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Letters to Cyclingnews - October 24, 2008
While Lance Armstrong's return to professional cycling might be the big news
at the moment, Cyclingnews readers have their say on the other issues
affecting their favourite sport.
Comments and criticism on current stories, races, coverage and anything cycling
related are welcomed, even pictures if you wish. Letters should be brief (less
than 300 words), with the sender clearly identified. They may be edited for
space and clarity; please stick to one topic per letter. We will normally include
your name and place of residence, but not your email address unless you specify
in the message.
Please email your correspondence to letters@cyclingnews.com.
Doping
McQuaid's approach
Re-testing samples
Chris Horner
Germans pull the plus
Basso and Liquigas
Does doping work?
Lifetime bans
LeMond's power test
Rashaan Bahati
Doping
The doping issues coming out of the world of cycling seem to be endless, yet
the focus is limited to the cyclists.
However, getting hold of and using illegal performance-enhancing drugs is not
easy. Someone must supply the goods, make sure that they are used properly,
and that they are used in a manner that is not detectable. I cannot imagine
that Ricco, Sella, Kohl or any other of the CERA-using pros just strolled into
a pharmacy and asked for a two-week supply of the drug - nor can they have fooled
some doctor to accidentally prescribe any illegal drug that they then pick up
at the local Boots.
So why just focus on the ill-behaving cyclists? What about the doctors, the
middle-men, the manufacturers, and everyone else involved? Surely, they have
played their roles too. In most countries, someone who assists a criminal in
performing criminal activities is also responsible and can be charged.
In the fight against drugs, law-enforcers chase the bigger fish, not the small
ones trawling the streets. Maybe focusing on the big fish of cycling would have
a clean-up effect too?
Erik Nordlie
Oslo, Norway
Thursday, October 23, 2008
Respond to this letter
Doping #2
I just learned of the Italian professional federation's statement regarding
life expulsions for riders found guilty of doping. I applaude this decision
and look forward to hearing of its consideration by the various agencies involved
with officiating the sport - I support full convictions for all/any others who
are involved in doping (doctors, etc.). I also advocate for the development
of a legitimate testing process that will only establish true guilt in terms
of riders use of drugs.
I am a former racer and current fan of the sport, and agree that the crisis
is at a threshold of no return. If such measures are not taken soon, we can
kiss whatever respect there still is for the sport goodbye.
Patrick Pickens
Thursday, October 23, 2008
Respond to this letter
McQuaid's approach
After the exposure of big name cheats in recent weeks, including Bernard Kohl,
Stefan Schumacher and Ricardo Ricco, Pat McQuaid was quick to hail the drug
testing system in place, and that the net was closing in cheats. He confidently
asserted that they would be caught. In the midst of yet another drug scandal
cycling could at least hold its head up high and say that it was trying to catch
the cheats.
But alas this week Pat has had a change of heart. Mr McQuaid has realised that
yet another positive from a big name rider would probably not be the best PR
for cycling, the reasoning seemingly been 'We've shown we're serious but that's
enough of that for this season.'
Now the UCI is against retrospective testing. Certain individuals in the peloton
sigh in relief. Pat McQuaid believes retrospective testing of Giro and Vuelta
samples could cause more problems than it solves. I believe testing the Giro
samples for CERA is extremely important. This was the time period where this
form of EPO was creeping into the doping practices of many riders.
Instead of rooting out some more cheats and sending a message, we are on the
verge of letting them get away with it. I think the case of Stefan Schumacher
shows that riders who get away with cheating once, or even twice will continue
to dope until they are caught.
Niall Bleeks
Dungannon, Ireland
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
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to this letter
Re-testing samples
The day Ricco was announced as positive, you had an interview with a professor
who said that micera was definitely used at the Giro but they didn't have a
test for it. Cycling is in trouble right now, and it's no time for politics
in terms of doping and public perception.
How dare they claim they're trying to clear up the sport, and not retest those
Giro samples. When the Italians announced there would be no retest, I wondered
if they are trying to protect their own riders as well as the race. But the
UCI is taking a lot of heat because the biological passport system isn't fully
functional yet, and now I'm starting to believe that they'd rather have Giro
cheaters in the system so they can catch them later with the biological passport
- if they continue to cheat.
