- Jul 18, 2014
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JV said those things before Cannondale was on board. Cannondale isnt going to let the team go away.
Enrico Gimondi said:JV said those things before Cannondale was on board. Cannondale isnt going to let the team go away.
MartinGT said:Enrico Gimondi said:JV said those things before Cannondale was on board. Cannondale isnt going to let the team go away.
This
That team has since evolved into Cannondale-Garmin. Early on, the team implemented a stringent doping policy that remains today. If a rider is caught doping, the whole team will be fired.
They are rare, and expensive, simple as that. Why do you think not every urine sample is tested this way? Because it is as easy as the normal ratio test?TheGame said:Fearless Greg Lemond said:Alex for the win.Alex Simmons/RST said:Quick, call Impey for some ideas. They must have workshopped a few.
Synthetic doping tests are rare by the way, very expensive and thus not done often. I say one and one is...
Not really. They did a CIR test, probably because his initial screen showed a whacky t/e ratio. Cir isn't that expensive and is used pretty often in those situations
Billie said:MartinGT said:Billie said:Anybody seen any reaction form other riders on the Danielson positive? I remember half the peloton tweeting their anger at Di Luca couple years back. All keeping quite now. What a disgrace.
Hope Lance tweets later today![]()
Lane already has https://twitter.com/lancearmstrong/with_replies
nice![]()
But crucially, this is as true now as it was everytime he 100% guaranteed everyone in his team was clean. Didn't stop him from saying it and enjoying the good PR boost from it.happytramp said:The thing is that it's not actually possible for him to hold the hand of each rider when they go to the bathroom or tuck them into bed at night.
Benotti69 said:MartinGT said:Enrico Gimondi said:JV said those things before Cannondale was on board. Cannondale isnt going to let the team go away.
This
NY times, june 2015 article begs to differ;
That team has since evolved into Cannondale-Garmin. Early on, the team implemented a stringent doping policy that remains today. If a rider is caught doping, the whole team will be fired.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/26/sports/cycling/us-cyclists-fight-to-spread-their-message-were-clean.html?_r=2
Will be interesting to see Vaughters action on this.
happytramp said:Glenn_Wilson said:Unfair? JV is the one who made the statements that if they got 1 postiffff test he would fire the team quit the sport or that his sponsors had a 1 test and out clause. Unfair? He should have not made those big bold statements of clean.Blakeslee said:I think its unfair to be criticizing Jonathan Vaughters for this. As a rider he was one of the first to walk away from the institutionalized doping that was going on in the sport and then went on to try to do something constructive about it by starting the Garmin team. If the test result holds up and Danielson is confirmed to have doped, he is the one who should be taking the responsibility after blowing his second chance and taking down the rest of what the team has accomplished with him.
For the moderators can this positive test be moved into its own thread? Having a single thread for a rider like this is somewhat inefficient having to wade through posts from 2009 to find discussion about what is currently going on.
Yeah possibly he was a bit ott when he said that. The thing is that it's not actually possible for him to hold the hand of each rider when they go to the bathroom or tuck them into bed at night. Also as far as i'm concerned anyone holding him to account for that statement and beating him across the back with it now is an honest to God a$$hole who probably has zero place being a cycling fan.
Enrico Gimondi said:JV said those things before Cannondale was on board. Cannondale isnt going to let the team go away.
mrhender said:Benotti69 said:MartinGT said:Enrico Gimondi said:JV said those things before Cannondale was on board. Cannondale isnt going to let the team go away.
This
NY times, june 2015 article begs to differ;
That team has since evolved into Cannondale-Garmin. Early on, the team implemented a stringent doping policy that remains today. If a rider is caught doping, the whole team will be fired.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/26/sports/cycling/us-cyclists-fight-to-spread-their-message-were-clean.html?_r=2
Will be interesting to see Vaughters action on this.
B-sample miracle on the way?
Fearless Greg Lemond said:They are rare, and expensive, simple as that. Why do you think not every urine sample is tested this way? Because it is as easy as the normal ratio test?
Uh uh.
Merckx index said:You don’t win a stage race with testosterone alone. Where there is testosterone, there is generally EPO and/or blood transfusion.
Remember, Floyd denied, and I believe continues to deny, that he took synthetic testosterone for the TDF that year. There was speculation that his positive test resulted from testosterone taken prior to the Tour, and introduced to his system during the Tour by blood transfusion. The same explanation that seems most likely for Contador and CB.
Keep in mind that testosterone, like CB, is not a threshold substance. AFAIK, the high T/E ratio that constitutes the initial criterion can result from any detectable amount of testosterone, and the isotope test doesn’t even care about the amount of testosterone.
For the same reason, though, I wouldn’t yet rule out contamination of some supplement. Of all the riders who upon testing positive insisted their innocence, TD strikes me as one of the most credible. Did he really have that much to gain here? He won this race twice before, it’s not that big a deal, anyway, and he’s going to retire soon. I guess you could argue that since he was already sanctioned once, he has a dirty reputation and therefore not much to lose, either. But still doesn’t make much sense, IMO.
