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Why Testosterone? Landis found Guilty, a no-Tolerance Approach?

Anti-Doping, Bicycle Racing, Floyd Landis No Comments

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This is a guest post from Dana Lookadoo www.PixelPosition.com
. Dana will be receiving a free BicycleFrenzy T-Shirt for contributing an article

Is this a farce or a justification?

Floyd Landis was found guilty of testosterone doping and the 1st Tour de France winner to be stripped of his title.

Is this France vs. America? Wasn’t it France that didn’t want any websites using dot com or the English language to be available for access in France?

It’s hard to say he is innocent when tests show that exogenous (manufactured) testosterone in his system.

Why testosterone? That’s what doesn’t make sense. Testosterone is not an immediate performance-enhancing drug but a recovery aid. Men are high in testosterone anyway, which gives their bodies strength and stamina, but it’s a long-term cumulative effect. EPO, a common doping drug that is often used in kidney patients who cannot cleanse their blood thoroughly and thus produce enough oxygen-carrying cells, would be more like Viagra. Short-term performance.

Why would Landis take testosterone for a 1-day recovery? He bonked and cracked the day before on a grueling stage (Stage 16 ), and then he comes back to win Stage 17. Shouldn’t his blood show a drug that has effects like EPO?

Was he setup by someone putting “testostogel” on his skin? Someone could have run up behind him and gave him a push. Osmosis (similar estrogen patches for women) and…whallah! Positive test!

I want to believe the system works. I want to believe in Landis. Can the two beliefs coincide? It’s the issue of the use of testosterone that raises disbelief.

His power output for Stage 17, the day he kicked butt and killed everyone, was not an exceptionally high wattage. He no longer was dehydrated and recovered. Could it have also been strategy and that no the other riders were watching someone else and not paying attention to who was chasing?

The Cycling News article of Sept 20, states that ” Landis’ defense was based around raising questions about the LNDD lab and how the sample was analysed.” Chances are the test was at least close to accurate, given they took 2 samples. But the question, which cannot be proven in a laboratory is, “Why Testosterone?”

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My 2 cents on Doping…

Anti-Doping, Bicycle Racing No Comments

If you follow professional cycling or any professional sport these days you have undoubtedly caught some of the buzz about doping. It seems that everyday in the news there is another allegation or confession of doping by another high level athlete.

Lance Armstrong was accused of doping but was cleared of all wrong doing. Floyd Landis is in the depths of a doping scandal that is raising questions of the validity and the reliability of the testing done at the same French labs that wrongfully accused Lance. The World Anti-Doping Agency or WADA is even under scrutiny for not following procedure and leaking information to the press. That’s just the tip of the iceberg. That’s just the two highest profile cases surrounding American riders.

The major media outlets seem to spend more time on the negative doping stories. What about the positive stories? What is the other side of the issue?

Many pro cycling teams have taken it upon themselves to stop doping on there own. Team Slipstream/Chipotle for example has started mandatory blood testing for all of its riders. Rider Danny Pate said, “I’ll give DNA. I’ll post all my information on the Internet. I’ll do anything to save the sport.

More and more teams will have to take Slipstream/Chipotle’s lead and set strict, documented, and provable guidelines for their riders. Riders will have to take Danny Pate’s position to ensure there are no suspicions. All the team directors and coaches will have to be vigilant to make sure their riders are not compromising their sport, their team, their sponsors, and most importantly themselves.

The atmosphere inside professional cycling needs to be one that is very hostile towards doping to the point that those involved in doping activity are forced out in the open, exposed to world, and not hidden in the locker rooms and team busses. The dopers need to be made into outsiders, part of the fringe.

As a fellow cyclist and a fan of bicycle racing of all varieties I really hope for the good of the sport that all of the doping troubles will come to an end and the sport can move forward.

On a side note…Rider Brad Huff of Slipstream/Chipotle is from Springfield, Missouri and grew up in Fairgrove. Pretty cool for us fellow Missourians.

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