But people won't be using micera again - well, the stupid ones might try at
smaller events. I watched all three Grand Tours online this year, plus the Olympics
and some other events, and if it wasn't for Lance, I might have switched to
another sport.
John Calliott
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
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to this letter
Chris Horner
After watching Chris Horner at this year's Giro di Lombardia, can USA cycling
please make a statement on why he was left off both the Olympic and WC road
race teams (and don't say collarbone, that was after the fact)? All due respect
to those that raced, but Horner is one of the best one-day racers we have, especially
in hilly terrain. And since Levi evidently said from Day 1 he wasn't going to
race the road, why did we leave that spot open. I guess my real question is:
who did Horner piss off and can they please kiss and make up so we have the
best the US has to offer racing in the world championchips?
Christopher Carey
Monday, October 20, 2008
Respond to this
letter
Germans pull the plug
We do not need the Germans and their negative attitude to cycling.
As big of a cancer the drug cheats are in cycling, people and fans with very
negative attitudes like the Germans are not needed, either. If we will ever
turn the corner and get a clean peloton, we need fans and sponsors that are
hopeful and believe, instead of the constant gloom and doom like the German
TV stations and their fans express.
Also, cancelling races is not going to solve anything either, so the Germans
really need to realise they are just as big of a part of the cancer as those
that dope are, with their kind of attitude. Other 'cycling mad' countries such
as Italy, France, Spain and Belgium, I am sure are disappointed as well, but
unlike the Germans, they at least have a positive attitude and are not ready
to give up.
Last but not least, instead of constantly blaming the riders and their mentors
and so on and trying to punish them, we need to look at, what is really causing
various riders over the last 20 years to cheat and need performance enhancement
drugs? I mean we can ban and punish them all we want, but until we find the
cause of what the problem is, the war on doping in Cycling will continue and
the bans and suspensions will solve nothing
Cycling's problem is more of a creditability issue, then it is a doping issue
and once we address the cause of the problems and get to the bottom of them,
then we will have a peleton that does not dope and then creditability in the
sport will be restored, but until then we will get remain in a quagmire of doping
and creditability problems that will just drag the sport down more and more
Mark Schmidt
Dayton, Ohio
Friday, October 17, 2008
Respond
to this letter
Germans pull the plug #2
So apparently the German media has had its bellyful of the doping scandals
caused by riders from its country. Not soon after the Deutschland Rundfahrt,
German crownjewel, calls it a day, after other one-day races did so before them.
It is absolutely regrettable that, despite the so called 'new wave' of a young
anti-doping generation, precisely guys from that group were caught out cheating.
It's bad news that this form of cheating is still going on, but at the same
time the fact that the cheaters are not getting away with is should be encouraging,
not the other way around.
That the Germans pull the plug also shows the lack of historical awareness
this country has with cycling, and that apart from Rudi Altig and later Dietrich
Thurau, that big country has no real cycling culture comparable with Belgium,
France, Italy and Spain... to name a few. I believe they're making a big mistake
by capitulating while they should have make a firm statement by continuing to
support the majority of clean riders, rather than using a few cheaters as an
excuse for pulling out of cycling.
Almo
Belgium
Friday, October 17, 2008
Respond
to this letter
Basso and Liquigas
On the day the Italian rider's association appealed to the UCI's Pat McQuaid
to punish dopers with life bans, Cyclingnews reports on the return to the professional
peloton of one Italy's, ummm, more tarnished professional riders, Ivan Basso,
after serving a 16-month ban for his relations (nice way of putting it) with
Operación Puerto's Eufemiano Fuentes.
And Team Liquigas is allowing Basso to race at the first moment possible following
his suspension for doping - tomorrow, in the Japan Cup. Their Italian web-site
even celebrates the fact (although, interestingly, the English language version
of the site is silent on the topic). A quick look at my old Italian-English
dictionary reminds me that basso means, in English, (variously) low, lower part,
bottom and deep. Liquigas SPA is an Italian producer and distributor of liquefied
gas with, it promises, un basso impact on the environment. Unfortunately it
would appear this low impact does not extend to the environment of professional
cycling.
So, just how basso will Team Liquigas go? I figure Ivan's entry in the 2009
Giro is a near certainty, but do they propose also entering him in le Tour next
year (assuming Liquigas' entry is accepted)? And what does the UCI and ASO have
to say about this state of affairs? Are they prepared to go as basso as Team
Liquigas?
