- Jun 9, 2014
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It is a bit of a double-standard when people who freely use the term 'alien' grouse about the use of a nickname for another rider.
djpbaltimore said:It is a bit of a double-standard when people who freely use the term 'alien' grouse about the use of a nickname for another rider.
But he looks like an aliendjpbaltimore said:It is a bit of a double-standard when people who freely use the term 'alien' grouse about the use of a nickname for another rider.
It also would seem to suggest that his rivals are somehow not doping.LaFlorecita said:Changing riders' names to incorporate "doping" or whatever is just boring and cheap.
Good postJacques de Molay said:It also would seem to suggest that his rivals are somehow not doping.LaFlorecita said:Changing riders' names to incorporate "doping" or whatever is just boring and cheap.
As everyone is well aware, Contador's doping-by-association links, and dead-giveaway-performances were always there to be scrutinized. But not until one, marginal bust does he get these ridiculous nicknames. Of course he dopes. As do others. But this implied notion of...
Busted once = Always doping
Not busted = Always clean
is absurd. And that's what the nicknames imply, that somehow he's the only one doping. Otherwise, why not refer to all his rivals will similar dope-related names? Because the Contador ones are just so witty and clever?
I'm having a hard time with those other stats, but "Alien" is probably more used with Basso in terms of doping.djpbaltimore said:Alien, 1080 matches.
I'm not so sure about that.djpbaltimore said:Most everybody who uses them seems to believe that doping is rife throughout the peloton, so insinuating that this nickname suggests that the other riders are clean is not supported by the facts.
LaFlorecita said:How old are you86TDFWinner said:Lol! It does actually. That's Exactly what Contadoper is, let's call it what it is, hypocrisy. If you choose not to believe it, that's your right. Anything out of Contadopers mouth is mostly(and probably) a lie.![]()
LaFlorecita said:But he looks like an aliendjpbaltimore said:It is a bit of a double-standard when people who freely use the term 'alien' grouse about the use of a nickname for another rider.![]()
Zam says Alberto looks like ET. I have no issues with it. Changing riders' names to incorporate "doping" or whatever is just boring and cheap.
LaFlorecita said:Who the hell said otherwise?86TDFWinner said:Savant12 said:Some would say Omerta is the worst hypocrisy in pro-cycling and Contador has always been one of its leading ambassadors. He has been up there in the pro-peleton longer than a Froome or Wiggins.
Love Contador as a rider but he's on the sauce just as much as anyone.
Exactly! To say otherwise (after knowing his past history), is just foolishness.
djpbaltimore said:Fair enough. I can respect your viewpoints. I think people use the Clentador type nicknames because they dislike him.
86TDFWinner said:LaFlorecita said:Who the hell said otherwise?86TDFWinner said:Savant12 said:Some would say Omerta is the worst hypocrisy in pro-cycling and Contador has always been one of its leading ambassadors. He has been up there in the pro-peleton longer than a Froome or Wiggins.
Love Contador as a rider but he's on the sauce just as much as anyone.
Exactly! To say otherwise (after knowing his past history), is just foolishness.
Umm, a few here?
RobbieCanuck said:86TDFWinner said:LaFlorecita said:Who the hell said otherwise?86TDFWinner said:Savant12 said:Some would say Omerta is the worst hypocrisy in pro-cycling and Contador has always been one of its leading ambassadors. He has been up there in the pro-peleton longer than a Froome or Wiggins.
Love Contador as a rider but he's on the sauce just as much as anyone.
Exactly! To say otherwise (after knowing his past history), is just foolishness.
Umm, a few here?
And just what is this past history you refer to? The only "provable" drug violation is his clen violation in 2010. That showed he had 50 trillionths of a gram of clen in 1 mL of blood. Every credible pharmacologist in the world would testify it is impossible for that amount of clen to have had a performance enhancing effect. The only reason he was suspended was because of strict liability!
Please, once and for all, show us the evidence that on a balance of probabilities (50.01% vs 49.99%) would prove to us, on the lowest standard possible, Contador is a doper and not the abject speculation, the conjecture, the hollow assumptions and presumptions, the guilt because he is a top rider, the guilt by association or the usual specious and hysterical reasoning of the Clinic, or saying so in order to be on the Clinic bandwagon, or the deficient power "analyses, or the blood transfusion theory and the traces of phthalates theory both of which the CAS properly debunked and ruled as clearly lacking in proof.
RobbieCanuck said:Please, once and for all, show us the evidence that on a balance of probabilities (50.01% vs 49.99%) would prove to us, on the lowest standard possible, Contador is a doper and not the abject speculation, the conjecture, the hollow assumptions and presumptions, the guilt because he is a top rider, the guilt by association or the usual specious and hysterical reasoning of the Clinic, or saying so in order to be on the Clinic bandwagon, or the deficient power "analyses, or the blood transfusion theory and the traces of phthalates theory both of which the CAS properly debunked and ruled as clearly lacking in proof.
That's just stupid. People were discussing if Contador was as much of a hypocrite as other riders. NOT if he is doped or not.86TDFWinner said:LaFlorecita said:Who the hell said otherwise?86TDFWinner said:Savant12 said:Some would say Omerta is the worst hypocrisy in pro-cycling and Contador has always been one of its leading ambassadors. He has been up there in the pro-peleton longer than a Froome or Wiggins.
Love Contador as a rider but he's on the sauce just as much as anyone.
Exactly! To say otherwise (after knowing his past history), is just foolishness.
Umm, a few here?
WADA were completely *** coming up with such a complex explanation. They did not have to prove anything. Yet they tried to anyway, CAS thought it was ridiculously farfetched and now WADA looks stupid and Contador has a CAS decision to point at and say "see, I didn't knowingly dope".Merckx index said:RobbieCanuck said:Please, once and for all, show us the evidence that on a balance of probabilities (50.01% vs 49.99%) would prove to us, on the lowest standard possible, Contador is a doper and not the abject speculation, the conjecture, the hollow assumptions and presumptions, the guilt because he is a top rider, the guilt by association or the usual specious and hysterical reasoning of the Clinic, or saying so in order to be on the Clinic bandwagon, or the deficient power "analyses, or the blood transfusion theory and the traces of phthalates theory both of which the CAS properly debunked and ruled as clearly lacking in proof.
There you go again. The probability that the CB derived from contaminated meat was far, far, far below 50%, that was shown very clearly in his case. CAS did not debunk the DEHP evidence, they just noted that it had never been officially approved as an anti-doping test--IOW, Contador got off on a technicality. The main evidence against the blood transfusion scenario was that 1) no one could be dumb enough to withdraw blood right after taking a large dose of CB (because, as we all know, athletes the world over show the highest degree of intelligence when it comes to doping); and 2) there would have had to have been a transfusion of serum as well as cells, which was too much complexity for the CAS panel to grasp, though riders do it all the time. There was a lot of evidence for the transfusion--just ask Ashenden, who was not allowed to present it.
Contador himself insisted he never took any supplements. If we were to take him at his word, then doping becomes the overwhelmingly probable alternative. If we don't take him at his word--and obviously, CAS did not--why should we believe anything else he says?
Even Flor, to her credit, accepts that he most likely doped.
Do you know how many people use the reasoned decision to argue Contador didn't dope?hrotha said:They simply proved AC's scenario of no significant fault of his own was not the most likely one. They didn't need to do anything else to ban him, so they didn't, and they said explicitly that the reasoning didn't mean they believed AC had necessarily used a contaminated supplement.
Also, Alpuerto Clentador > all.
