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Letters to Cyclingnews - September 23, 2005
Here's your chance to get more involved with Cyclingnews. 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.
Each week's best letter gets our 'letter of the week'. We look for for
letters that contain strong, well-presented opinions; humour; useful information
or unusual levels of sheer helpfulness.
Please email your correspondence to letters@cyclingnews.com.
Recent letters
A quick thanks
Australian worlds team
Go Mick!
Infighting
Pound Ill informed
WADA mess
Heras and the Giro
Verbruggen is wrong
Chris Sheppard busted for EPO
Explaining increases in performance
Quote of the year
Vuelta rest day observations
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A quick thanks
Hi there,
I just wanted to use the letters column as a quick way to get in
touch with the people in the cycling community that I have no other
way of contacting. I recently had a pretty bad crash in a stage
of the Tour of Sunraysia in Victoria, Australia. I have been amazed
at the number of people who have asked after me, both during my
long (four day) period where I was basically unconscious, and also
since then, half of whom I don't even seem to know (and no, that's
not due to head injuries).
So I just wanted to thank all of the people who I do not/have not
contacted any other way, basically because I don't know how to.
A big thanks (from me, my partner and my family) for your concern,
and to answer everyone's obvious questions I am basically fine now,
although it was pretty scary for a bit (so I'm told - I was sleeping
peacefully!). I've got a couple of tiny scars under one eye, a couple
more scars on the knees and elbows, and a couple more tests next
week to tell me my head is OK.
Again, thanks.
Simon van der Aa
Tasmania, Australia
Monday, September 19, 2005
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to this letter
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Australian worlds team
Speaking of Worlds selection, congrats to all the riders who have made the
team but please somebody explain to me why Robbie can't have the team he wants
to help him win? Gatsey is his faithful lieutenant who has ridden for him for
years. He knows Robbie better than Robbie does! He doesn't have results under
his belt, but hey, that can only mean that he knows his job and he does it.
He has just come from Spain so he is ready, acclimatised and in all fairness
mature enough to know what to do and when to do it. The last word POLITICS!
Michael Cross
Friday, September 23, 2005
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to this letter
Australian worlds team #2
In relation to the letter from M. Giovanni
I have a long association with Ben Day - investing my time and efforts as his
coach in the "early days" as well as being a constant source of support with
the life of sacrifice that he leads. With all due respect to Nathan, Ben has
been selected because he is a capable rider in the world of cycling and more
specifically in the TT discipline. While you may have a question to the selectors,
please be very careful to ensure that you do not ask your question at the expense
of a riders' hard fought reputation.
Ben's recent achievements in the Tour of Britain were excellent. His living
away from his home, friends, language and warm weather show that he is no less
dedicated to the sport of cycling. His achievements, including the Australian
Championship at the TT, show that he is well credentialed to do what the selectors
have shown faith in him to do.
I appreciate your support for Nathan and hope you better understand that there
are supporters of Ben Day that know it is from hard work and sacrifice that
has allowed him to be in a position to ride at the worlds for Australia.
Vince McLachlan
Tuesday, September 20, 2005
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to this letter
Australian worlds team #3
Thanks M.Giovanni,
For your concerns over selections for Australia's Team at this years road worlds
in Madrid in mid-September.
The Australian open road time trial championship, of which Nathan O'Neill is
the champion, was in January. Ben Day has performed exceptionally well in the
past month in EUROPE, and is also an exceptional time trial rider. Nathan O'Neill
is also an exceptional time trial rider, but we are talking Worlds, and potential
for a CURRENT result.
The same goes for the outstanding results of a US citizen that has cleaned
up the Tour over the past seven occasions, but has chosen to reside in Europe
during his preparation, and realised where you have to be based to deliver the
desired outcome.
The U.S. of A's Athens Olympic cycling results are also testament to where
you need to race and have a base, both men and women, to realise your ultimate
dream.