Rick O'Brien
Sydney Australia
Friday, October 24, 2008
Respond
to this letter
Does doping work?
Baseball, track and field, cross-country skiing and bodybuilding all have participants
who take advantage of doping. It works. Look at the way Ricardo Ricco dropped
those guys on that climb. The first thing that came to my mind was, "Hmmm, I wonder
if he is on something". Those guys he dropped, by the way, were not exactly weekend
cyclists either.
Did you see the 2002 winter Olympics cross country skier Johann Muhlegg, the
way he just bombed away from the other skiers? Barry Bonds just clobbering everything
thrown at him? The problem with doping and sports is that it works. True, no
amount of doping will ever make me a Tour winner, but for the top level, a 3-5%
difference is huge. I think the best thing that has happened is keeping the
samples for later testing, since the dopers are always a step ahead of the testers.
Tom Zander
Reno, NV, USA
Saturday, October 18, 2008
Respond
to this letter
Lifetime bans
Standard penalty: five years for the individual and the team stops riding for
one month. Second doping offence: The whole team (incl. managers, soigneurs,
mechanics etc) stop for one year. Confessions which result in the successful
prosecution of significant aiders and abettors reduce the penalty to the current
two years. Cycling will continue to have a doping problem while we punish mere
individuals. Ride (incl. manage, direct etc.) as a team; take responsibility
as a team. Then doping will be everybody's business; not just that of those
who are caught.
Trevor Bond
Friday, October 17, 2008
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this letter
LeMond's power test
Several people have asked about LeMond's Proposed Power Test to stop doping
in cycling.
According to LeMond: "You'd get a continuous output of power recorded during
a Tour stage and then if you found someone who had a VO2 Max of 80 and he was
doing 500 watts for 30 minutes, you'd know that that was statistically and mathematically
impossible to do. So then he's positive - boom! - he's out - that's doping.
That's it - it's simple."
Where would Floyd Landis be today if we had been using LeMond's test? If we
followed LeMond's test, Floyd would never have been accused of doping, since
his VO2 Max, and his power output on Stage 17 in the 2006 TdF were perfectly
within his capabilities. His power output for the entire 2006 TdF have been
made available to any and all to study.
I know Greg is sure Floyd doped, but according to Greg's test, Floyd would
have never been under suspicion - and he would still be acknowledged as the
2006 Winner, and probably would be a lot wealthier.
I think the LeMond test would be good for cycling - but Greg would have to
realise that science would show that many of the people he's accused of doping
are clean. Just a thought.
Charlie Mack
Friday, October 17, 2008
Respond
to this letter
LeMond's power test #2
As a sports physiologist and with plenty of experience in VO2max testing, one
I do know is that an exceptionally high VO2max in a very well trained rider,
even in the mid-80's (mg/kg/min), doesn't necessarily result in a matching high
power output due to individual variations in metabolic and mechanical efficiency.
But can a rider with a relatively VO2max generate exceptionally high power?
I would think this is also likely for the same reasons, therefore how would
this testing control for such inter-individual variablilty, not to mention the
variablilty in athlete response to the training stimulus alone?
Frank Russo
Friday, October 17, 2008
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to this letter
LeMond's power test #3
I think that testing the power output and VO2 max of athletes to catch out
the cheats, as suggested by Greg LeMond, would be at best useless and at worst
counterproductive.
It may well be impossible to put out 8 watts per kilo without doping, but if
the UCI were to lay down a rule saying "If you ride at 8 watts per kilo you
will be convicted of doping" then you can guarantee that there will be a whole
bunch of riders climbing at 7.9 watts per kilo, and it will make for a very
boring race. In fact, no matter where you draw the line (6, 7 watts per kilo),
if everyone has a power meter on their bike and everyone knows the maximum power
output they are 'allowed' to ride at, then they will all simply make sure they
don't exceed that level.
It won't stop anyone from doping, because no matter where you set the level,
there will always be riders who can't reach that level without doping. Furthermore,
if you set the level low enough that some riders can reach that level without
doping, then you will end up with false positives, destroying the careers of
those riders who are the most talented and hardest working.
