pinot won. But if you happen to have your bad day(s) on a flat stage, then obviously no one will notice...
maltiv said:Not really, this is a common misunderstanding. A lot of those awfully bad days are due to doping, not due to the lack of it. E.g. a blood transfusion that went wrong. See Landis, Vino etc. Having those huge variations in form from one day to another with no logical medical explanation is simply not normal.
Small variations are expected on one's daily form if you're clean, but how do you know none of them had those? There were days when Porte and Rogers were dropped early as well, for example on the stage Pinot won. But if you happen to have your bad day(s) on a flat stage, then obviously no one will notice...
armchairclimber said:I can't remember a single post in the clinic or elsewhere suggesting that doping has ended.
Benotti69 said:No a rider riding clean will have at least 1 day where his body just wont respond.
Doping riders normally perform well for the whole race. The exceptions are bad blood bag days.
Do you base this on actual studies and science, or do you just pull that out of nowhere? You can't just present things as a known fact without any proof whatsoever (unless you are religious)Benotti69 said:No a rider riding clean will have at least 1 day where his body just wont respond.
Doping riders normally perform well for the whole race. The exceptions are bad blood bag days.
maltiv said:Do you base this on actual studies and science, or do you just pull that out of nowhere? You can't just present things as a known fact without any proof whatsoever (unless you are religious)
For all we know Wiggins might've had 10 bad days in the TDF, all during the flat stages...Anyway, I won't say I have raced a grand tour, but I've done some stage races and I've never experienced the "bad day" you seem to describe without there being a medical explanation for it.
But since Knees, Rogers, Porte, EBH etc all clearly had some bad days during the race, I guess that "proves" they are clean at least by your incredibly flawed logic.
maltiv said:Do you base this on actual studies and science, or do you just pull that out of nowhere? You can't just present things as a known fact without any proof whatsoever (unless you are religious)
For all we know Wiggins might've had 10 bad days in the TDF, all during the flat stages...Anyway, I won't say I have raced a grand tour, but I've done some stage races and I've never experienced the "bad day" you seem to describe without there being a medical explanation for it.
But since Knees, Rogers, Porte, EBH etc all clearly had some bad days during the race, I guess that "proves" they are clean at least by your incredibly flawed logic.
maltiv said:Do you base this on actual studies and science, or do you just pull that out of nowhere? You can't just present things as a known fact without any proof whatsoever (unless you are religious)
For all we know Wiggins might've had 10 bad days in the TDF, all during the flat stages...Anyway, I won't say I have raced a grand tour, but I've done some stage races and I've never experienced the "bad day" you seem to describe without there being a medical explanation for it.
But since Knees, Rogers, Porte, EBH etc all clearly had some bad days during the race, I guess that "proves" they are clean at least by your incredibly flawed logic.
thehog said:You do realise and putting nationalism aside for one moment statistically speaking that; 99.9999999% of all Tour de France winners for the last 20 years have been doping.
Proven fact.
What made 2012 buck this trend?
In a race dominated like none other in the history of the sport do you want me to believe a 0.00000000000001% chance that the winner wasn't doping?
Simply not possible. Statistically, mathematically, logically not possible.
Velo1ticker said:So according to the inhouse professor we will never have a clean winner. Why not get a degree in statistical anaysis before you make stupid unlogical conclusions?
(I am not excluding anything but what about an overlooked fact: Large amounts of money can buy better riders.
This is a better thread than the nuclear terrorbomb thread: Sky - let's accuse everyone at sky)
Velo1ticker said:So according to the inhouse professor we will never have a clean winner. Why not get a degree in statistical anaysis before you make stupid unlogical conclusions?
(I am not excluding anything but what about an overlooked fact: Large amounts of money can buy better riders.This is a better thread than the nuclear terrorbomb thread: Sky - let's accuse everyone at sky)
RichWalk said:It also buys you better 'programs' better doctors, better PR etc etc the list goes on; what it does not buy you is guaranteed performance, that doesnt even apply to Formula 1 and we are largely focusing on a car not a human being...............
RichWalk said:It also buys you better 'programs' better doctors, better PR etc etc the list goes on; what it does not buy you is guaranteed performance, that doesnt even apply to Formula 1 and we are largely focusing on a car not a human being...............
Velo1ticker said:(I am not excluding anything but what about an overlooked fact: Large amounts of money can buy better riders.
This is a better thread than the nuclear terrorbomb thread: Sky - let's accuse everyone at sky)
armchairclimber said:It's a shame about the SKY brand because I do like just how much they've got up the noses of some of you. Funny to watch. "It would have been fine if it wasn't for those pesky Brits and their pharmaceutical gains."![]()
Bag of Guts said:I've so far resisted wading in to this Team Sky debate clustercuss but I found this fairly banal, PR puff piece/interview too amusing to pass unmentioned.
At 4:58 Tim Kerrison is asked a doping question...
http://video.cyclingnews.com/video/...&ns_source=cyclingnews&ns_linkname=0&ns_fee=0
Jesus! The guy goes bananas. Is it just me? Is anyone here well versed in the interpretion of body language? I'd love to hear a professional opinion. It made me think of The Chicken's super-slippery responses to questioning during the '07 tour in the days leading up to his ejection. Oozing with guilt. Comically so.
I could, of course, be mistaking a monarch for a giant lizard but this is The Clinic after all.
