It seems that you're using an outdated browser. Some things may not work as they should (or don't work at all).
We suggest you upgrade newer and better browser like: Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer or Opera

×
avatar
misfire200: As for Lance, he became the biggest scapegoat ever for UCI. Let's not forget he passed all his "official" drug tests, and lets not forget that the UCI most likely covered up all transgressions in that period.
Probably so.

avatar
misfire200: At least in the long run, Lance Armstrong did something useful by using his "name" to get a lot of money for cancer research.
Well ... that's a bit like pointing out that a mafia boss and leader of a massive corrupt crime cartel can't be such a bad guy because he also supported an orphanage. I'd have my doubts whether someone who was obviously capable of immense cynicism, and ruthlessly pursued his personal goals in his sport, really was driven by pure altruism when founding a charity organization. But yes, some of the hundreds of millions of dollars that he fraudulently acquired were probably used for a good cause. But that doesn't really change anything.

avatar
misfire200: Now, i would say had the sport been clean during that time period, Lance still would have won 7 titles. Only because of the fact that he only prepared for the TdF, the tactics they used were just for the TdF, and he spent all his time training at altitude and knew those stages better than anyone.
I strongly doubt that. Armstrong was a pretty average cyclist early in his career. I think he even mentioned thoughts of giving up in his biography, but I'm not entirely sure, it's been a while since I read it. And technically he never was a good rider. He never rode economically. His superiority was based on the fact that he could pound the pedals with an insane frequency for a very long time, even when going uphill. To make this style work, he had to dope, and he had to dope more than others.

To put it differently: To compensate for his obvious limitations in technique, he had to be physically superior in a way that was attainable only through massive, systematic doping.

Note also that Armstrong practically forced doping onto his teammates. Granted, some of them probably didn't _need_ forcing, but the fact remains that US Postal (and later RadioShack) were teams where non-dopers weren't tolerated. This contributed to the superiority of Armstrong's teams (they regularly won the team-against-the-clock stages in Armstrong's best time, and he could always count on 3-4 riders to support him when things got rough), and thereby to Armstrong's perceived superiority as a driver.

Finally, you shouldn't believe that training on the actual stage courses makes that much of a difference. This was a publicity thing more than anything else, or perhaps Armstrong tried to give people ways to explain his superiority without becoming suspicious. But really, _every_ major player in the Tour de France knows these routes by heart. And they are talked about for hours in the team conferences, when the strategy for the next stage is discussed. These are professionals, after all.

In short: I'm pretty certain that without doping, Armstrong would have remained the thoroughly average rider that he was at the beginning of his career.

avatar
misfire200: I love cycling but i will say the sport has a shit ton of issues and they are trying to use this to hopefully get people off of the others issues and current cheaters and what not.
That's true though.
Edit: Ah, dang. I wrote "RadioShack" above when I meant "Discovery". Sorry for that. Please bear with me when I don't edit this monster of a post while the forum's linebreaks are still broken.
avatar
SimonG: Out of curiosity, how is this handled in the US? In Europe he was pretty much a proven doper for the last ten years. Nobody really doubted that. But the US always held him in high regard, is it now changing?
No, in Europe you had a lot of snotty elitists that never believed that an American could be that dominant and you had a French newspaper working to frame him. He never tested positive during his years racing it was only after they managed to find a sample without the other confirmation sample that they were able to frame him properly.

At this point he's admitted that they won't stop hounding him until they get the result their looking for. They still have precisely zero actual evidence that he doped, all they have are the allegations of team mates who themselves were already under investigation.

But, IMHO given how many times he's tested clean over the years, it really does make the cycling world look dirty. As if they're using him as a martyr to show that they really do take doping seriously, even though he has yet to fail a drug test and has already retired.
avatar
jefequeso: Woah. I really didn't know much about the guy, apparently. What all has he done?
avatar
Psyringe: - massively used illegal substances and techniques to win the world's most popular cycling race 7 times - lied about that every time he was asked (which happened quite often) - threatened to ruin other cyclists if they talked about his practices - threatened to sue journalists and other people who mentioned his connections to doping (and sometimes did sue successfully)
You do realize that there still isn't any evidence to back that claim, right? He's tested clean on every single test he's taken and the only exception was a B sample where there was no A to verify that it wasn't a testing error.

Suggesting that he was a massive cheat despite a complete lack of any actual evidence that he was shooting up is just plain ignorant.

I realize that he threatens the European image of owning the Tour, but facts are facts and I have yet to see a convincing explanation as to how he could be such a massive cheat and yet pass every single drug test he's been required to take.

