Re: Re:
My point is the TUE system is in place, if that system is not good enough to weed out the 'fake' requests from the real requests then the system is broken. If a professional team exploited this broken system that is surely just playing the game? Just like if you count cards in a casino, should you? ethically probably not, but technically it is not cheating, and in professional sport technicalities are surely all that matter?
I just find the amount of time wasted on this report ridiculous, I would get it if it was an investigation into Olympic sport whereby the government are funding it, but the whole story seems to be Team Sky/Bradley Wiggins
53*11 said:jarvo said:Can I ask a question and I don't know if it has been asked or answered as I haven't gone back through the dozens of pages, but, why does anyone actually care about this?
The parliamentary report stated that no anti doping violations have taken place but sky have 'crossed an ethical boundary' Team Sky are a privately funded team, why do the government feel it necessary to stick their nose in?
Professional sport is result orientated, there are rules in place, if no rule has been broken, why does it matter? professional teams will always go as far as they can up to the line, this happens in all sports. If a footballer dives in the penalty area to get a penalty, that is crossing an ethical line, but there isn't this fervour to brandish them a cheat to this extent.
If I am not mistaken, TUE's have to be granted by a panel of experts after the medical facts are presented to them? if that panel have the wool pulled over there eyes and grant a TUE, then surely that is where the spotlight should be? the team have only done what they can to tip the balance in their favour, at the end of then day a board of medical professionals were presented with evidence and signed off on the TUE's why then is Bradley Wiggins being branded a cheat? Why is the board that grant the TUE's not been held accountable? And surely if their medical expertise resulted in the granting of the TUE's, how is this now such a big issue? surely some kind of medical need had to be established? and if it cannot be established then the TUE system needs a massive overhaul and that should be the story, not a team working within the system that was in front of them
Also if I am not mistaken Triamcinalone is not a banned substance out of competition either? so if the team wanted to use it during training blocks, this is also not illegal, so again what is the issue? Also if it is such a powerful performance enhancer why is it not on the complete banned list by WADA?
Caffeine is a limited drug during competition as well, but if riders choose to use inflated levels and drink 30 espressos before training that is surely no different?
I am just so confused why everyone is piling on as if Bradley Wiggins and Sky are the same as Lance and USPS, they systematically were using EPO and blood bags which were illegal
All I see Sky and Wiggins guilty of is studying the rules of the game better than others (or finding loopholes in the rulebook) none of which are illegal. Have they been found guilty of breaking any rules on this matter? if not, to me it is a non-story. Professional sportsmen and teams will use any small advantage to win, as professional sport is result based, like it or not
BTW this is not a Team Sky/Wiggins love fest. I would have the same puzzled response is this were any team or rider
i guess it depends on whether you believe that a team/rider deciding to invent a medical condition that required a TUE for a drug that is not permitted in competition, and that confers an advantage to said rider, is important or not?
the testing protocols have caught up with the blood bag doping scam and so no professional team is greedy/crazy enough to try that these days - micro dosing perhaps is more a possibility
the committee investigation was into all sports not just cycling.
My point is the TUE system is in place, if that system is not good enough to weed out the 'fake' requests from the real requests then the system is broken. If a professional team exploited this broken system that is surely just playing the game? Just like if you count cards in a casino, should you? ethically probably not, but technically it is not cheating, and in professional sport technicalities are surely all that matter?
I just find the amount of time wasted on this report ridiculous, I would get it if it was an investigation into Olympic sport whereby the government are funding it, but the whole story seems to be Team Sky/Bradley Wiggins