COUNT ALL of the records: national records, masters records, indoor records. Do what you do with numbers and COUNT them to look at these regional, national, and area records within an absolute global perspective. Draw a number line to scale, and look at the times on a scale from 1985 world record to the world record that existed at that time.Look at the distribution of 1) non-Africans, vs. 2) North Africans vs. 3) East Africans. You will find three very different patterns, with non-Africans clustered around 1985.My goalpost (look again at the subject line):Canova says: EPO doesn't help top Kenyans in top shapePopular response: Canova is crazy/lying/doping -- EPO helps top Kenyans because studies show it works for everyone, runners, walkers, cyclists and sprintersMy observation with records: (Just like we observed with the Russian men) Non-African athletes have not progressed significantly since 1985 -- not just some narrow subset I cherry-picked for some select years, but *ALL* non-African origin athletes for the *TWO DECADES* between 1990-2009, commonly referred to as the EPO-era, before the ABP.People argue that EPO cannot help Kenyans less than non-Africans.With the same physiological justifications, I argue that EPO cannot help Kenyans more than non-Africans.
solution seeker wrote:
No it's not clear what you mean, You are now taking national records and masters road race records into consideration yet you chose to discount European indoor records in previous posts when considering whether EPO works in Western elites.
Anyway if you are now considering national records then yet again you ignore that in addition to your two poster boys for the efficacy of EPO in elites that Alberto Garcia set several Spanish national records, as did Sergio Sanchez. Interestingly Alberto Garcia'a national 5000m record was broken by someone caught red handed taking blood transfusions. Julio Rey broke the Spanish national record in the marathon and he was caught using nandralone, a drug which is used to potentiate the effects of EPO so you can join the dots there. There are other examples but all of these fit into your goalposts of "RECORDS".
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Boulami is Morroccan but relevant because you widened the debate (or shifted the goalpoasts) to whether EPO works in any world class athlete regardless of their geographical location (I copied from your previous post so that readers can follow). He tested positive for EPO and to date no one has surpassed his performance for the 3000m steeplechase.
Anyway going full circle, for your argument to be valid you have to be assuming that every single elite level European or African distance runner competing in the 1990s to 2000s was using EPO. That is something that you do not know and that is why yet again, with the information available to us, the only way to examine whether EPO works in elites is to look at individual cases where you have good reason to assume that an elite was using EPO.