Parker said:
It's warm all year round. It has plenty top quality hotels. It has 15+ miles of road over 2000m. It has many direct flights there from all over Europe. It has good sports facilites particularly at the University. Holiday islands tend to have less traffic.
On the downside, half a dozen people on the internet will think you are doping. If you were a clean rider, would the pros beat the con?
As to your conspiracy idea - 13 million people go through Tenerife airports every year. No-one can keep track of that. And it's not remote. One hour from Lisbon, less than two from Madrid.
Darryl Webster said:
. . .Or is it as simple as being several hours flight from Europe and paying someone off at the airports to check the passenger lists on a daily basis for anyone flying in who works for anti doping?
Socrates
Your last paragraph pretty much explains it .

Well - it explains why YOU are suspicious! It does not explain all the "why"!
thehog said:
The international planes fly in to one airport from one direction. You always know your window.
Hmmm, sounds good. But, doesn't this assume that the teams will have a list of ALL the people who work in anti-doping? And that they can compare their tip-off list to the list of anti-doping personnel? They'd have to hire somebody full time just to take care of that. And how would they get around getting passenger manifests from every airline? Wouldn't that involve a lot of people? Maybe they could get somebody in customs who collects all the manifests to share them? But certainly the customs person couldn't be doing the filtering themselves - again, it would be a full-time job? Wouldn't that get awfully obvious?
doolols said:
This. Because it was used by dopers in the past, and everyone knows it, then it *must* be being used now by Sky for the same reason. 'Cos they're that stupid.
Velodude said:
Dr Fuentes is a local born Spanish Canarian. Dr. Ferrari is a regular visitor to Tenerife.
If you want to lay down your EPO base you choose a location not frequented by (Spanish) drug testers on secondment by the UCI or WADA or any other drug testing authority. Throw in high altitude roads and you have a red herring as the distraction from the real purpose.
Teams went to the Spanish Canaries en masse.
Except for USPS/Discovery. Armstrong went only with Ferrari while the non descripts stayed in Girona. The only exception was Floyd Landis on one occasion when he was being groomed as heir apparent and of course that squeeze at the time who sang a song about a car wash.
Fuentes and Ferrari go there. So? Does that mean that any rider who goes to Italy is automatically suspect? Or, to narrow it down, isn't Verona where Ferrari has his main office? Would that mean that any rider who went to Verona was automatically suspect? Aren't you also saying that high altitude is of no benefit? If high altitude IS beneficial, wouldn't I want my riders to use it, whether they were doping or not? How is it then a red herring? Doesn't make sense.
x0einstein0x said:
This.
There aren't too many places within Europe with training conditions this good. The Alps comes to mind first but then there is bad weather much of the time. (By the way altitude training got more popular again since the development of EPO tests.)
I think infering that a team is doping because it they do training camps on Tenerife is unsound. Actually I know because my team was clean and we used to do that (even though I personally never got to go there, unfortunately).
Einstein, I agree. However, we do know some things now, based on all the replies. We know some valid reasons that some of the people are suspicious - but we also know who are the perpetual cynics.
Last I heard, altitude training was not a myth, and recently researchers have added warm weather training to those things that can naturally increase your O2 vectors. Tenerife has both, and, those are among the stated reasons by Sky for using Tenerife.
That doesn't mean I am not suspicious. But, the arguments that Tenerife is a symptom haven't gotten very far in convincing me. I am left with these reasons for suspicion:
* a series of magnificent performances during this past year, by several riders on Sky.
* Use of a trainer with some suspicion of doping association in his past.
* And, last, Wiggo's dodgy attitude, and seeming change of heart from a couple of years ago.
It's pretty weak as evidence.