To me, the whole idea smacks of 'tall poppy syndrome' - the mentality of 'He's
riding faster than me, therefore he must be cheating', and it provides little
incentive for clean riders to train harder and smarter to achieve better results.
Tom Byrt
Melbourne, Australia
Monday, October 20, 2008
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to this letter
Rashaan Bahati
Thanks for mentioning Nelson Vails. As a racer here in the New York circuit
I was surprised he was not mentioned in the first article. Here in the tri-state
area we have many minority cyclists capable of racing on the pro level. Let
us not forget cycling legend Patrick Gellineau, who was just inducted into the
New Jersey Cycling Hall of Fame.
Romel Campbell
Oakland, New Jersey, USA
Friday, October 17, 2008
Respond to
this letter
Recent letters pages
Letters 2008
- October 17: Attitude
to cheats, Doping, Lifetime bans, Solutions to doping problems, LeMond's power
test, Rahsaan Bahati
- October 10: Enough
is enough, Thomas Bach's comments, Recent positives, Riccò confesses to using
EPO, Baden Cooke's comment, Holczer to sue Schumacher, Life bans for doping,
Advice to Contador, My own comeback, Better Borat than Vinokourov, Lance has
a Michael Jordan complex, Armstrong's busted former teammates, Astana, Lance
vs Basso, Say it ain't so, Frank!, Leipheimer's best Grand Tour
- October 3: Another
Armstrong Special: There comes a time, Guilty by association, Lance Armstrong
returning, Armstrong comeback, Armstrong should be applauded, Lance is back,
Armstrong and Astana, Mr Armstrong and SRAM, The resurrection of Lance, Armstrong's
return
- September 25: The
Armstrong Special: Armstrong obligations, Armstrong comeback, Armstrong riding
for Astana, Armstrong's return, Guilty by association, Lance Armstrong and
Taylor Phinney, The resurrection of Lance
- September 18: Armstrong
come back, All round classification, Madiot's need to explain himself, Does
doping work?, Exciting racing!, Contador and the Vuelta, Lance on Astana?,
Say it isn’t So Lance!, ARD not looking forward to Armstrong return, Guilty
by association, Garzelli, Scott Spark project bike
- September 12: Does
doping work?, Scott Spark ultralight bike, Cadel stays with Silence-Lotto?,
Vuelta, Giro, Tour triple, All round classification, Editorialising / opinion
within articles, Do it twice or until you get it right, Olympic mountain biking,
Say it isn't so Lance!, Armstrong come back, BMX....That's all?
- September 4: BMX....That's
all?, Olympic mountain biking, Cadel stays with Silence-Lotto?, Head tube
logos at Olympic Games, Fabio Baldato's premature retirement, Does doping
work?, Cadel Evans and the Beige Jersey, Team Australia helmets, British track
team's Olympic Games medals Pro cycling sponsorship
- August 29: BMX,
Carlos Sastre, NRC Calendar, U-23 Championship road race fiasco, Therapeutic
use exemptions - please explain, Phil Liggett encounter, John Fahey and Jacques
Rogge on doping, Aussie Allan Davis?, Pro cycling sponsorship
- August 28: US cyclists
and masks, Cadel, Cadel Evans and the Beige jersey, Levi Leipheimer’s Bike,
Doping, Team Australia helmets, Lance and the doping debate, British Olympic
track medals, BMX....That's all?
