the big ring said:
Were there any boring bits?
Did you feel it dramatised things at all?
Going to be a bit before I can get a hold of a copy.
I didn't find any parts of it boring. Tyler only spends a chapter talking about his time before turning pro, so the majority is spent on his time in the peloton. I am still processing some of the information, but here are some of my first observations.
There were a lot of things that I was taken aback by.
1. With the exception of Fuentes, none of the "notorious" doctors are as involved as one may imagine. It's a few years into Tour victories before Ferrari is ever connected to administering EPO by Tyler. Cecchini has very little to do with it when it can help it, and if the book is true, then doesn't deserve the notoriety he receives.
2. USPS team would only include Lance's two top climbers (Tyler and Livingston 1999-00) during the tour when administering the junk. The rest had to ride "paniaugia" or take care of it themselves, which makes sense when you consider Frankie's admission of never seeing it with his own eyes.
2. Lance is an a$$, but so are quite a few people in this book. Johan is more of a puppet with strings, and the real power, even over Lance, is in the shadows. Tyler never saw everything, and suspects that there was something that even
3. Tyler more or less backs up the assertion that JV was one guy who would question what the team was doing, and this put him at odds with Lance. It actually balances almost completely with Vaughter's own account that was published in the NYT and the other longer interview he gave.
4. While the Tyler says that he and Bjarn were tight, I get the feeling at CSC, a guy like Carlos Sastre could exist without being implicated in doping.