Skip to main content

Distressing news on the cycling front

I just learned yesterday that Bjarne Riis, winner of the 1996 Tour d'France, admitted to using EPO from 1993 to 1998. And this comes after recent confessions by Erik Zabel and teammate Rolf Aldag for also using EPO.

Then there was Ivan Basso, winner of last years Giro d'Italia, and one of the team leaders on the Discovery Channel team, until he opted out of his contract after confessing to attempted doping.
Basso said he made contact with a doctor at the heart of the Spanish investigation, Eufemiano Fuentes, and gave him a blood sample with the intention of doping - but never actually did. .......

"It was a moment of weakness on my part," Basso said. "I accept responsibility and I am ready to face my punishment."

He still faces disciplinary action, and a likely suspension, regardless of his intentions.

As a cancer patient, I am keenly aware of the effects of EPO (having considered taking it myself due to a low hemoglobin count), as a performance enhancer, increasing the oxygen carrying capacity of the blood, so it isn't much of stretch to believe everyone is taking some performance enhancer in professional sports.  Heck there's even wide spread use among many amateur cyclists.

And what does this say about the allegations against Floyd Landis, and all the speculation surrounding Lance Armstrong?

At least the sport of cycling is trying to be up front with the problem, unlike a number of other sports.

Hopefully this will lead to either a cleaning up of the sport, or as Mark Cuban believes, a legalization of drugs not found to be detrimental to your health.

I'm just not sure who is going to be the arbiter for deciding what is not detrimental to ones health. Even EPO, while helping patients, also has some deleterious effects as well.

Comments

Becky said…
I don't fully understand how all this stuff works, but it seems to me that if you are to be judged on your physical abilities, doping seems to be cheating, because they wouldn't be doing something illegal it if they could perform on that level without it.

And while we're on the subject, can we get nudity back in the Olympics?
Marc said…
Well that's correct, and that is why there are rules, but when there is so much money and notoriety involved, some people will do anything to gain an advantage.

Sometimes they get caught, but many times it seems they don't.

And I wouldn't object to nudity in the Olympics. Heck I might even try and qualify! :)

Popular posts from this blog

My concerns reaffirmed today

When I was first diagnosed with MCL, I pretty much read just about everything I could get my hands on, I attended various conferences, and I talked to anyone who would listen. One of the most important lessons I learned, and which I've mentioned numerous times before was No one cares more about you than you. But in addition to that, I learned to fear the drug Doxorubicin , AKA Adriamycin, Doxil, Hydroxydoxorubicin, or more affectionately the Red Devil. Besides being a deadly chemical, as is the case with most chemotherapy drugs, it is one of the few chemotherapy drugs known to cause permanent heart damage. I even heard Dr. Sandra Horning , a noted Stanford lymphoma specialist, state at the first lymphoma conference I attended in LA, there was no evidence Doxorubicin provided any added benefit to chemotherapy protocols. This was music to my ears, since Doxorubicin is very common in most lymphoma treatment protocols. And even though Dr. Horning has since changed her tune [which my sk...

Bowling: A metaphor on life [sorta]

Over the past 15+ years the game of bowling has changed dramatically. Not only has the equipment changed, making it easier for bowlers of all ages and physical conditions to participate, and score well, but there have even been major advances to how the lanes are prepared for the start of bowling. No longer is it just heavy oil, light oil, long oil, short oil, or no oil, with the latest equipment, the amount of oil can be varied from front to back and side to side, producing a myriad of patterns designed to make the game more interesting, more challenging and as you might surmise, more frustrating. No longer does the "one ball fits all" approach work any more either. In order to navigate all the differing possible lane conditions, you need to have a varied selection of bowling balls. Most pros will tell you the average bowler needs 3 balls, plus a ball for spares, but to be an above average bowler you'll need at least 6 balls, with many possessing more than that. But just...

Fatigue! Part II - Maybe it is real?

Or it's actually Motivational Deficiency Disorder, MoDeD (pronounced Mo-Dee-Dee) for short. In a report this week by Roy Moynihan who reports for the British Medical Journal Austrailian scientists may have come across the reason for extreme laziness . The condition is claimed to affect up to one in five Australians and is characterised by overwhelming and debilitating apathy. Neuroscientists at the University of Newcastle in Australia say that in severe cases motivational deficiency disorder can be fatal, because the condition reduces the motivation to breathe. Neurologist Leth Argos is part of the team that has identified the disorder, which can be diagnosed using a combination of positron emission tomography and low scores on a motivation rating scale, previously validated in elite athletes. "This disorder is poorly understood," Professor Argos told the BMJ. "It is underdiagnosed and undertreated." Who knew? Maybe I have MoDeD, from my attempts to become a...