Trust this clarifies your concerns over Australia's worlds selection, and life
outside the U.S. of A.
Mark and Bronwyn
Tuesday, September 20, 2005
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to this letter
Go Mick!
To all those last year who questioned Mick Roger's TT credentials in this forum,
I am very glad that he has proved you wrong. If it wasn't enough last year that
he won by a huge margin, some of the best time trial riders in the world were
there this year and they were way off. OK, he had a very bad Tour overall by
his standards for some reason but that doesn't mean that he is not a good time
trial rider, as he has shown here. I am sure there will be others who will again
question his credentials but three is a row speaks for itself - well done Mick.
Simon Quirk
Seattle, WA
Thursday, September 22, 2005
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Infighting
Whether one supports Lance Armstrong or not, the most telling events about
this whole situation are the actions and infighting among the UCI and Pound/WADA.
It is clear that these organisations are nothing but little fiefdoms of their
respective dictators and neither group will budge an inch towards cleaning up
the sport ethically or providing any type of transparency.
Seeing Pound pronounce UCI as the villain only to now have the UCI state that
the WADA [and therefore Pound] are blocking the investigation reminds me of
the worst sort of bickering - the type that should be reserved for five year
olds on a school playground. I believe it would difficult for anyone to state
with a straight face that there is not a problem with doping in cycling [as
in many sports]. And that is a shame. However, when the organisations responsible
for cleaning up the sport are these kangaroo courts led by half-witted petty
dolts, the future is not looking very bright. I am saddened by the actions of
those who cheat in the sport and am completely disgusted by the actions of those
who claim responsibility and authority to clean up the sport.
Sean R. Jones
Trinidad and Tobago
Tuesday, September 20, 2005
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letter
Pound Ill informed
The statement by Dick Pound that EPO can't suddenly appear in samples where
there was none before highlights the anti-doping czar's lack of knowledge on
the subject.
As detailed on your website http://www.cyclingnews.com/features/?id=EPOv2 the
EPO urine test detects the difference between natural EPO and recombinant EPO
which has a slightly different weight and charge. EVERY urine sample contains
natural EPO, and it is conceivable that long term freezing could alter the protein
to mimic recombinant EPO. This is all theoretical of course; no-one has published
any research to rule in or rule out this possibility, but that is the entire
point.
I am just as passionate about clean sport as Mr Pound - however, the war against
doping is fought largely on credibility, and if he continues to make such ill-informed,
knee-jerk comments, he weakens the credibility of the WADA.
Dr Warren Jennings
Queensland, Australia
Monday, September 19, 2005
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to this letter
WADA mess
Dick Pound is a disgrace to WADA. We recreational and amateur racers who support
clean cycling want rigorous enforcement. But time and time again, Pound has
spoken out as a zealot, rather than the deliberative head of an important organisation.
I call for his removal and I think other cyclists should, too. If he's not up
to his eyeballs in conspiracy to frame certain cyclists, then he's acting as
a mouthpiece for those who may be. At worst (and this may be the most likely
answer) he's an incompetent who doesn't know when to keep quiet.
Greg Root
Worcester, Mass.
Friday, September 16, 2005
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letter
Heras and the Giro
Manolo Saiz's idea of sending Roberto Heras to the Giro d'Italia in preparation
for the Tour de France is proof that sometimes team directors DO know what they're
doing. The decision is almost certain to be fruitful, for a variety of reasons.
As Saiz himself pointed out, he seemed to do well in the Vuelta a Espana after
riding the Tour. Maybe his passion for the Vuelta was powerful enough to create
a physiological pattern, and now, after several years, he has unintentionally
conditioned himself to do well in the second Grand Tour of the season rather
than the first.