- August 22: Spanish
federation questions Leipheimer's bronze, Hushovd's Look, Cadel's Injury,
NRC Calendar, Phil Liggett encounter, British Olympic track medals, Therapeutic
Use Exemptions - please explain, Truvativ HammerSchmidt, Carlos Sastre, Cadel
Evans and the Beige Jersey
- August 21: Levi
Leipheimers Bike, John Fahey and Jacques Rogge on doping, Cycling out of the
Olympics, Team Australia helmets, Scott-American Beef excluded from Vuelta,
Doping & money, U-23 National Championship RR fiasco, US Cyclists and masks,
World Road race championships national quotas
- August 19: Therapeutic
Use Exemptions - please explain, Carlos Sastre, Riccò confesses to using EPO,
Lance and the doping debate, Cadel Evans and the Beige Jersey, Bring back
bonus seconds to liven le Tour, Crank Length formula, Thank you, Confused
- August 14: Cycling
out of the Olympics, U-23 Championship Road Race Fiasco, Phil Liggett encounter,
WADA chief John Fahey, Moreno, John Fahey and Jacques Rogge on doping, Beijing
Road Race, World Road race championships national quotas, Scott-American Beef
excluded from Vuelta, US Cyclists and masks, Team Australia helmets
- August 7: Riccò
confesses to using EPO, Carlos Sastre, Contador, A question for Susan Westemeyer,
Confused, Lance and the doping debate, Accountability and cycling teams, Crank
length formula, Bring back bonus seconds to liven le Tour, Yet another...Manual
Beltran, ASO, doping and Astana
- July 31: A bike
by any other name, Accountability and cycling teams, Andy Schleck "killing
moves", Anti-doping chief calls Tour tests a success?, ASO, doping and Astana,
Bad blood, Boycott le Tour and Olympics, Carlos Sastre, Bring back bonus seconds
to liven le Tour, Canadian eh! Ryder Hesjedal, Cleaning up cycling, a suggestion,
Confused, Crank Length Formula
- July 25: Confused,
Consistency please, Damages paid, Dave Russell passes away, David Miller on
Riccò, Do you believe?, Doping, ASO vs UCI, what is going on?, Evans to wear
number one in Tour, How does Andy Schleck "kill all the moves"?
- July 24: Gerrans,
One question & two predictions about the Tour, A bike by any other name,
ASO, doping and Astana, Beating a dead horse, but..., Boycott le Tour and
Olympics, Cascade Cycling Classic accident, Cleaning up cycling, a suggestion
- July 17 - Edition 2:
The effect of time bonuses, Cascade Cycling Classic accident, Confused, Boycott
le Tour and Olympics, Alison Starnes diary, Is McQuaid interested in Cycling
at all?, More involvement needed from CPA, Teams ditch UCI, Yet another...Manual
Beltran, LeMond: Cycling doesn't need UCI, Dave Russell passes away
- July 17 - Edition 1:
Tour mountain cats, Is Pereiro getting a bum wrap?, Popovych! Where the bloody
hell are you?, Evans' team-mates, Evans to wear number one in Tour, Poor quality
of competition, Tour climbs, What if…, Riccó uses outdated bike in ITT, Fabian
Wegmann's electronic Dura Ace problems?, Hushovd's Look, Stage 10 coverage
was a treat!, Tour de France accident, EPO is back on the menu boys!, Consistency,
please
- July 15: Tour de
France: Stage 3 - The Badger is back!, Thor Hushovd's Look, Riccó uses outdated
bike in ITT, Boycott le Tour and Olympics, Astana and the Tour, Romain Feillu,
Cascade Cycling Classic accident, LeMond: Cycling doesn't need UCI, Tour de
France accident, We Might As Well Win Review, Evans shoe covers, Pure climbers,
Why on earth Danielson?, Historical information, Stefan Schumacher loses yellow,
Sylvain Chavanel, Yet another...Manual Beltran, Stage 10 coverage was a treat!
- July 10: Stefan
Schumacher, LeMond: Cycling doesn't need UCI, Excellent article - ASO v's
UCI, Insulting comment, Romain Feillu, Pure climbers are they a thing of the
past?, Evans and shoe covers, Evans to wear number one in Tour, Djamolidine
Abdoujaparov, Experience with UST Mountain Tires, Boycott le Tour and Olympics,
Astana and the Tour, Riders stuck in the middle, Oval bars, Landis decision
- July 4: WADA, Inconsistent
Lab Analysis, and Landis, Rabobank and the Tour, ASO and past Tour winners,
