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What Don’t I Know? May 9, 2007

Posted by Steve in : Tour De France , add a comment

dam.jpgAnother day — another suspension of some guys whose cycling teams less than 10 days ago denied reports in the Italian press that the team had sidelined it key riders. Is there something I don’t know?

Have the team’s managers been worn down by the authorities’ juggernaut or do they really know something about Operacion Puerto that nobody is talking about?

In a press release today, their Tinkoff Credit Systems team announced that Tyler Hamilton and Jörg Jaksche will not race the 2007 Giro d’Italia and have been suspended indefinitely “until the competent authorities … have finally sorted out all the implication of the riders in Operación Puerto“. Team management said the decision was aimed “at relieving pressure created around the Giro … and on the team itself” after statements made by other squads that decided to deny Giro starts to riders thought to have been implicated in the Spanish blood-doping inquiry. In addition, German sprinter Danilo Hondo has also been suspended, although Tinkoff vows to “fully support” the fight against doping pressed by UCI president Pat McQuaid and race organizers.

This was a HUGE u-turn for Tinkoff, which on April 30 denied reports in the Italian press that the team had sidelined Hamilton and Jaksche, when the GM told Velo News “For me, Tyler and Jörg can start the Giro. Stories that they are suspended are not true.” “Tinkoff has a list of 12 riders that can go to the Giro. Tyler is on that list and we expect him to race.”

Hamilton also held out great hope, saying “Everything is for the Giro. I want to be on the podium in Milan,” at the Tour de Georgia.

What is happening here…Is the dam about to break? What do you think?

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“Let The Drug Free Chess Games Begin” November 30, 2006

Posted by Steve in : Tour De France , add a comment

From humble beginnings in 1951, the Asian Games have blossomed to become the second largest sporting event in the world, only superseded by the Olympic Summer Games themselves. The 15th Asian Games, held in Doha, Qatar, will host more than 10,500 athletes from 45 countries and regions.

My favorite part? The drug-free environment mandated in the chess matches! Yes, Dick Pound would be proud of this ruthless focus on stopping the doping of chess players!

In its official press release, the organizing committee of Doha 2006 trumpets that chess players, like athletes in any of the other sports at the Asian Games, will be required to undergo doping tests in Doha. “The chess athletes will be treated exactly the same as any other sport,” said Julian Hocken, the manager of the venue where the chess competition will be held.

All the blog readers at Trust But Verify will get a huge kick out of this one…….

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Floyd Landis Shows His Cards October 12, 2006

Posted by Steve in : Weblog, Tour De France, Breaking News , add a comment

In a novel approach that could challenge the conventions of sports anti-doping disputes, the winner of this year’s Tour de France took his case to the public today with an online multimedia presentation at www.FloydLandis.com. Here are the Floyd Landis Legal Submittal 1 and the Floyd Landis Legal Submittal 2 he is getting ready to file. Floyd Landis, the Mennonite cyclist who is accused of having high testosterone to epitestosterone ratio during the Tour, provided a PowerPoint defense and 350 pages of material from the French laboratory that handled drug testing for the world’s premier cycling event. Landis, who recently had hip-replacement surgery, faces a two-year ban and the loss of his Tour title. He won the race in dramatic fashion July 23 after faltering during one of the final mountain stages.

After repeatedly maintaining his innocence, Landis has now taken the unprecedented step of supporting his statements with documents. Check out Trust but Verify for a comprehensive blog of all facts and the current status.  The defense’s central arguments are the French laboratory mishandled his urine samples, did not follow standard protocols, and (more…)

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