But there might be a more emotional reason for it, too. The last time Heras
entered the Giro (in 1999 on the evergreen Kelme team), not only did he win
a stage right in front of Gilberto Simoni and Ivan Gotti on the way to fifth
place overall, but several months later, he also broke through to the podium
of the Vuelta for the first time in his career, placing third at the tender
age of 25. The following year, he was just brimming with possibility; the world
was his oyster. He proceeded to take fifth in the Tour de France, his best result
to date, and then, best of all, took his superb form to Spain to win the Vuelta
outright. What a magical couple of years that was for Heras! The following year,
he switched to US Postal Service, a move that had its own rewards but distanced
him in some ways from Spain.
The Giro, then, may turn out to be more than just a way for Heras to leverage
his talent for "second efforts," as Saiz modestly suggests. Seven years on,
Heras may find - despite a love for his native Spain that is second to no man's
- that he has a lot of happy memories in Italy. He may even start to be reminded
of his time on the invincible Kelme of 1999 - of trading attacks with Oscar
Sevilla and Jose Jaime Gonzalez, of exploring the boundaries of his talent,
of the old adventures. And maybe he can use those memories to again find the
magic of 1999 and 2000. The scientific mind of Manolo Saiz may, once again,
give rise to a beautifully unscientific story.
Jeffrey Jones
Morgan Hill, CA
Saturday, September 17, 2005
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to this letter
Verbruggen is wrong
Just a small but valuable point. Cyclingnews writes:
'The journalist came to the UCI wanting to write a positive story about Armstrong,'
Verbruggen told Dutch paper Telegraaf. 'For this, he wanted insight in his medical
dossier. Armstrong and the UCI agreed to this after long discussions. He couldn't
find anything, as they were all blank. Armstrong never used any medications.'
It seems to me that Verbruggen is trying to spin this so hard that he's forgetting
his facts. Armstrong did indeed use "permitted" medications - in the 1999 Tour,
in fact. From VeloNews: 'In the 1999 Tour, a urine sample showed small traces
of corticosteroids. Armstrong was cleared, however, when his U.S. Postal team
produced a medical certificate showing that he used a cream to ease the pain
of a saddle sore.'
Armstrong's camp and the UCI are obviously very irritated about l'affaire L'Equipe,
but all they've done so far has been to blame the messenger(s) and smear anyone
who's not on their side. Only today, for the first time, do we hear Lance's
excuse for the retro-positives, from his agent: "Someone put EPO in them if
the test is accurate." (Sounds to me a bit like the Pantani persecution complex,
in which the poor suffering pro cyclist is framed and forced to extremes by
the criminals around him.)
Also, a side note: Verbruggen seems to say that if a journalist wants to write
a *positive* story about a cyclist - hey, no problem, open the books. But if
the journalist wants to investigate the rider (which is to say, if the journalist
wants to do his real job rather than writing puff pieces fawning over celebrity
and power), then tough luck. Very telling, I say, about the way the UCI works.
Philip Higgs
Boulder, CO
Friday, September 16, 2005
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to this letter
Chris Sheppard busted for EPO
Yep, you da man Robert. Virtually second in the one race, 10th in the other,
23rd in the circuit race at Enumclaw and DNF (what does that stand for?) in
the road race...good work, if you were here I'd pat you on the back. Your pro
contract should be in the mail. I'm still waiting on my pro contract after Filip
Meirhaeghe tested positive and it moved me up to 76th place in the 2004 Calgary
World Cup XC - I'm sure it will be here soon.
First and foremost - in the words of another great Canadian mountain biker
(Geoff Kabush) "Doper's Suck". I am disappointed to find out about Sheppard,
but believe that the bulk of top North American mountain bikers (and road cyclists
for that matter) are clean. Your reference to two-time World Champion Roland
Green is completely off base - he was penalised for not producing the appropriate
paperwork for asthma medication at the time. FYI, that's different to EPO.
To make my point short ... worry less about what others are doing, the only
thing you can control is yourself. congrats on the year, but you likely don't
need to tell everyone how well you did.
