thehog said:...US Postal Service spokesman Jörg Muller ...
LOL, Jörg Müller, blood transfusions in 1988 (!) with PDM, Rooks and Theunisse...
http://www.dopeology.org/people/J%C3%B6rg_M%C3%BCller/
thehog said:...US Postal Service spokesman Jörg Muller ...
Race Radio said:Transfusions changed the "Everyone was doing it" narrative substantially. Super easy to take a shot, or if you are Riis two shots, but blood bags are a logistically, financially and mentally a much larger hurdle. Most said no.
The "Everyone" Jan and lance refer to is a comparatively small group
Netserk said:I don't think Jan ever said that everyone used transfusion.
roundabout said:here comes more rationalization
pathetic
who knows what a pro-conti rider would have done on a 70 000 per year program and 9 blood bags (thanks, google) waiting for him.
roundabout said:Froome must be on a 100k program then.
Sorry for the sidetrack.
Point is Ullrich probably paid the most for his "treatment" out of all known Fuentes clients. He also had the most blood bags in the fridge (weaker indicator as the Tour was coming up).
But of course it doesn't matter, because for the apologists the next line of defense is that he earned the "right" to spend tens of thousands per year on doping and that he was better than Matt frigging White.
That he was the biggest of the big league dopers is irrelevant. That he has no guts to admit to his doping beyond what is already known is irrelevant as well. I hope the IOC finds the way to strip him of his Sydney medals. He deserves no place in history.
Eufemiano Fuentes, a doctor who worked with the Kelme team and Jesus Manzano, has denied giving the cyclist any illegal substances. "If Jesus Manzano did these things it was hidden from the team," Fuentes was quoted by El Diario Vasco as saying. "We have no knowledge of what Manzano has said goes on within the team."
However, a close friend of Manzano's, José Luis Montoya, called Fuentes a "hypocrite" on the Spanish Antenna 3 TV station. "When I read this in the newspaper, it has particularly incensed me," he told AS. "In the first place, that this gentleman says that Manzano hid all this from the team, is a total lie. This man is a hypocrite. He was not hiding it, far from it. I took Jesus Manzano from here (Zarzalejos) to a hotel in Torrejon de Ardoz to see this gentleman. There I found myself with cyclists from all over Spain who were there doing exactly the same thing. He gave us a prescription, we went to a certain pharmacy in Madrid to get certain medical products. I have spoken to Jesus and asked him if he still had the prescriptions Eufemiano gave him. He still has them in the gentleman's own handwriting and with his signature."
Manzano debate: Riis weighs in
Team CSC's general manager Bjarne Riis has expressed his opinions about the revelations of Jesus Manzano, which have lifted the lid on doping practices in cycling like never before. Although Manzano hasn't named anyone else in his own very detailed admissions, he has clearly pointed the finger at his Kelme team management and doctors as holding responsibility.
His actions have already resulted in the Amaury Sport Organisation (ASO) excluding the Kelme team from the Tour de France and any other races organised by ASO. Meanwhile, Kelme has threatened legal action against Manzano and Spanish newspaper AS, which reported his comments, while the UCI has also stated that it will take a similar approach to "all who, by their actions, do such damage to cycling's image." The UCI also stated that blood tests show that 90 percent of the peloton is clean.
In a press statement issued during the Criterium International, Bjarne Riis commented that, "Each case, which throws cycling into a new debate regarding speculations about doping, affects all of us. Even though we still do not know precisely how many of Jesus Manzano's claims are true, his statements have nevertheless given rise to yet another sad case in cycling. The stories one can read in the Spanish press these days place the Kelme team in very poor light. If this turns out to be an accurate representation of how they work then it should have very serious consequences.
"It is - to put it mildly - extremely frustrating to experience how some within the sport do not live up to the wish that most of us have for a healthy, sound, professional sport. We cannot live with these kinds of scandals as a regular turn of affairs. All riders and all teams are responsible for maintaining the credibility of cycling. We owe this to everyone - both within and outside of the sport."
Riis' own team has not escaped suspicion that it is using doping to dominate events such as the Tour Mediterranean, Paris-Nice, and even the Criterium International. But Riis strongly defends his team, "Our team has delivered a fantastic season so far, and our results are based on plain, hard work that everyone can vouch for. We have nothing to hide, no secrets that cannot stand the light of day. Everything we have done is 100% justifiable in the face of any criticism or suspicion, and ought to be a good example in support of all future cycling."
Riis called for cycling not to lose its focus, "I am entirely on a par with the statements made by UCI and Lance Armstrong: There is strong documentation indicating that the largest part of the professional cycling world has a clear conscience. I wish to emphasize that on our team we have a crystal clear, unconditional attitude to the use of illegal substances. All riders are aware of this and have signed their names to contracts stating that any such use is unacceptable in any form whatsoever."
Netserk said:I don't think Jan ever said that everyone used transfusion.
thehog said:Apparently Jan transfused all 8 bags at once rather than the regular 2![]()
ElChingon said:He's always had a bigger appetite than most, and could backup that appetite.
But only just by chance, no? Had they ridden for USPS in 2004, they would've been on the bus with Floyd when the entire team received the transfusion on the side of the road.Race Radio said:Frankie never transfused. Either did VDV, or Dave Z.
webvan said:So what was that SMS about then, the one that Pevenage sent to Fuentes saying that Ulle wanted more of that good stuff just after the ITT?
webvan said:So what was that SMS about then, the one that Pevenage sent to Fuentes saying that Ulle wanted more of that good stuff just after the ITT?
thehog said:Trust me when I say. If you gave a Pro-Conti guy a 70k a year doping program he wouldn't win the Tour.
thehog said:200 bags of blood at Fuentes.
Big Doopie said:Rotfflmfao!!!!
Ricco and landis weren't even good enough for a pro contract without bbs and one almost won the giro and the other won the tour.
Anyone who thinks they know what the natural talents of a rider is in the epo/bb era is completely and utterly freakin ridiculous.
Zam_Olyas said:I thought Landis was a talented junior and of the best american prospect since Lemond/Hampsten![]()
Big Doopie said:Yeah, and without bbs and epo he was a domestique at Ouch.
Um... Ouch!
Riis was rescued from unemployment and won the tour on epo.
The idea that anyone here in the clinic knows the natural talent of riders that cheated throughout their careers is just plain stupid.
BroDeal said:And yet you seem to think you know.
Landis was overweight and out of shape in 2009.
Scott SoCal said:and un-motivated, deflated, etc.
But, Floyd put in a helluva ride at Battenkill. Good rider, fearless, big engine. Hard to know how he would of done in a drug-free pro cycling scene.
And yet you seem to think you know.