first, there is no way a "dose of testosterone" will improve your performance the next day. even if he did it, it would have been over a period of time in order to get the benefits and all his previous and subsequent tests would have shown traces of it. the test for determining the testosterone/epitestosterone level is supposed to be very accurate, but there are cases of gross errors. i think most notably is the young rider (age 18) who was stripped of his license after a positive result, then fought the result and lost repeatedly until they found the same results in his younger 15-year-old brother.
second, dont believe a word greg lemond says. the man has totally lost it. he was an arrogant little rich boy at the start, a notorious whiner, and now is just bitter. he seems to deride any american who may be better than he was. he was good, and good for american cycling, but he is a blame-er - if he hadnt got shot, if hineault hadnt reneged, yadayadayada. the abuse? did it even happen?
third, lance always said its impossible to prove a negative, as in "i didnt do it, but how can i possibly prove it?" i dont like the guilty until proven innocent scenario, but i also dont like the defenses they present. focussing on the lab mistakes seems to be the lawyerly tactic of "throw everything out there and get 'em all confused about the details." id rather see a defense that consisted of the accused standing proud and saying No, I Never Once Doped In Any Way, and provide ALL the career test results before and after to cast doubt on this one sample. i used to think Tyler was innocent because he protested so strongly and was so believable, but the puerta scandal kind of shot that down. i respect david millar and stefano garzelli who admitted their mistakes and served their suspensions quietly then came back to race.
fourth, did floyd do it? i dont know, i hope not, his legal defense team has a good presentation about all the lab testing errors, which should be enough to acquit him, but WADA and the UCI are very proud and stubborn and dont seem to ever favor the athletes over "their system". which is one reason to hope he wins even if he did do it - to make WADA and UCI more accountable and change some much needed procedures (like having the A and B tests done by the same lab). i would at one time have said floyd couldnt have done it based on his sincere denials, but tyler ruined my trust in people's innocence. i used to think "why would he be protesting so hard at such expense if he was guilty," but theres a LOT at stake pending the outcome so i dont hold with that so much any more. less gullible, more cynical, i guess.
finally, floyd, i hope you didnt do it. please convince me and everybody else. restore my faith in you.



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