http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/ot...ce-Armstrong-fallout-grows.html#ixzz2vn5670N1Rogers is mentioned in a sworn affidavit given to USADA by American cyclist Levi Leipheimer as somebody who attended two training camps in 2005 in Tenerife run by Dr Michele Ferrari.
sniper said:
pmcg76 said:If riders and teams are travelling to Tenerife specifically to dope, does that mean that those who do not go there are not doping.
pmcg76 said:If that is not the case, why is it even noteworthy that people go to Tenerife if they can just dope as well anywhere else in the world?
nor could brailsford possibly have known that tenerife was/is a doping haven.Digger said:but brailsford didn't know he was doping![]()
sniper said:nor could brailsford possibly have known that tenerife was/is a doping haven.
del1962 said:Tenerife is a place where athletes go to train.
Why? Because it has altitude which many think is good for training, and warm weather all year
Now amongst athletes a subset are dopers, so if say 5% dope, and 1000 go there, and only 100 go to somewhere else, those who deal in dope will go to where more athletes are as they are more likely to find clients, not exactly rocket science
Dear Wiggo said:Hot damn. I must have missed that somewhere somehow wtf - Fuentes was [edit] / is living on the island next to the one containing Mt Teide - Team Sky's favourite volcano!?
Parker said:You do realise that Fuentes was born and brought up on Gran Canaria, don't you? It's where his family are.
When he was running his doping operation, it was in Madrid though.
SocratesJohnson said:What do people feel are the reasons for sky training in tenerife, there are few roads, one mountain, it must get pretty boring, no?
Yeah, probably. The primary reason the likes of Ferrari went there was because it's a great place to train. Still is.Dear Wiggo said:Kinda makes a mockery of the "doping doctors go where the athletes are" line then, innit?
Parker said:Yeah, probably. The primary reason the likes of Ferrari went there was because it's a great place to train. Still is.
Dear Wiggo said:Having a ready supply of unregulated clenbuterol would no doubt help also. In fact. I'd train there full time vs race if that was the case - less likely to be OOC tested, more time for adaptations to occur.
Win win.
oldcrank said:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ggx_YrAmchI
Very nice roads, and excellent weather.
Parker said:And why is OOC less likely? It's a major tourist destination - easily accessible from many, many European cities.
Dear Wiggo said:No idea. I saw somewhere how many times there had been OOC tests, and it seemed very low. Looked for the original article but could not find it.
As for you getting personal, meh, get over it.
Catwhoorg said:It was in Walsh's book.
And Yes I thought it was low as well.
I have posted it previously, but I'd need to dig the book out to post exactly.