Byron Davis
Calgary, Alberta
Friday, September 16, 2005
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to this letter
Chris Sheppard busted for EPO #2
This letter is written as a response to Robert Campbell's letter regarding
Chris Sheppard's EPO bust. While I, like most competitive cyclists, are sick
and tired of performance-enhancing drugs and the scourge they represent to the
sport, it's important that we don't treat all positive tests in the same light
when a cyclist gets busted for a psuedoepherdrine in an over the counter allergy
remedy - this is not the same intent to cheat as a positive for EPO, HGH, anabolics,
etc.
When Roland Green gets nailed for a paperwork issue regarding an inhalant prescribed
to him from his doctor for his asthma (and previously accepted by all the cycling
bodies) this is also not the same intent. When Jan Ullrich was busted for the
party drug ecstasy, it was initially reported that his positive drug test was
indication he was a doper- ecstasy is not in any way performance enhancing as
relates to cycling.
Robert Cambell's point about the peloton at Columbia plateau already containing
one doper in Roland Green is an unfounded comment based on misinformation. With
all the dopers in the pro peloton it is ever more important that we still give
all the benefit of the doubt and don't cast any undue light on athletes until
all the facts are known.
Matt Bodkin
Whistler, BC
Friday, September 16, 2005
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to this letter
Explaining increases in performance
As always, I'd like to toss in my two cents on a "question of the day." In
explaining the increases in performance/speed at the Tour - I would like to
share a couple examples.
First, after holding out and riding my old bike setup for far too long, I stepped
up with a massive upgrade in bike and equipment. The difference in performance
in relation to speed is remarkable, with as much as 2.5 mph/average speed increase
for some of my longer rides. Secondly, I recently swapped out my wife's old
wheels with new ones. Her first comment after using these wheels was that the
wheels "...are a LOT faster!" (She also asked why I didn't change the wheels
before - I couldn't answer that question).
Given that cycling combines the human element with the mechanical, changes
that improve the mechanical equal higher performance. Just considering changes
in wheels and frames alone you have a peloton that is significantly faster.
Add to it all the latest training tools such as power meters and you have a
gain in performance over the past 10 years.
The equipment factor being considered, maybe doping is really not as prevalent
in the peloton as some would have us believe. Maybe the existing doping controls
actually work? Maybe then people such as Dick Pound are so sure that there is
a huge doping problem because it's their job? Sure would help his (and others
in his line of work) job security if he can get us all to believe the world
is full of cheats.
There can be no doubt that there are those who use performance enhancing drugs
- but I'll bet there are not as many of them as you might think.
Bruce Lee*
Redmond, WA
Friday, September 16, 2005
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to this letter
Quote of the year
Bravo Lance for the quote of the year, "I'm in here dealing with his BS," said
Armstrong. "I've got three kids out swimming in the pool, splashing around,
screaming my name...I'm sick of this." And YES, Mr. Pound is one of my least
favourite people and I consider him a man of zero integrity.
J.C. Van Deventer
Kansas City, MO
Friday, September 16, 2005
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to this letter
Vuelta rest day observations
In last week's letter from Eric Bowen about Vuelta rest day observations, he
makes mention of how Tom Danielson is the "future" of the Discovery Tour team.
Why do people keep saying things like this?
Danielson, other than having a few good rides in Europe and always improving
it seems, still has yet to prove himself out in a three week Tour. Popo has
done this a couple of times already. And all of this talk about Danielson being
the "future" of the team. When are people going to realise that he's 27 years
old. He's not the future of anything. This guy concedes that Danielson might
be ready to take the reins of the Disco Tour de France team in a couple of years.
If this is the case, he'll be, oh, 30 years old, and won't have too many years
of high level racing in the legs.
Look people, I'm not saying Danielson isn't a great talent, but before we start
singing his praises do you think we can try to let him prove himself first?
And no, top 10 in the Vuelta doesn't really signify much at this point in time.
A nice result, but he finished eighth overall.