Landis decision, Teenager mauled by bear in Anchorage, Evans to wear number
one in Tour, Experience with UST Mountain Tires, iPods while riding, Erik
Zabel, Oval bars, ASO's hidden agenda, Joe Magnani, Djamolidine Abdoujaparov,
Giro, ASO's world domination, Ban Boonen?, A Hollow Tour Victory
- June 26: ASO's hidden
agenda, ASO's world domination, Ban Boonen?, Gilberto Simoni, Giro d'Italia,
iPods while riding, Oval bars, Tour without minimum bike weight rule?, What
about Friere
- June 19: ASO and
the Vuelta, ASO's world domination, Ban Boonen?, Ban Boonen? Beware the inquisition,
Boonen, Boonen vs. Petacchi, Boonen's Tour exclusion, Giro d'Italia, iPods
while riding, Oval bars, Road rage incident, Tom Boonen exclusion from Tour
de Suisse
- June 13: Tom Boonen
and his nose, Apologies from Montreal, Chantal's Philly win, Gilberto Simoni,
Boring first week of Grand Tours?, Giro d'Italia, iPods while riding, ASO
and the Vuelta, Road rage incident, Astana chain choice
- June 5: Apologies
from Montreal, Astana chain choice, Bennati and race radios, Race radio?,
Gilberto Simoni, Giro winner, Good result in road rage court case, Helmets
in the Giro, Lemond vs. Armstrong, Millar, No, no, you can't take that away
from them, Oval bars, Review error, Ricardo Riccò, Road rage incident
- May 29: Bennati
and race radios, Helmets in the Giro, Review error, LeMond vs. Armstrong,
Losing something in the translation, Millar, Petacchi, Race radio?, Road rage
incident, Weight work on the bike
- May 23: Road rage
incident, How much will it take?, Paralysed cyclist, Fausto Exparza, David
Millar, Basso gets a contract, Weight work, CAS and Petacchi, Shortest TdF,
Petacchi & Piepoli
- May 15: Sydney road
rage incident, Steegmans lashes out at UCI, Steve Hogg's article, World Cup
#3 XC, Where is Chris Horner, Slipstream, Astana and Le Tour, Giro stage 5!,
US time trial Champion?, Basso gets a contract, Race radios, CAS ruling on
Petacchi, Hamilton's integrity? Dude!, Weight work
- May 8: Race radio?,
Ridiculous ruling, What a farce!, CAS ruling on Petacchi, Basso gets a contract,
Hamilton's integrity? Dude!, French riders had to give up their jerseys?,
- May 1: Race radio?,
Basso gets a contract, Advise needed for Alpe D'Huez, LeMond vs. Armstrong,
Bottles, Scars of war, ProTour in Russia! China? Ahem... America?, LeMond's
1989 TdF, Mayo?, Stuart O'Grady Team CSC Cervélo R3 Paris, Have any French
riders had to give up their jerseys?
- April 25: Just shut
up and ride, ProTour in Russia! China? Ahem...America?, Bottles, LeMond's
1989 TdF, New format for the Vuelta? , Scars of war, LeMond v. Armstrong,
No tour for Astana #1, Rock Racing rip off #1, Advise needed for Alpe D'Huez,
Stuart O'Grady Team CSC Cervélo R3 Paris
- April 18: Just shut
up and ride, USA Track Cycling, Paris-Roubaix, Little Indy 500 - Women's Race
Article, Stuart O'Grady Team CSC Cervélo R3 Paris-Roubaix, What's happening
to road tubeless?, Thanks Cyclingnews, Bottles, Just think?, Tour of Georgia
- Lame, Colavita, No tour for Astana, Clever tactics by McQuaid expose ASO,
Suggestions for the little bullies, Rock Racing rip off, LeMond Vs. Trek
- April 10: Suggestions
for the little bullies, Pat McQuaid, Clever tactics by McQuaid expose ASO,
Just think, Trek vs. LeMond, Rock Racing rip off, Homepage overhaul, Some
praise, USA track cycling, Team car order just the first gamble, Come on Greg
& Lance, LeMond vs. Armstrong
- April 3: Pat McQuaid,
April fools, Carbon Wrap-It System, Sylvain Chavanel, Astana vs. Rabobank
vs. Slipstream Chipotle, Cadel Evans, Clever tactics by McQuaid expose ASO,
Colavita, Let VDB ride?, Race radios, Rock Racing rip off
- March 27: Riccardo's
manner of professionalism, Rock Racing rip off, Chavanel's Paris - Nice shoes,
Cadel Evans, Cadel Evans at Paris - Nice, Let VDB ride?, ASO vs. Astana, ASO
vs. UCI help me with my memory, Astana vs. Rabobank vs. Slipstream Chipotle,
Police kill cyclists,"PRO"cycling teams
- March 20:"Pro"Cycling
Teams, AIGCP does have a choice, ASO vs UCI help me with my memory, ASO vs.
