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Letters to Cyclingnews - December 2, 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
Heras EPO test procedure
Heras - three times lucky
The Heras case
Another profile in disappointment
SFGP - Bring it back!
San Francisco Grand Prix
San Francisco GP
Tyler Hamilton
Chasing an inevitable high
Circumstantial evidence
The burden of proof
Global Doping
Graeme Obree
Moron or marketing genius
Exciting again
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Heras EPO test procedure
The revelations about the testing procedures used in the "B" sample
for Heras suggest there are more problems with the EPO test than
suggested by your earlier article. Without commenting on the validity
of the test and the chain-of-custody issues, it seems that the "B"
test involved only Heras's sample. That is, when they performed
the "B" test, the technicians knew they were handling Heras's sample
and they knew what the "A" result was - and they obviously were
aware of the pressure on the lab to a produce result that was consistent
with the "A" sample.
One would think that, for their own credibility, and for the sake
of fairness, the lab technicians would have tested Heras's "B" sample
blindly - that is, they would have tested it with a group of other
samples (for example, nine other samples, some with and some without
EPO). In such a setting, the lab technicians would not have known
what the "correct" answer was for any given sample - they would
have simply tested the samples and announced the results - and then
the samples would have been matched to the donors.
In this case, however, the lab technicians knew what the "correct"
result was ahead of time - and it certainly appears as though they
kept testing until they found that result in the "B" sample. While
Heras may have been given/taken EPO, the "circle the wagons" mentality
of the anti-doping organisations makes one wonder who is worse -
the dopers or the testers?
Patrick J. Wilkie
Sunday, November 27, 2005
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to this letter
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Heras - three times lucky
I think Timothy Shame will find that biological samples (urine, for example)
are typically stored by laboratories at -80 C or under liquid nitrogen (which
boils at -196 C), and that frost-free fridges (as he evidently has at home)
are deliberately not used due to the temperature cycling (forgive the pun) required
to, wait for it, keep them "frost free". Anyone who's dived into a -80 C fridge,
or even an old-fashioned kitchen fridge (-20 C) looking for those samples (or
sausages) they put there years ago, will find them as they were although encrusted
in ice, as opposed to shrivelled and dehydrated, as Timothy suggests (epo-positive
due to desiccated sample theory). Nice try, though.
David Langley
Sydney, Australia
Monday, November 28, 2005
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to this letter
Heras - three times lucky #2
In response to Timothy (always drug free) Shame; you are missing the point
on how athletes take drugs (or at least the organised ones). I am not making
any claims about whether or not Armstrong took them but only that you don't
take them with a hope that you don't get tested. Passing any test (or at least
diminishing the odds of getting tested) are as an important part of the strategy
as taking the actual substance.
As De Niro tells the Ray Liotta character in Goodfellas - it’s the idiots who
get caught as they don't have things 'organised' i.e. with the police, the lawyers
or worst case scenario the guards. In 1999 there wasn't a test so your 'organisation'
would not have needed to include steps to ensure passing it. After 2000 there
was, and hence your strategy would have changed to take account of the new test.
Of course another tactic is to shout about how drug free you are and how you
detest drug takers - one thinks of Carl Lewis specifically...it’s good cover.
Although why do you feel the need for your 'middle name'?
Norman Gillan
Friday, November 25, 2005
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to this letter
The Heras case
This is in reference to the November
27 news piece. The UCI states that, 'The positive results which ensued from
it (the urinary EPO test) since its introduction...demonstrate especially the
efficiency of these controls'.
Positive results emphatically do not demonstrate the test's efficiency. This
is clearly a logical error of Petitio Principii, or simply, begging the question.
The test would be shown efficient only if a positive result entailed unequivocal
use of EPO. At the present time, a positive result from the urinary EPO test
does not demonstrate that unequivocal use.
As such, the UCI statement is not a statement of fact, proving that the urinary
test for EPO is reliable and trustworthy. Rather it is a mission statement,
asserting the UCI's policy, and is confirmation that at the present time criticism
of such a policy will not be heard by the UCI.
Ian Martin
Lincolnshire, UK
Sunday, November 27, 2005
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this letter
Another profile in disappointment
OK - so yet again, one of the best and brightest in cycling deals us a huge
letdown. Our sport has suffered one more black eye in a long and agonising series.
Whether or not Heras appeals and is found guilty or innocent, the result of
the "B" sample is what will be remembered. I gave up on my illusions about the
integrity and moral strength of many riders long ago, but it is still like a
punch in the stomach every time more bad news is announced. I really wonder
what kind of colossal arrogance and stupidity it must take for these riders
to continue to flaunt the rules, even when it is so well recognised that testing
takes place on a regular basis.