Tom Arsenault
Chapel Hill, NC
Friday, September 16, 2005
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to this letter
Recent letters pages
Letters 2005
- September 16: Vuelta rest day
observations, Australian worlds team, Explaining the increases in performance,
Debate settled, doping lives on, Samuel Sanchez, Scientific proof, The perfect
crime, Another topic please, CYCLINGnews.com, Doping, Illegal motivation,
Illegal motivation - another possibility, Lance and the Tour de France, Drug
use, Alternate Universe, WADA, Chris Sheppard busted for EPO, Just Do It
- September 9: The debate rages,
Bad for cycling, Lance and the Tour de France, EPO Testing and Haematocrit,
Doping, Illegal motivation, Lance the Man, Armstrong and doping, Question
for Dick Pound..., Land of the Free, home of the Brave, Lance, I have a better
idea, Where are the results?, Armstrong's Tour comeback, Don't make that mistake,
Lance, Response to the test
- September 2: Lance Armstrong,
all-American boy, Doping, Claude Droussent lies, L'Equipe credibility, Lance
versus Jan, Jan versus Lance, Cold fusion and Lance, The perfect crime, EPO
and the Wink Wink Standard, Germany owed four yellow jerseys?, Lance, cycling
and cancer, Lance issues, The whole Lance doping issue, Neither defense nor
attack, The test, Land of the Free, home of the Brave, Armstong couldn't come
clean, Summarising the Lance situation, Lance's tests, Keep an open mind,
Lance and doping, Check results before you wreck yourself, Seeing is believing,
L'Equipe and ASO, and Lance, Lance and EPO, Aussie perspective on the upcoming
worlds, A rave rather than a rant
- August 26: Lance and LeBlanc,
Lance versus France, Can of worms story, The Test, Benoit Salmon wins the
1999 Tour, The perfect crime, Armstrong tests positive, L'Equipe and ASO,
Lance rubbish, Lance and the French yellow press, Armstrong, EPO and WADA,
Lance Downgrading Armstrong victories, Lance doping garbage, Lance versus
Jan, Doping, Six stages to win the 99 tour, EPO test under scrutiny, Lance
irony, Lance as a spokesman, Cyclists and politicians, Verbruggen's campaign
to elect his successor, John Lieswyn, Can of worms, Americans in Paris
- August 19: Ned Overend, Guidi
positive, What is going on at Phonak?, Ullrich's riding style, How about credibility
from both sides?, Lieswyn's gesture
- August 12: Pro Tour 2006, Credibility
from both sides?, Zabel leaves T-Mobile, Chris Horner, Ullrich's riding style,
Well done Wayne!, Armstrong and class, Possible correlations
- August 5: Zabel leaves T-Mobile,
Thanks from a survivor, Bicycle safety, Message for Chris Horner, Perspective,
Discovery in ninth, Tech, Armstrong and class, The King of July!, Heras through
rose colored glasses, Possible correlations
- July 29: Perspective, France
and Lance's Legacy, Armstrong and class, Best Wishes to Louise, Levi's Diary,
Heras through rose colored glasses, The King of July, Here we go again!, Treat
Lance like the others, Tech, Lance Armstrong's time trial equation, Life begins
at 30
- July 22: McEwen - villain to
superhero, Underdogs and overdogs at the Tour, Big George, George Hincape,
Hincapie's stage win, Cadel's Tour memory, What the fans would love to see,
