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Forget St. Etienne
On Tue, 24 Jul 2007 04:49:30 GMT, Ryan Cousineau wrote:
In article , RonSonic wrote: Michael Arse-ficken should be thrown out of the Tour for his multiple missed tests over the past couple of years. **** that. It's stupid that he has to report his ****ing whereabouts like a damn pervert on parole. Let Contador and Evans fight it out. Where was Contador every single week of the last 2 years? Are HIS papers in order. Ron- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - And how about the Columbians?? It's a Eurocentric system that works well for those close by. I wonder how many out of competition tests they've sent people to Kazakhstan to conduct? I saw an article this weekend about companies injecting GPS tracking and security chips into their employees, can the UCI be far behind? It's not just a nutcase conspiracy thing anymore, unfortunately. Bill C I really do understand that out of competition testing is the current thing and part of the job. But somehow I am so much more sympathetic to Chicken sending a postcard than I am with the bloodsuckers and peripheral personnel who only get to annoy and drain blood from such as him. I guess that's where the complaints about men in black come from. Who wants to go to all those weird, wild places to get samples for testing. Well, I sympathize. You see a recurring pattern of pros loving to train in the remotest places they can (Axel Merckx has been known to train in my province*. No word on what colour he wears), and you start to wonder if those locations are picked because they like lonely locales, or because they like being very far from WADA agents. I don't "train" any more than I have to. I rarely spend more than 2 hours on the bike at a time and I occasionally become desperate for new, interesting places to ride. If I needed locations for 4-6 hour training days with mountains I would also evenually end up in the Sierra Madres myself. The WADAns often seem to be Nifong-crazy: they over-promise and under-deliver on prosecutions. I suspect they think they're being "open" when they talk about their broad impressions of the state of doping in particular sports and their worries about particular athletes, but I think they tend more towards "slanderous." Probably explains McQuade's recent babbling a bit. But in the case of Rasmussen, it seems to me that if there's a penalty for failing to report properly after three incidents, then it is just plain wrong to enforce that penalty after two incidents. I can see getting pulled over by a cop for going 33 in a 35, "well, you were pretty close and we have to protect the integrity of the roads." As Ben Franklin once said, it's possible to frame a guilty man. I've also been wondering about the Hemopure allegations that've just come up. Who would use something that a seventh grader could detect. Dumbass: a seventh grader? He was a _mountain biker_ at the time! Like, nearly as bad as triathlism, Oh, yeah. He wouldn't have a 7th graders grasp of biology. Ron *Before this goes any further, I should make it clear that Axel's wife is from the interior. Just like Rasmussen's wife is from Mexico. |
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