Astana, Chavanel's Paris - Nice shoes, Kevin van Impe's doping control, Cadel
Evans at Paris - Nice, Hamilton, Operacion Puerto, and the ToCA, Paris - Nice:
What it could have been, Police kill cyclists, The Astana affair, UCI hypocrisy
- March 13:"Pro"Cycling
Teams, ASO vs. Astana, ASO vs. UCI, ASOh well, UCI'll see you later, Cycling
fans must let their voices be heard, Denounce ASO's actions for what they
are, Hamilton, Operacion Puerto, and the ToCA, Knife between the ribs?, Paris
Nice, Police kill cyclists, British track sprinters' helmets?, Rock Racing
and Michael Ball, The Astana affair, The real ASO problem, Tour and ASO, UCI
- very bad poker players, UCI hypocrisy.
- March 6: Zirbel
and the"ride of his life", British track sprinters' helmets, Hamilton, Operacion
Puerto and the ToCA, Three grand tours or five monuments?, Rock Racing and
Michael Ball, Pro cycling is dead, Paris - Nice, Knife between the ribs?,
Doping and the Tour, Astana, the ASO and the UCI, ASO vs. Astana, The Astana
affair, ASO vs. UCI vs. AIGCP vs. the non existent riders, The real ASO problem,
Denounce ASO's actions for what they are, Sponsorship code of ethics, Where
are the other ProTour teams?, ProTour vs. ASO
- February 28: ASO
vs. Astana, Passion and sponsorship, Crash or crash through, Pro cycling is
dead, Why we must have the ProTour, Rock Racing and Michael Ball, ToC and
Rock, The hidden message behind banning Astana, ASO is killing cycling, ASO
could be right, The real ASO problem, UCI - draw a line in the sand, ASO has
lost the plot, The Astana affair, Astana and ASO/RCS, the Astana decision,
Operacion Puerto, Old rider classification
- February 15: Doping
controls, Tour of California moving up!, Why I love the Tour of California,
Operation Puerto, Astana rejected by ASO, Boycott ASO, ASO - stop the madness,
Tour de France, ASO is wrong to exclude Astana, Astana, ASO, and the NFL,
Tour de Farce, The hidden message behind banning Astana, Astana exclusion,
ASO is killing cycling, Astana out of Tour, ASO has lost the plot
- February 8: Lampre
doping controls, Grand Tour Monopoly?, Giro selections, Slipstream Qatar,
Allan Davis, Sheldon Brown, Dick Pound to head CAS?, Find out who's leaking
lab results, Rock racing
- February 1: UCI
vs. Grand Tour war, Best wishes to Anna, The incident, Rock racing & Starbucks,
Rock racing Rocks, Rock racing, Landis in NUE, Lance is the best of all time,
Sinkewitz logic, Astana for 08 Tour?
- January 25: Rock
racing, Time to draw a line in the sand, ASO vs. UCI ProTour, UCI vs. Grand
Tour war spills over to European federations, Readers' poll stage races 2007,
Cyclist of the year, Team High Road's black kit, Lance is the best of all
time, Landis in NUE, Toyota-United abusing USAC team rules?
- January 18: Cadel
Evans - returns to training, Cyclist of the Year, DOPING - time to draw a
line in the sand, Hincapie in T-Mobile kit, Lance is the best of all time,
Readers poll: best stage races 2007, Rock racing, Speaking about Lance, Toyota-United
abusing USAC team rules?
- January 11: Armstrong
on Landis, Cadel Evans - returns to training, Hincapie in T-Mobile kit, Ivan
Basso - why no tough questions?, Reader Poll, Rock & burn racing, Speaking
about Lance, Sydor's consistency, The 'Bruyneel philosophy', Toyota-United
abusing USAC team rules?