Doesn't necessarily mean that he wasn't cheating, but if the tests keep coming out clean, then there is something far more troubling than a potential 7 time winner cheating. The testing regime is horribly broken.
avatar
mondo84: Athletes should have DRM to prevent them from cheating.
avatar
HGiles: Doping Rights Management? I think we've already got that. Time to get athletes in who *aren't* managing the dope, I think. :) Re: Armstrong - Honestly, I think it's shameful all around. Who knows if he really doped or not. I'm hearing one set of people say one thing, and another set say something else, and for years everybody said he was clean, so who's to say they aren't lying now to get a scapegoat? The kind of public mudslinging that's going on makes everyone look bad. If the drug tests were so bad and unreliable that he could get away with this for years, then *everyone* - every single professional cyclist - should lose their medals and all the testers be fired. Time to start over. If not, than Armstrong is being scapegoated and this is all whitewashing to make it look like the officials are doing something.
Right, that's the thing. The tests he was required to take all came back clean. If he's a massive cheat that's really more of an indictment of the sport than of Armstrong. He's been one of the most scrutinized athletes in a long time and they didn't manage to find anything on him until they started to cut deals with his team mates to snitch on him.

Doesn't necessarily mean that their testimony is invalid, but there is a pretty massive elephant in the room as far as conflict of interests in that whole thing.

I'm a bit surprised how some of the folks here that are usually all about innocent until proven guilty seem to advocating a lynch mob mentality in the absence of any clear and compelling evidence that Lance cheated.

And there's certainly no reason to think that he was cheating more than anybody else. Assuming of course that all those random screenings missed whatever he might have used to dope.
Post edited October 22, 2012 by hedwards
avatar
Etdn: Doping is rampant in any endurance sport. Whether it be cycling, swimming, rowing, track ect. It's just something that no sport truly has control over since every time testing technology advances so does the ability to mask or deceive the same tests in some way. Armstrong was one of the most obvious dopers in any sport I've ever seen and yet he went on and on with the officials turning a blind eye and the public in absolute ignorance for the past decade. The only other doper that is close to being that obvious in recent memory I can think of is Michael Phelps in swimming. Unfortunately athletes are no longer athletes they are becoming something that no normal human can compete with and doping isn't even close to being the only issue causing this. The only way to make it an even field in the future is to realize that this has change has occurred and either make it lawful to allow or separate the competition fields into "ultra-human" and "just-a-human" categories that compete separately similar to how boxing has weight classes.
Many of these folks are already genetic freaks in a way that makes them way "more" apt than even an gifted human. Whether it's doping or genetic engineering (oh you know this is nearly possible, if not so already with limited success), given what we'll be able to do soon, this may become a non-issue.

I only find the Olympic gushing funny when it's clear that many of those folks are almost guaranteed to be doping as well.
avatar
hedwards: 'snip
Just for the record, I don't follow the sport but unless I see an article with hard proof that he did dope up I don't believe it either. Rumors and gossip tend to find a way of becoming "fact." Does anyone have an article covering this and not from a tabloid?
avatar
hedwards: 'snip
avatar
Thunderstone: Just for the record, I don't follow the sport but unless I see an article with hard proof that he did dope up I don't believe it either. Rumors and gossip tend to find a way of becoming "fact." Does anyone have an article covering this and not from a tabloid?
It's slightly stronger than that, now there are some team mates that got pinched doping are alleging that he was in on it, but it's still just rumors and innuendo. It's certainly possible that he was doping, but it still requires some explanation as to how he was able to test clean on all those tests and why he even felt the need to cheat when he was so obviously capable of competing without doping.

I can't blame him for giving up, it says a lot about the situation that he's just giving up even when nobody has been able to produce any substantive evidence that he cheated. This is obviously a very determined individual who didn't give up when he had a particularly serious cancer case and who kept pushing to go back to cycling afterwards.

That being said, if they do find evidence that he was doping, that would make him the biggest cheater ever. Doping the first time is relatively normal for the sport, but to keep doping after 4 or 5 wins would be remarkable.
avatar
hedwards: 'snip
avatar
Thunderstone: Just for the record, I don't follow the sport but unless I see an article with hard proof that he did dope up I don't believe it either. Rumors and gossip tend to find a way of becoming "fact." Does anyone have an article covering this and not from a tabloid?
I don't know about the US. Here in Germany, _all_ the serious papers, including the biggest sport-specific papers, are covering the story. These aren't just papers who copy the news from the tickers either. They have experts who actually read the 1000-pages long collection of evidence against Armstrong.

With regard to "hard evidence", six of Armstrong's probes tested positive on EPO (which couldn't be tested for when the probes were taken). The UCI (the world's main cycling federation), who had supported Armstrong against doping allegations before, backed him again and declared the evidence insufficient. The WADA (world anti-doping agency) called the UCI report ridiculous and inexcusable. Later, the French doping agency (which has the probes) offered Armstrong to test them again, to finally put an end to that matter. Armstrong refused, he did not want the tests to be made.

Blood samples taken from 2009 and 2010 show evidence of blood transfusion and EPO doping.

Several former teammates are willing to state under oath that they saw Armstrong doping, that they saw Armstrong organizing doping for others, and that they saw Armstrong forcing others into doping. Armstrong could have taken them to court - he was always _extremely_ eager to take everybody to court who accused him of doping. This time, he didn't. His lawyers criticized the 1000-page long USADA report on a very general level, but he refused to address the evidence, and he explicitly refused to go to court and have the matter cleared up.

