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So, he's been formally charged with doping? What are your views?
tiler65 said:Guilty..........
tiler65 said:Epo was huge in the norties, not just jealousy from his accusers but they were probably doing it with him.
Lots of skulduggery went on, some of the things he did were incredible for such an endurance test
Lance Armstrong says:
"I have never doped, and, unlike many of my accusers, I have competed as an endurance athlete for 25 years with no spike in performance, passed more than 500 drug tests and never failed one"
500 drugs over 25 years test is on average about 1 every 2 weeks. Since the drugs are detectable for up to 3-6 weeks in a urine sample, I would say all they are doing is (litterally) taking the ****
London Headshots said:All drugs have different detection times, and some detection methods can be beaten, and others can't be tested for. This is my field of expertise; I'm not just telling you something I read on the net.
When he says he's had no spike in performance for 25 years, that just tells me he's been using gear for 25 years.
Which isn't that far-fetched.
Lance Armstrong is about as clean as the guy in 2nd, 3rd, 4th, all the way to the back. Every sport is utterly riddled with gear. I have first hand experience.
I don't think ole lancey boy cares he's rich
It's highly unlikely he was using PEDs at 14.
And the drugs tests - are they random? or on Tuesday at 9.00 every 2 weeks?All drugs have different detection times, and some detection methods can be beaten, and others can't be tested for. This is my field of expertise; I'm not just telling you something I read on the net.
When he says he's had no spike in performance for 25 years, that just tells me he's been using gear for 25 years.
Which isn't that far-fetched.
Lance Armstrong is about as clean as the guy in 2nd, 3rd, 4th, all the way to the back. Every sport is utterly riddled with gear. I have first hand experience.
And the drugs tests - are they random? or on Tuesday at 9.00 every 2 weeks?
All I am saying that in 25 years, that's a lot of "system beating" mathematically, its very improbable
A combination of both scheduled and random.
Cavendish, for example, had in excess of 60 tests performed last season.
All drugs have different detection times, and some detection methods can be beaten, and others can't be tested for. This is my field of expertise; I'm not just telling you something I read on the net.
When he says he's had no spike in performance for 25 years, that just tells me he's been using gear for 25 years.
Which isn't that far-fetched.
Lance Armstrong is about as clean as the guy in 2nd, 3rd, 4th, all the way to the back. Every sport is utterly riddled with gear. I have first hand experience.
Richard King said:So in one season, would you say 60 tests, random and scheduled ought to catch out a drugs cheat.
From the outside looking in, its almost an oppressive regime of testing
And the drugs tests - are they random? or on Tuesday at 9.00 every 2 weeks?
All I am saying that in 25 years, that's a lot of "system beating" mathematically, its very improbable
That is the biggest load of crap i have read on here in a while.
Yet no accompanying sentence showing exactly WHY it was crap.
Funny that.
The problem with the tests is both the tests themselves and the way in which you are notified of them.
You aren't just suddenly approached by a guy with a needle and a urine pot, you're always given a couple of days notice. In some bodies, there isn't a penalty for having to reschedule an initial drug test, and if the testing body cannot contact you, you cannot be held liable for not attending a test. Although things are changing, this is initially how it was.
Take someone using growth hormone, for instance.. It's been available in recombinant form since the end of the 1970's, and it still can't be reliably detected, which is the same for other performance enhancing peptides such as IGF, fragment, or insulin, or EPO.
Although a test exists for EPO, which is what a cyclist will favour, the test is very unreliable, and a well-designed dosing schedule will almost eliminate the possibility of being detected.
Anabolic steroids can be detected, but many of the testing methods are either easy to fool (administering Ambien before a lie detector test to skew the results), or injecting masking agents such as Furosemide, or simply running dosages that can't be detected.
The old method of testosterone detection used to be to measure the ratio between testosterone and epitestosterone, I believe the ratio had to be 6:1 or less, but that just meant athletes also injected epitestosterone as well to keep the ratio the same. It didn't actually measure the amounts.
Now they've developed a method of detecting the different isotopes between natural testosterone and an exogenously administered hormone, the athletes have changed tactics. Now they use topical testosterone in smaller doses, or they use testosterone suspension, which has barely any ester attached and clears the system in a day or two, so an athlete can use right up until they get notified of a random testing.
Also, as is the case with Patrick Arnold and the BALCO scandal, one, with enough knowledge can simply make an alteration to an existing compound, thus creating a new drug that doesn't show up in the tests.
You're right on the money about it seeming improbable to fool a body for so long, but if you're properly prepared, it's much like crossing the road outside your house for 40 years and never once getting run over. You know the cars coming, so you make adjustments.
You statement about "always given notice" appears to contradict the UK Anti Doping Agency Rules that in Section 5.5.2 specifically refers to "No advance Notice Testing" and the need for confidentiality so the athlete doesn't find out, in accordance with the IST (International Standard for Testing).
You have made the assumption that "he has been using gear" for 25 years with no proof whatsoever. In those 25 years, I wonder how many times Lance was tested. Every time, clean.
If I remember, when recovering from his cancer op did he not forego some meds for fear they would test positive???
No notice testing takes place wherever the athlete is. The registered pool of top athletes have to provide a "whereabouts" statement giving details of where they can be found so a test can be carried out with No notice as I previously said.
This is in addition to the regular appointment style tests.
There's no notice of testing required, athletes are required to provide an hour a day they are available to the whereabouts system for a future certain period. The Vampires then turn up during that hour. From what I see most cyclists know that they are going to be in bed from 6am-7am so they nominate that time, which means they get woken up.
Yes, I have made an assumption, it's based on an intimate knowledge of this subject. I firmly believe Lance has used drugs for years, if not decades. It's not "crap", as you so eloquently put it, it's called an "opinion".
So in other words, they know when they'll be tested.
They nominate 1hr everyday. They don't what day they are going to get tested, and generally the "half lives" of the substances are longer than 24hrs anyway, so knowing what hour in the day they might come doesn't help with evasion.
The problem is that opinions can and wreck careers, and really upset people
If I was going to loose my livelihood, I would hope it was based on some facts. The facts say that in 25 years, and after 500 tests, there was never any evidence of drug taking
Maybe there was, maybe there wasn't. If the testers are experts, and are doing the job properly, then on balance, after 500 tests one has to conclude he wasn't taking any drugs. We employ the testers to do a job, we need to let them get on with it
I cant see the value in retrospectively going back and re-raking through old results either. The testers ought to be able to do their job and say one way or the other: this athlete is or inst cheating. They need to be able to tell you this for today's result, like they ought to be able to have told you for last years results too
If the testers are incompetent, or the tests are overly fallible, then we shouldn't be judging whole careers on the results
And I just explained that the random tests that can't be avoided are generally **** tests, which are not conclusive or all-encompassing.
You're speaking on this subject as if the tests are perfectly infallible. People have been beating them for years and continue to do so. As many outspoken sports personalities will tell you, you have to be extremely stupid, unlucky, to both, to fail a urine test.