Cycling is still the most tested sport in the world. Lance used to get woken at 3 am from his own home by random testers.You saw Linus Gerdemann yesterday just about fall off his bike at the end of the Stage and get half dragged by the soignieur straight to the testing caravan.
And in another part of the world that shall remain nameless football players and atheletes are given the timetable of drug-testing dates at the beginning of the season!
Regulation is simply that. It should not be about saying "I caught you!" or about hounding people or being suspicious of everybody, especially someone who does well. It should be routine and dry and we should take the sting, never-ceasing suspicion and "shock! horror!" out of it. And some people's phony righteousness as well.
We should get to the point in cycling that you test because you test. Not because "they" are searching and not because "they" want to "catch" him/her in the act.
I worked for a while in quality control and the first thing I learned was to "just do it"; without worrying, without hoping, without expecting, without giving workers the feeling that they were always under the microscope or on camera. If it's there (or not) the testing will show it and *then* you take appropriate action .(Get your knickers in a twist for starters!) Same here; first let's get the testing systematic completely routine and then we will find what is there to find. Let's take all this cat-and-mouse out of it. And we can help best by not playing into the media frenzies of "X undergoes drug test! Exclusive!" and "Did he or didn't he?".
Self-regulation (either individual or the professional body) is the best regulation.
Last edited by margo49; 07-14-2007 at 09:26 PM.
All you need is love...la-dee-da-dee-da...all you need is love!