If you are leading in a Grand Tour, you get tested every #$*@ing day! How could
one even consider doping? I can't say if Heras did actually dope, but I'd be
willing to bet that the doctors in the lab take a great deal of pride in their
work and don't want to do shoddy or incomplete work. Say what you will, but
these people are professionals too, and I would think that it takes a great
deal of integrity and courage to put the stamp of guilty on the record of a
national hero. They know that they are going to be put under a microscope pending
their release of information, but Heras knew that he'd be under a microscope,
too. Is the test flawed? I'm not a scientist and can't say. I doubt that the
doctors that carried out the test are flawed though, so just exactly who are
we to believe - the lawyers?
Theron Colucci
Lawrenceville, GA
Friday, November 25, 2005
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to this letter
SFGP - Bring it back!
I was greatly disappointed to hear of the cancellation of next year's Barclay's
Global Investors Grand Prix. During the past several years, I have attended
the race as a spectator and a host, entertaining clients and potential corporate
sponsors. There are a limited number of great races with rich tradition in the
United States and San Francisco was well on its way to joining this elite group...clearly
there is a lot of 'politics' at play between the Mayor's office and Board of
Supervisors, but nobody is disputing the basic facts:
An independent study commissioned by the Convention & Visitors Bureau estimated
that the 2005 race generated more than US$10 million in economic benefits to
local business and as much as US$430 000 in taxes for the city.
The City negotiated a deal with the organizers in April of 2005 that included
40% of the event's profits (but no liability for losses?!?!) in exchange for
discounting fees for police services 50% for every dollar collected in taxes.
Wow! What a deal! Where can I go to get 40% of the profits, no risk of losses
and a guarantee that costs will be half of income?
One of the major complaints cited by some Supervisors was an unpaid bill for
police services from the 2004 race. However, the Mayor's office has indicated
the revised bill for 90K USD was only sent one business day before last week's
hearing. It is disingenuous to claim the organizers haven’t paid a 2004 bill
when they only received it yesterday! Since 2001, San Francisco cycling has
paid the city more than US$1.5 million for police services - that hardly sounds
like "a bad actor that has repeatedly refused to pay its bills" (Peskin).
Various sources have estimated that between 100,000and 500,000 spectators watch
the race every year.
The sport of cycling needs world class events like the SFGP if it is going
to compete in the sporting and entertainment sector against more ‘mainstream’
sports. If you live in San Francisco, urge your supervisors to focus on the
basic facts and economic benefits the race clearly brings to the city.
PS - You can suggest they save the aggression for attacking the Taylor Street
hills and why the disparaging remarks about Topeka? I thought San Francisco
was all about tolerance?
Paul Drees
Avondale, PA
Tuesday, November 29, 2005
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to this letter
San Francisco Grand Prix
This is a copy of what I sent to the San Francisco Chronicle and the San Francisco
Examiner on 11/27/05
Please bring the Grand Prix Back to San Francisco.
As a cycling fan since the 1970's when most Americans did not know what a peloton
was or the strategy behind bike races, I was most disappointed to find out that
the race organisers felt they had no choice but to cancel the 2006 Grand Prix
in San Francisco. I have been a volunteer for the event for the past four years.
Each of those years, family members came from out-of-state. We stayed in SF
hotels, ate at restaurants and honestly spent quite a bit of money considering
we could have just as easily driven home - only 35 miles from SF.
The Grand Prix put San Francisco on the map in yet another dimension showcasing
the great city that it is in terms of being possibly the most difficult bike
race in America. Yes, it is very expensive to run such a world class event.
A professional bike race does not generate revenue from ticket sales or entry
fees of thousands (such as Bay to Breakers).
Cycling as a sport has grown so much in this country with American athletes
like Lance Armstrong (seven-time Tour de France winner) and our own champion,
Levi Leipheimer (who lives in Santa Rosa).
I hope the City of San Francisco and the supervisors will take another look
at the value of such an event and realize that there are thousands of bike racing
fans just as there are Giants and 49er fans. Please bring the Grand Prix back
to San Francisco.
Cyndi Niendorf
Petaluma, CA
Monday, November 28, 2005
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to this letter
San Francisco GP
Dear Editor,
I would like to add my response to news of the demise of the San Francisco
Grand Prix in the hope that the city realises its loss. I am a British tourist
who deliberately called in on San Francisco for a few days, partly to take the
race in before moving on for the rest of my holiday. I thought the city and
the event were fantastic but the news of the event's demise has saddened me.
I had thought about returning to watch the race again.
I hope the city reconsiders its position and realises what a tourist attraction
the race actually is.