- January 5: Great
day for cycling, Sydor's consistency, Hincapie in T-Mobile kit, CA awards
misses national series, Thank you, Ivan Basso - why no tough questions?, Cadel
Evans - returns to training, Helmets belong on heads, Armstrong on Landis,
Will there be a Tour of Missouri?, Roberto Heras, Speaking about Lance, Mayo's
B Sample
Letters 2007
- December 27: CA
awards misses national series, Armstrong on Landis, Vinokourov's sentence,
Vinokourov, Cadel Evans - returns to training, Mayo's B sample to get B test
- December 14: Sydor's
consistency, George Hincapie, Helmet straps must be cinched a bit too tight,
Will there soon be a sample"C"test?, ProTour, Vino's joke of a suspension,
Mafioso McQuaid, Obee and Health Net, Mayo's B sample to get B test, Campagnolo
offers its own 'red' shifter, T-Mobile's withdrawal a blow to Jaksche
- December 6: Tschüss
T-Mobile, Anquetil, Mayo's B sample to get B test, T-Mobile drop out, Obee
and Health Net, Stefano Zanini
- November 30: Anquetil,Mayo's
B sample to get B test, Stefano Zanini, Rider's passport, Betting, Jonathan
Page, Wake up!!, T-Mobile drop out, Bike design originality
- November 23: Remembering
Jacques Anquetil, Done looking back, Mayo's B sample to get B test, Cross
crank, Rider's passport, Blood passports and humanity, Fothen's comments on
Bettini, Nathan O'Neill , Sinkewitz, Rasmussen blood values, Sponsorship strangeness,
Dick Pound better understood, Bike design originality,
- November 16: Nathan
O'Neill, Rasmussen blood values, The Crocodile Trophy, Sinkewitz, Drug testing
procedures, Rider's passport, The drug issue, Bike design originality , Sponsorship
strangeness, Selfishness will ruin cycling
- November 9: The
Crocodile Trophy, A little bit of bias here?, Rider's passport, Kasheckin,
Positive tests, Drug testing procedures, Marco Pinotti: Engineering a new
path, Bike design originality
- November 2: What
does this mean?, Le Tour 08, Mayo's B sample, Bike design originality, Trimble,
UCI says Mayo case not closed, Drug testing procedures ... and false positives,
Kashechkin: controls violate human rights, Drug testing procedures, Mayo,
UCI, Kashechkin, et al... Great, now it's coming from both ends, Positive
tests, Why even bother with B samples then?, Mayo's positive EPO test, Falling
barriers
- October 26: Rider
passports & Cadel Evans, Drug testing procedures ... and false positives,
Iban Mayo's false positive, Iban Mayo and Landis, Armstrong on Landis, Mayo's
B sample, UCI turns Mayo's case into a debaucle, Great...now they hand pick
the results, No justice for Mayo, UCI says Mayo case not closed, Bike design
originality, 2006 Tour de France, A bad week for cycling, A fitting end to
the season
- October 19: 2006
Grand Tour trifecta!, 2006 Tour de France, A fitting end to the season, Armstrong
on Landis, Bike design originality, doping in cycling, Doping numbers, Paris-Tours
testing mishap, UCI and the lack of testing!, Vino's other Tour stage win,
The absolute best?
- October 12: Armstrong
on Landis, Bike design originality, Cycling drama, Doping is unfair; but so
is discrimination, It’s not doping that's..., Landis case - everyone's a loser,
Length and cost of the Landis case, R & R, The Landis decision, Tour of America
- October 5: Cycle
drama, It's not doping that's"killing"the sport, Why is VAM a benchmark, Tour
of America, The Landis decision, DYNEPO, Worlds, Rock & Republic's CEO Michael
Ball, Please explain, Giuseppe Guerini, FICP
- September 28: Tour
of America, World champion zany-ness, The Landis decision, ASO v UCI, McQuaid
vs ASO vs the riders, Please explain, Why is VAM a benchmark, Giuseppe Guerini,
Menchov felt betrayed by Rasmussen, ProTour and Le Tour, Where is the due
process
- September 21: Astana's
future and Bruyneel, Bruyneel's afterlife, Floyd Landis decision, Why is VAM
a benchmark, Lifetime bans, Menchov felt betrayed by Rasmussen, Ungrateful
Levi, Spanish cycling, Where is the due process
- September 14: Astana
& Bruyneel, Cycling vs. soccer, Cycling will survive, Floyd Landis decision,
LeMond's comments, Menchov felt betrayed by Rasmussen, Ungrateful Levi, Why
is VAM a benchmark?
- September 7: Cycling
vs. soccer, Floyd Landis decision, UCI, ASO, LeMond, et al who cares? Riders,
Lawyers in the Landis case, LeMond's comments, Riders taking the fall?, US
Postal/Discovery R.I.P.
The complete Cyclingnews letters archive
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