Merckx index said:.
For the same reason, though, I wouldn’t yet rule out contamination of some supplement. Of all the riders who upon testing positive insisted their innocence, TD strikes me as one of the most credible. Did he really have that much to gain here? He won this race twice before, it’s not that big a deal, anyway, and he’s going to retire soon. I guess you could argue that since he was already sanctioned once, he has a dirty reputation and therefore not much to lose, either. But still doesn’t make much sense, IMO.
Benotti69 said:Have you read Steve Tilford's post about Tom Danielson. Guy would never had made it to a pro without doping.
http://stevetilford.com/2012/09/06/vaughters-outs-danielson/
If a supplement contamination then Garmin's 'internal testing' should've picked it up!
If a rider is taking a supplement, he doesn't just take it once, he takes a week's worth at least. So internal testing should have picked it up, but i dont really believe JV's 'internal testing' schtick.
Berzin said:Blakeslee said:For the moderators can this positive test be moved into its own thread? Having a single thread for a rider like this is somewhat inefficient having to wade through posts from 2009 to find discussion about what is currently going on.
There's nothing to "wade" through. The thread so far is only six pages long and all you have to do to get to the latest posts is go to the last page.
As far as I'm concerned six pages is seven pages too long for this rider. Overhyped for almost all of his career and accomplished little of note. Hanging on for grim death and looking at the Tour of Utah as the highlight of his year...puleeze.
This is just another excuse for the Vaughters haters to pile on him, that's all. In the large scheme of things, this latest "bust" is of no consequence whatsoever. Nothing but a sad end to the career of an anonymous rider.
Merckx index said:Benotti69 said:Have you read Steve Tilford's post about Tom Danielson. Guy would never had made it to a pro without doping.
http://stevetilford.com/2012/09/06/vaughters-outs-danielson/
Yes, I read that before. I’m not saying I think TD can be trusted on his word alone. I’m saying I don’t think this race was worth doping for. But who knows. At his age, an eight year suspension is probably no worse than two years.
The ToU is a big race in USA. Where do you think TommieD's granfondo clients will be coming from? This was a big race for him and is a big race for the team it's USA sponsors.
If a supplement contamination then Garmin's 'internal testing' should've picked it up!
Not necessarily. As I discussed at great length during the Contador case, supplement contamination can be very difficult to detect. In fact, the level of contamination in a supplement sufficient to account for the amount of CB in Contador’s system would have gone undetected by that Netherlands group—I can’t remember their name—that advertised themselves as a way for athletes to guarantee that their supplements were clean. That would almost certainly be possible for testosterone, too, unless the testing used CIR, and they very likely would not, because of the expense.
Benotti69 said:Merckx index said:You don’t win a stage race with testosterone alone. Where there is testosterone, there is generally EPO and/or blood transfusion.
Remember, Floyd denied, and I believe continues to deny, that he took synthetic testosterone for the TDF that year. There was speculation that his positive test resulted from testosterone taken prior to the Tour, and introduced to his system during the Tour by blood transfusion. The same explanation that seems most likely for Contador and CB.
Keep in mind that testosterone, like CB, is not a threshold substance. AFAIK, the high T/E ratio that constitutes the initial criterion can result from any detectable amount of testosterone, and the isotope test doesn’t even care about the amount of testosterone.
For the same reason, though, I wouldn’t yet rule out contamination of some supplement. Of all the riders who upon testing positive insisted their innocence, TD strikes me as one of the most credible. Did he really have that much to gain here? He won this race twice before, it’s not that big a deal, anyway, and he’s going to retire soon. I guess you could argue that since he was already sanctioned once, he has a dirty reputation and therefore not much to lose, either. But still doesn’t make much sense, IMO.
Have you read Steve Tilford's post about Tom Danielson. Guy would never had made it to a pro without doping.
http://stevetilford.com/2012/09/06/vaughters-outs-danielson/
If a supplement contamination then Garmin's 'internal testing' should've picked it up!
Doper caught doping, makes perfect sense.
Do you think they test for synthetic testosterone in their internal testing?irondan said:Tommy D's A pos is a testament to the fact that the Garmin/Slipstream system to catch his own dopers was nothing more than a clever marketing tool.
Hey JV, you've been outed!![]()
At the time that JV was touting his team as 'the clean team' yes I do think they were testing for it.Escarabajo said:Do you think they test for synthetic testosterone in their internal testing?irondan said:Tommy D's A pos is a testament to the fact that the Garmin/Slipstream system to catch his own dopers was nothing more than a clever marketing tool.
Hey JV, you've been outed!![]()
I doubt it.
Enrico Gimondi said:How long does it take to get the B sample results?