Andrew Woolf
Nottingham, UK
Friday, November 25, 2005
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this letter
Tyler Hamilton
This is exactly right - the politics of power take the stage with equal billing
to the science. It's OK for these doctors to identify and police rider behaviour
while violating the codes of their own organisation and profession? Hamilton
may or may not be guilty, but the doctor who divulged these things is cheating
and subverting what passes for due process in this circus. The UCI is a predatory
political zoo, WADA is run by a demagogue, their affiliates and partners are
as guilty by implication in their systems as is any rider. It takes a clean
organisation to run a clean testing programme, one would think; it takes an
organisation that doesn't practice cheating and manipulation to be credible
enough to enforce one.
Mark Jenkins
Portland, Oregon
Thursday, December 1, 2005
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this letter
Chasing an inevitable high
Dear Cyclingnews,
The concept of pushing further and harder and deeper than ever isn’t for nothing
is it? It’s for a high, an endorphin high: a release of serotonin, dopamine,
and norepinephrine. Granted this comes with a sense of accomplishment (especially
if one feels victorious). So add some adrenalin and for the men reading this,
elevated testosterone levels for a period of time. The recent news of those
involved in the Marco Pantani case brings up yet again the memory of a man which
should be instrumental in every cyclist's life. Whether we like it or not our
sport gives us a high just like a drug and pharmacologically a high very similar
to cocaine. Marco Pantani is one of the greatest cyclists of all time and he
fell to an addiction he held long before his first line of cocaine. Let us remember
him as the champion he was and heed him as warning of what can come from getting
lost in chasing a high; no matter what kind.
Konrad LeBas
Stratford, CT, USA
Tuesday, November 29, 2005
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to this letter
Circumstantial evidence
As another reader pointed out, Heras's TdF/Vuelta performances were too much
of a night/day contrast that he was sure to be scrutinized, especially when
a rider like Basso does the Giro/TdeF with very similar results. I would think
that at the level of fitness these riders have in July/August, any gains in
fitness through just training would be very incremental, seconds as opposed
to several minutes in a TT for example, whereas training with chemicals, you’re
winning mountain stages instead of coming in 36min down.
K LaFleur
USA
Tuesday, November 29, 2005
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to this letter
The burden of proof
Laurel Stephenson's statement on the Tyler Hamilton blood doping question that
"if the test was conducted correctly, then the antigens showing a 'mixed population'
would be the same on all the tests; regardless of the percentage" is not accurate.
If Hamilton had had a further transfusion between Athens and the Vuelta from
a different blood donor, then there would be new antigens present in the later
test. There is also the question that the only source for the changing antigens
issue is Hamilton's website.
Further, Timothy Shame states that it doesn't make sense that Lance Armstrong
would need erythropoietin to win the tour in 1999 but not need any drugs to
win subsequent tours. This is based on the belief that the athlete that tests
clean is not doping. We know that this may not always be the case eg David Millar
and Raimondo Rumsas (at least in the 2002 Tour). If Armstrong were using Epo
but changed to micro-dosing from 2000, he would test negative subsequently even
though he was doping. Also, athletes may be using substances that are performance
enhancing but cannot yet be tested for, eg, growth hormone. Mr Shame may well
believe in Armstrong's innocence but the argument that he tested negative many
times is certainly not any proof of anything.
Dr Pat Charles
Melbourne, Australia.
Monday, November 28, 2005
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to this letter
Global Doping
Well, I admit to being part of the largest doping scandal on the planet. I've
stood by and believed in the protestations of innocence by Tyler, Roberto and,
dare I say it, Lance (gasp), only to have evidence to the contrary thrown back
in my face. Yes, I am part of the ubiquitous doping problem by virtue of being
one of the biggest dopes to ever believe that cycling is basically a clean sport.
I've been a bigger dope than Virenque, and a bigger dope than Rumsas. I suppose
the only solace I can find is that I'll never be as big a dope as Vandenbrook.
That is surely a podium place I must reserve for him. From now on, I will suspect
first and cheer later. Pity.
Mitch Delmar
New Jersey, USA
Saturday, November 26, 2005
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letter
Graeme Obree
I wanted to encourage cycling fans to read Graeme Obree's story (which is now
for the first time available in the United States). As a cycling fan, I pushed
hard to encourage book houses to import this little known classic. Very few
people may know of Obree, save for us track specialists and hour enthusiasts.
But this book does prove two things with much more heart and soul than 'Rocky'
or similar sports stories.
First and foremost, that motivation and guts can make you faster than even
the Lotus-equipped superstars. Second, that winning medals and shattering world
records does not lead to some ultimate level of unending happiness and contentment.