Is Godefroot really NOT the man?, A true classic, Phonak's poor sportsmanship,
Phonak double standards, My new hero, Discovery Channel tactics, Lance Infomercial?,
Treat Lance like the others, TdF sprint finishes, Leaky Gas?, Little black
box
- July 15: The best seat in the
house, Joseba Beloki, Message for Chris Horner, Treat Lance like the others,
Lance Infomercial?, McEwen defense, Rail lines in the TdF, Ruse Discovered?,
Discovery's unanimous breakdown, IS Jan really the man?, Cycling socks, Patrick
Lefevre quit your whining, Armstrong and class, Leaky Gas?, TdF sprint finishes,
Who is in charge of the UCI?, Tires and slippery roads, Response to the Vowels
of Cycling, Little black box
- July 8: McEwen defends himself,
Tires and slippery roads, Random test on Lance Armstrong, French Government
dope controls, The Pro Tour and Grand Tours, Tour de France's early finish?,
Here we go again!, Thank you, Ed Kriege, Lance Infomercial?, No, the other
Merckx!, The Vowels of Cycling, Armstrong's pre-Tour communiqués, Armstrong
and class
- July 1: No, the other Merckx!,
Armstrong's pre-Tour communiqués, The Vowels of Cycling, Figures of merit
- TdF tipping, Lance Infomercial?, Daily Terror, Sydney article, Why Michael
Rogers will be awesome with T-Mobile, I love it!, MTB news, Twins
- June 24: Sydney article, Hit
and run on cyclists - Australia's new blood sport?, Another fatal hit and
run on Australian cyclists, How can Ullrich win the Tour?, Drop Verbruggen,
The second American, When the Tour heads up, Droppin' the Kilo!, Kilo or no
go, What is Michael Rogers thinking?, Rogers to T-Mobile, For the love of
god don't do it Mick!, The first yellow jersey, Horner Impressive, Leave T-Mobile/Fassa
Bortolo, renew your career!, Horner's stage win at the Tour de Suisse, Bobby
Julich, Daily Terror, Hell on Wheels review
- June 17: Droppin' the Kilo!,
Killing the kilo and 500, The kilo, Axing the Kilo?, The track Time Trials,
The first yellow jersey, Armstrong and Class, The year of the comeback, Horner's
stage win at the Tour de Suisse
- June 10: The year of the comeback,
An open letter to Cadel Evans, How Ullrich can win the Tour, USPRO/Liberty,
Lance, the Tour and the Giro, Lance and the Tour, Show us your discards Godefroot!,
Armstrong and Class, Ivan's training ride, Giro comments
- June 3: Giro comments, Giro
excitement vs Tour blah, Ivan Basso, Ivan's training ride, Discovering the
future, Jose Rujano, Savoldelli vs Simoni, How Ullrich can win the Tour, Eddy
Merckx Interview, Johan Bruyneel, Show us your discards Godefroot!, Improving
Pro Tour Team Rankings, Lance and the Tour, Armstrong and class
- May 27: Giro excitement vs
Tour blah, Great Giro!, Double or nothing..., Colle delle Finestre and a Cipo
farewell, Joseba Beloki, Ivan's training ride, Hell on Wheels, Matt Wittig,
How Ullrich can win the Tour, UCI fines, Armstrong and class, Eddy Merckx
Interview, The disappointment of Viatcheslav Ekimov, You have let us down
Paolo
- May 20: Colle delle Finestre
tactics, Rogues, It just keeps happening, Davis Phinney, Joseba Beloki, Australia
- number one, You have let us down Paolo, Bettini/Cooke, What's up with pro
cyclists these days?, Cipo, Cipo, Cipo, A question about team names, The disappointment
of Viatcheslav Ekimov, Go Eki!
