VeloCity said:
I think that's the biggest myth of all, that doping only exists because the UCI tolerates it. Again, I'm no fan of the UCI, but to me this idea that they can make it disappear if they really wanted to is just a way of shifting responsibility away from the riders.
Let's say that the UCI wasn't corrupt, etc. How exactly would they end doping in the peloton?
Difficult. But not rocket science.
Imagine, if you will, a clean, transparent oversight body that has at heart the best interests of the sport, the riders, the fans, and, by extension, the teams and sponsors. Imagine that it has a strong sense of its own integrity, and that it's run by individuals of truly upstanding character who eschew making "extra income." Let's call it UCI (Union for Cycling Integrity).
The first thing it would do is to put in place rules whereby officers, employees, and contractors for UCI could not have any financial interest in any of the teams or sponsors of the sport, or in anything else that might be seen as a conflict of interest. The next thing it would do is assign drug testing to a body independent of itself. This body would be well funded and tasked with testing widely and deeply. (Perhaps the drug testing body could be connected with Interpol so that it had legitimate investigative powers.) After that, it would lobby hard to criminalize PED trafficking and use the world over, in the same way they've done it in France. At the same time, it would make the sporting penalties much stronger. (Say, four or five years' suspension for first offense, lifetime ban for second.) It would also hold teams and team officials responsible for rider doping behavior, so that there would be stiff penalties for them as well, including suspensions, bans, and loss of license.
In other words, it would make clear to all concerned that it is
serious about
no doping. Penalties would be so great, and the chances of getting caught so real, that it simply wouldn't be worth the risk.
VeloCity said:
Doping is a large problem in cycling (and probably most other sports) because - even if the overseeing agency was completely competent and honest - it's next to impossible to stop it. Riders know it; DS' know it; the Ferrari's know it. No anti-doping agency has the power to stop it. If you know you can probably get away with it, that you can beat the testing, there's little incentive not to dope. It's less a systemic problem than it one of simple logistics - there's almost no way of preventing athletes from doping. So they do it.
See above.