Will Carter said:Actually the bold bit is fact - it was taken after a TUE. Whether he was ill or not is as you say claimed by SKY and the UCI, I didnt comment on that though.
We know that is claimed. We don't know it as a fact.
Will Carter said:Actually the bold bit is fact - it was taken after a TUE. Whether he was ill or not is as you say claimed by SKY and the UCI, I didnt comment on that though.
GJB123 said:Were you present when it was taken? Whose word do we have to believe that medication was actually administered after the the TUE was granted? Sky's word, Froome's word?
red_flanders said:We know that is claimed. We don't know it as a fact.
RownhamHill said:So are you suggesting that they took the drug before the TUE was granted (for which they would have faced a two year ban had they been picked up in a drugs test on the first day of the race), then went to the trouble of getting the TUE (I think I read somewhere here it's normally prescribed as a six day course), and then didn't bother to take any more of it?
Or are you suggesting that they didn't take the drug at all (either before or after), and they just applied for the TUE either for ****s and giggles, ss a test for when they might need it in future, or some other reason I can't think of right now? (Maybe they got the TUE, in order to deliberately leak it and troll the clinic?)
Because on the face of it, the idea that a team would go to the trouble of getting a TUE (for whatever reasons, nefarious or otherwise) and then not bother to take the drug afterwards doesn't really sound that likely - especially if it was a team of inveterate drugs cheats; it would be like inviting a bank robber into the vault and asking him to help himself with no liability. . .
RownhamHill said:So are you suggesting that they took the drug before the TUE was granted (for which they would have faced a two year ban had they been picked up in a drugs test on the first day of the race), then went to the trouble of getting the TUE (I think I read somewhere here it's normally prescribed as a six day course), and then didn't bother to take any more of it?
Or are you suggesting that they didn't take the drug at all (either before or after), and they just applied for the TUE either for ****s and giggles, ss a test for when they might need it in future, or some other reason I can't think of right now? (Maybe they got the TUE, in order to deliberately leak it and troll the clinic?)
Because on the face of it, the idea that a team would go to the trouble of getting a TUE (for whatever reasons, nefarious or otherwise) and then not bother to take the drug afterwards doesn't really sound that likely - especially if it was a team of inveterate drugs cheats; it would be like inviting a bank robber into the vault and asking him to help himself with no liability. . .
Tom T. said:Somebody's probably already pointed this out, but this is starting to feel a lot like 1999 all over again.
RownhamHill said:It's a pretty safe assumption though that once the TUE was granted the team took 'advantage' of the dispensation it provided, no?
Dear Wiggo said:And has been so, since 2012.
Tom T. said:Somebody's probably already pointed this out, but this is starting to feel a lot like 1999 all over again.
“Local corticosteroid injections must be validated by the physician in charge of the team, which prescribe mandatory minimum eight days off work and competition.”
Dear Wiggo said:Bahahahhahahahahahaaaa.
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MatParker117 said:How this is this in anyway similar? All Sky did was follow what appears to be an incredibly flawed process and for further information here's what the MPCC rules actually say:
Froome's TUE was for an oral dose.
GJB123 said:Do you think Armstring actually used a saddle sore cream after he got the TUE? But granted the more likely solution in this case seems to be, he took it anyway. Point is, we don't know for sure, do we?
GJB123 said:As stated above it is an assumptions, perhaps even a safe assumption, he took it after receiving the TUE, but fact is we do not know for sure.
MatParker117 said:How this is this in anyway similar? All Sky did was follow what appears to be an incredibly flawed process and for further information here's what the MPCC rules actually say:
Froome's TUE was for an oral dose.
Benotti69 said:No way, the Clean Team aka TeamSky, take advantage, never, how dare you.....
What was it Brailsford said, 'you dont say i am going to cheat on monday but not tuesday, wednesday.........'
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GJB123 said:Were you present when it was taken? Whose word do we have to believe that medication was actually administered after the the TUE was granted? Sky's word, Froome's word?
Alpe d'Huez said:Amazing. You or I get an infection of any sort, the doctor prescribes us a small bottle of antibiotics, we often have to be pretty sick to even get them. Froom gets an infection that no one is even aware of he has, and he gets steroids, and what appears to be a limitless uncontrolled quantity.
Will Carter said:'Uncontrolled Quantity'? It was (according to the news reports - so this is claimed and not fact mind you) that it was for 40mg a day. That is the standard dose for that ailment for an adult and not an uncontrolled quantity.
thehog said:Lets see:
1. rider that won race has TUE for otherwise banned substance. check
2. facts are leaked by the French press. check
3. rider has claimed never having any TUEs, performances are as clean as the driven snow. check
4. UCI official involved in according of TUE. check
5. UCI says everything is OK, everybody move on please. check
6. trolls abound to discredit any discussion about wrong doings. check
The big difference so far is that I haven't seen anything about TUE-holding rider making generous donations to UCI. Yet.
(Stolen from FrenchFry - http://forum.cyclingnews.com/showpost.php?p=1492874&postcount=193 )
Will Carter said:You raise 6 points there HOG.
#3: I believe he only confirmed he hadn't raced the Tour in 2013 with a TUE (I could be mistaken or Sky did), but even so if that statement was in the book then the book would (likely) already have been written before the TDR (correct with link if I am mistaken).
#4: You apply to the UCI for a TUE and then the UCI (presumably a UCI official ...) grants it. This is an invalid point.
#5: Since it followed due process what else are they to say. Again an invalid point.
#6: Happens for all discussions, not really sure what it proves.
Honestly HOG you're beginning to undermine your own well structured and valid arguments by making posts like this.