- May 13: Hit and run, Bettini
vs Cooke, Bettini's Illegal sprint, You have let us down Paolo, Giro, Bettini/Cooke,
Cookie's crumble, Bjarne's right: There's only one Jens Voigt!, Jens Voigt
and the blind, South Australians protest against hit-and-run death, It just
keeps happening, Liberty Seguros, The disappointment of Viatcheslav Ekimov,
Go Eki!, Australia - number one, Irresistible in July, UCI weight rule
- May 6: South Australians protest
against hit-and-run death, Tyler Hamilton's case, Hamilton and the facts The
USADA decision on Tyler Hamilton, Tyler Hamilton, Tyler, Testing and the Virenque
Comparison, How do dopers live with themselves?, General view on doping, Hamilton
guilty regardless of the facts, Hamilton verdict, Tyler is good going uphill,
Hamilton interview, Klöden comments, Tyler H, Simoni, Grazie Mario, Sheryl
Crow, or should we say...Yoko Ono
- April 29: South Australians
protest against hit-and-run death, Tyler Hamilton's case, Hamilton and the
facts The USADA decision on Tyler Hamilton, Tyler Hamilton, Tyler, Testing
and the Virenque Comparison, How do dopers live with themselves?, General
view on doping, Hamilton guilty regardless of the facts, Hamilton verdict,
Tyler is good going uphill, Hamilton interview, Klöden comments, Tyler H,
Simoni, Grazie Mario, Sheryl Crow, or should we say...Yoko Ono
- April 22: Lance Armstrong's
retirement, W is for Witchhunt, Tyler's mishandling defense, Not for real,
is it?, Bad Science, Blood testing issues, Hamilton - finally a decision,
Regarding the Tyler Hamilton decision, Tyler Hamilton, Satisfying Verdict
for Hamilton Case, How do dopers live with themselves?, Hamilton's case, Tyler
Hamilton's case, Hamilton, Hamilton verdict and a call for outside expertise,
Tyler Hamilton saga..., Tour de France preview...2006!, Klöden comments, Tour
de France Training, The New Dynamic Duo, Sheryl Crow, or should we say...Yoko
Ono, Random Musings
- April 15: Glenn Wilkinson,
USADA and Hamilton, Bergman; so sad, ProTour leader's jersey, That's a Jersey?,
Too many chiefs?, Track World Championships, What do you think?
- April 8: The New Dynamic Duo,
Boonen's Hairdo, Viral infections and antibiotics, George Hincapie, What do
you think?, Track World Championships, VDB?, A little bit more about blood
doping, Blood testing issues
- April 1: Well done Ale-jet,
Eyes of tigers..., Viral infections and antibiotics, Let's talk about cycling…,
What's worth talking about in cycling?, First Ride of the season, The New
Dynamic Duo, Blood testing issues, Sydney Thousand, UCI Pro Tour Grand Theft,
not Grand Tour
- March 18: The Forgotten Hero!,
Way to go Bobby, Bobby J, Lance has lost the ‘Eye of the tiger’, Blood testing
issues and Hamilton, With all Due Respect, All this Lance Talk..., Is Lance
getting soft?
- March 11: Blood testing issues
and Hamilton, Cycling on TV, In Defence of UCI president Hein Verbruggen,
Defending the Pro Tour?, Is Lance getting soft?, Lance has lost the "eye of
the tiger"
- March 4: In Defence of the
Pro-Tour, Grand Tours back down...for now, Armstrong and Simeoni,Help - what’s
on the TV?, Cycling on TV, Lance Defends His Title!, Hamilton movie role downplayed,
Blood testing issues and Hamilton, I really don't know when it happened
- February 25: Lance Defends
His Title!, Build it and tear it down?, Build, dismantle and donate!, Lance's
Hour Record attempt, I really don't know when it happened, Can't get enough!,
Dream on
- February 18: Build it and tear
it down?, Remember Marco, One Reason I Love Cycling, The ongoing Hour Record
Saga, Lance’s Hour Record attempt, Can't get enough!
- February 11: One Reason I Love
Cycling, Francisco Cuevas, F-One - Come down to earth Lance!, Armstrong and
the Hour, Can't get enough!, Greatest of all time
- February 4: F-One - Come down
to earth Lance!, Armstrong and the Hour, Armstrong and Simeoni, Can't get
enough!, Help, Greatest of all time Eddy is King, but who is second best?
- January 28: "I am the greatest
of all time", Armstrong and the Hour Record, F-One - Come down to earth Lance!,
Lance Drug Probe, Armstrong and Simeoni, Can’t get enough!, Help, NBC's 2004
RAAM Coverage, Doping, Crash distance from 1km to 3km, Eddy is King, but who
is second best?