Graeme has such a fond memory of the sound of the pistol which rang out at the
point when he broke Moser's record. There is the suffering most athletes have
never tasted, having ridden past the point of physical safety. Graeme literally
had blood in his lungs after pushing beyond the limit to take the world champion
pursuit, setting another world record as well. This is a man the UCI wanted
to hunt down for his unusual bike and positions (the 'Superman' and the tuck
or 'Praying Mantis'). Graeme has my respect and admiration.
Timothy Shame
USA
Thursday, December 1, 2005
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letter
Moron or marketing genius
I think it is unfair to the general public and their intellect to state they
will be apathetic towards the '06 Tour because Lance is not there. I began watching
the Tour during Lemond's time and I did not lose interest when he retired because
cycling is a fascinating, complex sport. Trying to learn the various nuances
of attacks and counter attacks, team and individual tactics, weather and road
conditions, etc. is enough to keep me tuned in post-Lemond, post-Armstrong and
post-anyone else. I have become fans of a variety of cyclists both American
and foreign. I have got up off my butt to see how difficult it is to ride 100+
miles. I watch because the SPORT is amazing. I will continue to watch and I
am betting millions of others will as well.
Jacki Strack
Thursday, December 1, 2005
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to this letter
Exciting again
Andy Galloway's letter was just about the best summation of the Lance Armstrong
fiasco I have read. I hope Lance gets to read it; it would make him feel good,
I'm sure. And more strength to SBS, they made my 69th year an absolute delight,
although I thought I might die from lack of sleep after three weeks. And why
is Cadel Evans being virtually ignored, when he finished eighth overall without
virtually any team support? Anyway, that's my lot; it’s my first response to
Cyclingnews - where would I be without you!
Don Thompson,
Geelong, Australia
Saturday, November 26, 2005
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this letter
Recent letters pages
Letters 2005
- November 25: San Francisco
GP, San Fran Grand Prix, San Fran GP, San Francisco city supervisor responds,
A tale of two cities, Tyler Hamilton - UCI leaks, Wire in the blood part II,
Tyler Hamilton, Hamilton wait time, Heras - three times lucky?, What is the
UCI doing?, Exciting again, Le Tour will live on without Armstrong, Moron
or marketing genius, A modest proposal, Weekend club racing world championships
- November 18: Heras - three
times lucky?, What is the UCI doing?, Exciting again, 2006 Tour de France,
Positive urine EPO tests, Le Tour will live on without Armstrong, LeBlanc's
Tour snub of Armstrong, Tour of Southland, Schlimmer response, Exercise-induced
asthma
- November 11: LeBlanc's Tour
snub of Armstrong, Exciting again, Le Tour will live on without Armstrong,
Armstrong, the TdF, etc, The 2006 Tour de France and Lance, Lance, Le Tour
and Ethics, Armstrong snub at Tour presentation, Pro wrestling and cycling,
Swimming and Cycling, What TdF?, Fair justice, Another doping letter, Where
has common sense gone?, Technology in cycling, Schlimmer
- November 4: LeBlanc's Tour
snub of Armstrong, The 2006 Tour de France and Lance, Le Tour de malcontent,
Tour de France 2006, What TdF?, Le Tour wounded, Gossip ruins cycling, EPO,
Exercise-induced asthma, Dick Pound and soccer, Tour of US, Tour of California,
Swimming and Cycling
- October 28: Le Tour de Malcontent,
LeBlanc's Tour snub of Armstrong, Caution needed, TdF 2006, Has cycling become
a honky tonk sport?, Tristan Hoffman, UN effort to fight doping in sport,
UCI ProTour, Cam Jennings, Exercise-induced asthma, Chris Sheppard is a class
act, Why?, Crocodile Trophy - worlds' toughest race?
- October 14: Infallible doping
tests?, Get on with your life, Doping. What else?, Pound versus Armstrong,
Hamilton, etc, L'Equipe forgot - or not, John Lieswyn, Eddy Merckx
- October 7: John Lieswyn, Bravo,
Lieswyn, 1999 Tour de France urine samples, Allan Butler, Tyler Hamilton,
Doping versus biomechanical enhancements, Doping control, McQuaid's image,
Comment on Chris Horner at Zuri Metzgete, Scientific proof, Thank goodness
Moreno lost, What has happened to American Cycling?, Pound versus Armstrong,
Hamilton, etc, French bias
- September 30: Petacchi and
McEwen's reactions, Ale-Jet, Ale-Jet blasts his critics..., Petacchi's class,
Petacchi, Bravo, Lieswyn, French bias, Tom Danielson, What has happened to
American Cycling?, Quote of the year, At the heart of the matter, Lance's
EPO tests, Doping control, On Pound and the like, Pound Ill informed, Verbruggen
is wrong, Doping and apparel
- September 23: 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
- 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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