I don't know how much more evidence you need.
hedwards, athletes cycle off illegal drugs and pass tests all the time. there are ways to test negative and still be doped up.
Post edited October 22, 2012 by scampywiak
avatar
Psyringe: 'snip
I haven't been paying a lot of attention to the news, but damn 0.o http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/10/22/us-cycling-armstrong-idUSBRE89L0HC20121022
I usually don't take forum posts seriously unless there's a link backing the accusation otherwise I tend to dismiss things. Especially in regards to something serious like this.

However: "The UCI also said it had dope tested Armstrong 218 times and the fact he never tested positive and "beat the system" means that other organizations such as the World Anti-Doping Agency should share the responsibility of accepting the results."

I understand why he said enough is enough.
Post edited October 22, 2012 by Thunderstone
He's guilty but he's also a victim. What SapienChavez said in this thread, as harsh as it sounds, reflects a reality.
avatar
scampywiak: hedwards, athletes cycle off illegal drugs and pass tests all the time. there are ways to test negative and still be doped up.
Yes, athletes can do that, but the fact of the matter is that he passed the tests that were required of him. If the anti-doping agency doesn't know that they can cycle off and set up the testing regiment to handle it, then I'm not really sure how seriously we can take those negative results.

The point is that he was tested hundreds of times and now they're retroactively trying to change the standards so that they can kick him out of the sport. The whole thing is a which hunt.

He may well be guilty, but with the kind of incompetence we've seen by the anti doping body, I don't think we can ever conclude that he cheated.
avatar
hedwards: It's slightly stronger than that, now there are some team mates that got pinched doping are alleging that he was in on it, but it's still just rumors and innuendo.
You call 29 written affidavits of people who are willing top testify under oath (or have done so already), a 200-page long detailed analysis of Armstrong's practices, and 800 pages of even more detailed appendices, "rumor and innuendo"?

avatar
hedwards: It's certainly possible that he was doping, but it still requires some explanation as to how he was able to test clean on all those tests
Have you read the report? The explanations are given on pages 129-139. Hiding, inefficient testing methods, inside knowledge of the testing schedules, warnings, use of not yet detectable substances and methods, use of masking substances, micro-doping. How much more do you need?

avatar
hedwards: and why he even felt the need to cheat when he was so obviously capable of competing without doping.
Well, that's simple. He wasn't.

Look, you've raised some points here that sound like you're buying into Armstrong's defense spiel, which is pretty poor this time, imho. He attacks the USADA analysis on a very general level. I really suggest to not just read Armstrong's very superficial defense, but to actually read the USADA report. It's public (click on the tabs to get to the report and the appendices). It's very detailed. It's very disconcerting.

If you want to believe that this is just a European conspiracy against a great American cyclist, feel free. But please be aware then that you are ignoring a _mountain_ of evidence.

Personally, I couldn't care less if the dominant athlete in a sport was American or European. Especially not in cycling, which is a team sport performed by teams of mixed nationality. But I do think that massive, organized doping, fraud, drug dealing, and intimidation of critics should not be rewarded with titles, fame, and millions of prize money.
avatar
Psyringe: SNIP
Well, you might want to make note of the fact that the team mates that fingered him were given reduced sanctions in exchange for their testimony. And that the sample you're referencing was the B sample from years earlier and was didn't have the A sample to go with it, making it impossible to say if it had been contaminated after the fact.

What's more, Lance is retired, banned or not he wasn't going to do any more racing, this was more likely a face saving measure for the UCI because of the incompetent anti-doping regiment they've had in place.
avatar
hedwards: The point is that he was tested hundreds of times and now they're retroactively trying to change the standards so that they can kick him out of the sport. The whole thing is a which hunt.
No. You are again repeating Armstrong's rhetorics. They have not changed the standards. I suppose you are referring to the infamous Vrijman report? Have you read Appendix P of the USADA paper, where the World Anti-Doping Agency explains in detail why the Vrijman report is worthless?

There is no doubt that 6 samples from 1999 contained EPO. There is no doubt that these samples can be linked to Armstrong. There is no doubt that EPO doping was illegal in 1999. The whole (and, frankly, rather strange) position of the Vrijman report is that _the testing procedure_ used to find the EPO was different than the one used before - which actually doesn't pose a problem at all, and why should it?
avatar
Psyringe: SNIP
The bottom line Psyringe is that the party doing the investigation has a significant motive to find him guilty. They weren't able to catch him doping in over 200 tests during his career.

Doesn't ultimately matter whether or not Lance did it, if they are that incompetent when it comes to administering the tests, then the sport is a complete loss and everybody in it ought to be booted. If negative tests don't count for anything ultimately, then why bother to test in the first place? Just catch the obvious cheats?

And yes, I do buy into his defense, because quite honestly, UCI isn't trustworthy and they could easily have found somebody independent to handle the claims. Taking affidavits from people that are receiving special treatment for fingering their team mate isn't something which screams honesty to me.