- January 21: Professional Cyclists,
Der Kaiser's Goals, Jan Ullrich's problem = Lance, Rider of the Year, Crash
distance from 1km to 3km, Help, Lance vs. Eddy
- January 14: Der Kaiser's goals,
Help, Foreign stage races, Lance vs. Eddy, Tour '05, Rider of the Year, Best
bikes for heavy riders, Quick Step helmets
- January 7: Death of Dmitri
Neliubin, Der Kaiser’s goals, Rider of the Year, Best bikes for heavy riders,
Who's Greater? Come on now!, Virenque "most charismatic"?, Downhilling, Downhill
time trial, Trendy cyclists, No flat tyres, Spring classics trip advice, Bettini's
trainer
- January 3: Spring classics
trip advice, Big Bear ends downhilling, Armstrong and Simeoni, Holding teams
accountable, Downhill time trial, Trendy cyclists, Bettini's trainer, No flat
tyres
Letters 2004
- December 24 letters - Why are
cyclists so trendy?, Business and cycling, Big Bear ends downhilling, Off-bike
weight gain, No flat tires, Armstrong and Simeoni
- December 17 letters - Business
and cycling, Tom versus Axel , Big Bear ends downhilling, Shane Perkins, Spring
classics trip advice, Tyler Hamilton, Phonak and the UCI, Why are cyclists
so trendy?, Mark Webber interview, Armstrong and Simeoni, Injured and missing
it: an update, Clyde Sefton
- December 10 letters - Why are
cyclists so trendy?, Big Bear ends downhilling, Floyd's choices?, Merckx,
fit and trim, Pound must go, Spring classics trip advice, Tyler Hamilton,
Phonak and the UCI, Punishment: Vandenbroucke vs Hamilton, Prosthetic hip,
Armstrong and Simeoni, Dave Fuentes, Homeopathy, Jeremy Yates, TDF coverage
for Australia, Weight limits and maintenance, Mark Webber interview
- December 3 letters - Domestiques
vs Lieutenants, Tyler Hamilton, Phonak and the UCI, Dave Fuentes, Santa vs
Hairy Guy, Why are cyclists so trendy?, Mark French and homeopathy, Shane
Perkins, Jeremy Yates, Weight limits and maintenance, UCI regulations, Armstrong
and Simeoni, Prosthetic hip
- November 26 letters - Mark
French and homeopathy, Two big guns in one team, Tyler Hamilton case, Bartoli's
retirement, Dave Fuentes, Shane Perkins, Merckx and Armstrong, Training like
Lance, Lance Armstrong, Why are cyclists so trendy?, Phonak gets what it deserves,
Armstrong and Simeoni, Bike weight, Spouseless riders, Mary McConneloug, Adam
Craig, Mark Webber interview, Santa vs Hairy Guy
- November 19 letters - Tyler
Hamilton case, Phonak gets what it deserves, Are you there Mr Coates?, Bike
Weight, Merckx and Maertens make up, Heart troubles, Where to find cycling
spouses, Mark Webber interview, Lance Armstrong, Where's Greg?, What ever
happened to..., Why are cyclists so trendy?, Armstrong and Simeoni, l'Etape
du Tour registration, Still Laughing
- November 12 letters - Why Armstrong
will ride the 2005 Tour, Scott Sunderland, Why are cyclists so trendy?, Armstrong
and Simeoni, Where to find cycling spouses, Lance on Italian selection, Heart
troubles, l'Etape du Tour registration, Tour 2005 team time trial, What ever
happened to..., Love and a yellow bike
- November 5 letters - Love and
a yellow bike, Tour 2005, Where to find cycling spouses, Why are cyclists
so trendy?, Lance on Italian selection, Armstrong and Simeoni, Tour of Southland,
Construction technique for veloway, Heart troubles, l'Etape du Tour registration,
Rahsaan Bahati
- Letters Index The complete index to every
letters page on cyclingnews.com
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