Well, that was a long time coming. A nice reminder that high profile riders can indeed get away with "never testing positive in races" and have been dirty cheats all along, dear journalists. For the next time people feel an urge to parrot instead of questioning the obvious ability to get away with it for years at top level.
I am glad that someone who was caught messing has got the ban as it was promised to those that were caught. You join the system, you play the system, you mess up, you pay.
I didn't hate to see Valverde ride over the last year more (or less) than any of the long list of riders from that era that are still around and are probably no strangers to the stuff either. I have never really got it why he drew much hotter fire than others. Maybe a case of "their dopers being so much worse than our dopers".
Instead, I'm sure that in that era, it was a far more level playing field than the list of banned riders suggests. There were some tough choices to be made in back then (and still), at all levels of competitiveness. I applaud those brave (and able) to just walk away from it, but I don't despise those that didn't.
And yes, I'm also delighted we seem to be getting beyond the worst of it. I don't like that culture one bit.
Still, I actually quite enjoyed Valverde in action, as I have enjoyed druggies from Merckx to Rasmussen for the entertainment I have witnessed. And I'll miss him more then some, as he sure was one of those that animated races. You can inject some capacity, but you don't change the instinct and attitude much. I liked his style.
And I suspect he wasn't using less than others then, as I suspect he was also living "cleanly" in that grey area that is semi-officially tolerated now. What he won this year was won on that same level playing field.
There is only one pro-career to have in road cycling, the one that comes with all the trappings of office when you join up. He messed it up a bit more than others, got caught out, and chose this route out. He has been in a process, one that was clearly open to him. Again, I did not hate him for picking the route open to him, it's the rule makers I have issues with. Anyway, that route has now run its inevitable course. 2 years it is, and thankfully not back-dated too far, so he will do 18 months, or whatever. Maybe I am even glad he has staggered his naughty step period with others.
I hope to see him back at some point, and I'd really welcome him back. Like I have welcomed back all those from Millar up to Vino. I don't need the circus of seeing people "be sorry" to make me feel better. In a way I even prefer the "what bit surprised you - sorry for what?" attitude. I know full well what I am watching, and I still think it is great (as I think it has always been a level playing field of sorts).
When he comes back he'll know the rules of the game as he finds it then, and I will once again assume that he'll try hard to fall within the letter of the law when the watchtower flashlight drops by, rather than the spirit, as that seems to be the arena that is left to the riders to compete and earn a living in. As long as he doesn't get caught, I will take it for granted he is playing along as it is "institutionally" accepted. In a loopy way I trust those that have come back to work harder to stay within the "parameters", than those that have got away with it and keep doing so.
So 2012 it is.
Saying all that, I hate dope in sport. I want it out.
But rules are rules. Those rules are set and enforced by others. The sport will get as dirty as the watchmen allow it to become. I believe it is getting better, but it isn't banning riders that will change the sport, and 2006 is well beyond us. But someone will have to throw the stick into the Watchmen henhouse before we get serious changes. That's where our real problem lies. We can ban until we keel over, until we ban the obvious officials from getting anywhere near the control panel, we will keep fiddling at the margins and see random talent and bread-earners ostracised for taking the only realistic career route left open to them.
I hope that the stick has been thrown now, in the US, and it is beyond the Watchmen control at last. The feds getting very serious with Lance and the UCI is the only way I can see the circumstances in which riders find them change within the next few years. It will be a long process. I hope the holy houses will truly burn.