UCI helped Froome with illegal(?) TUE at Romandie

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Oct 16, 2010
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peloton said:
That's a very good question.
Here's an interesting article on Cookson, Zorzoli etc. (in Spanish)
excellent piece indeed. thanks for linking it.
spot on.

No me gusta, de entrada, que al frente de la UCI esté el que fue el responsable de la federación británica durante la lluvia de medallas en la pista propiciada por los marginal gains y el “método científico”
cookson replaces hubschmid but sticks to zorzoli.
lo que si es cierto es que lo primero que hizo, no pasando 24 horas desde su elección, fue viajar a Aigle y destituir al anterior director general, Christophe Hubschmid.

Tal cual hizo eso podía haber hecho lo propio con Mario Zorzoli, auténtica piedra de toque de la edad de oro del dopaje consentido por el órgano de gobierno del ciclismo, acusado por Tyler Hamilton y Floyd Landis, e incluso por el propio sentido común: tan renovador que es Cookson, tan investigador del pasado, y ya lleva cinco meses en el cargo y Mario Zorzoli sigue en su puesto, que es el mismo desde hace 20 años: jefe de la comisión médica de la UCI. El que reparte los TUE. El que interpreta el pasaporte biológico. El que dice lo que da positivo y lo que no. El que facilita su número de teléfono personal a Eufemiano Fuentes.
 
Jul 21, 2012
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TailWindHome said:
Brian Cookson OBE ‏@BrianCooksonUCI · 9m
I recognise the legacy I have inherited is an atmosphere of distrust around our sport. You should (and you will) judge me on my actions. 1/2

Brian Cookson OBE ‏@BrianCooksonUCI · 7m
But smears and innuendoes are one thing, and facts are another. UCI and I will be commenting more on this matter over the next few days.

Its pretty funny that the sky miracle starts to fall apart right after they get Cookson as president. Please dont sue me Cookie!
 
May 26, 2010
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MatParker117 said:
UCI actually did nothing wrong according to it's rules:

The UCI rules are set up so the UCI can do no wrong.;)

also when a sky staff member has his dad, president of UCI on speed dial, no one will be making mistakes.
 
Granville57 said:
Seems like an odd bit to add to such a dry and formal statement:

And WTF does that even mean, exactly? :confused:

It sounds suspiciously like a threat of legal action. But a UCI head would never use his office to threaten legal action against journalists would he ..... ?
 

martinvickers

BANNED
Oct 15, 2012
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The Hitch said:
Some people here posted that Froome has said that he has never had a TUE.

Is there a link for that? I don't remember it. IIRC he said he didn't have it for the most recent tour, not ever.

I vaguely remember him saying something like it last year but nothing this year.
 
Granville57 said:
Somewhere, lurking in the background, BroDeal must have his finger on the key.

Login, Bro.

Just Do It.

Shhh. I am undercover. Right beneath the nose of Ernst Stavro Brailsford.

ernst_stavro_brailsford.jpg


I have managed to smuggle out Team Sky's new branding graphics.

team_steroid.jpg


I am hearing a lot of chatter between the team and the UCI. Fran and Oli have been advising the UCI about how to handle damage control.

i_am_not_a_crookson-1.jpg
 
Jun 29, 2009
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Benotti69 said:
Seems some posters are missing the TUE is for a substance, prednisone, that is given to people suffering from Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease: e.g. emphysema. Now why would a guy be racing with COPD? Or why would a guy need a TUE for prednisone if he doesn't have COPD?

Why did the UCI grant a TUE for a rider suffering of COPD and instead tell team, rider too ill to race and if not then why let a guy take prednisone if he wasn't ill?

UCI look bad, Froome looks bad and Sky look bad.


prednisolone isn't just given for copd
it's also given for asthma (which is the case with Froome):
https://www.brit-thoracic.org.uk/document-library/clinical-information/asthma/btssign-asthma-guideline-quick-reference-guide/
and for a miriad of other things:
https://www.medicines.org.uk/emc/medicine/26657/SPC/Prednisolone+Tablets+BP+5+mg/#INDICATIONS
 
Aug 13, 2009
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_nm___ said:

Yup, There are lots of uses. It is also some strong stuff. If you take it for a few weeks your body becomes addicted to it. Can take a while to ween off.
 
_nm___ said:

Yes, but still missing the point. Why was a rider who was pulled from LBL 3 days previously riding Romandie when in "acute" need of such a drug just to compete? Why not pull him from Romandie? Why the rush TUE? How was he smashing the field if in such respiratory distress?

No one seems to want to answer those questions, and no one in the press seems to want to ask.
 
Jun 29, 2009
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The Hitch said:
Some people here posted that Froome has said that he has never had a TUE.

Is there a link for that? I don't remember it. IIRC he said he didn't have it for the most recent tour, not ever.

martinvickers said:
I vaguely remember him saying something like it last year but nothing this year.



he can't have said "i have never had a TUE". or if he did then something doesn't add up: because as early as this week he said
I’ve used an inhaler since I was a kid – I do have exercise-induced asthma, it’s nothing new to me, it’s something I’ve used throughout my career.
http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/froome-surprised-at-controversy-over-in-race-inhaler-use

and the thing is: up until 1st january 2010, you had to have a TUE to use this asthma inhaler he is talking about in the quote (salbutamol inhaler)...

so either
1- he is genuinely asthmatic since childhood and he has had a TUE until december 2009,
or
2- he is only asthmatic since recently and indeed he has never had a TUE (because salbutamol dropped off the Prohibited List in 2010)

but not both
 
Sep 29, 2012
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Merckx index said:
The one and only thing I liked about what Walsh said in his book on Sky (didn't read it, but did see lots of excerpts) is that--despite all his fawning over Froome--he said his impression of him was that he was very fragile, on the cusp of poor health, and that he didn't expect him to have a long run at the top of the GT world.

One secret to Froome's success has surely been his even-by-pro-cycling-standards emaciated body. A very narrow line between losing enough weight to become an elite climber and weakening your immune system to the point where you are vulnerable to a host of maladies. This isn't new to pro peloton riders, of course, but Froome may well have taken it further than most.

Except he has always been unwell, according to that same book.