You still seem to be fundamentally confused. I pointed you to a reference, which succinctly talked about 3-papers and a book, and somehow you skipped over the 3-peer reviewed papers, and only found the book, pointing out books are not peer-reviewed. I know this is your job, so you must know how footnotes work. I'll drill down directly to the contradiction (again): The peer-reviewed papers repeatedly say the legality of blood testing is not sure and would be easily challenged. The Sunday Times say that not only was sanctioning possible, it was a duty and a moral obligation, and an act of negligence not to try. This contrary stance in the legal strength of blood test results to lead to a sanction (first no, then yes) can be rightly called a "contradiction". It is correct to say "what they said publicly contradicted their own peer-reviewed research". If you prefer, Ashenden and Parisotto were and are competent ABP scientists who just acted incompetently: - When accusing the IAAF of inaction, when they could not have possibly known the IAAF's response - When insisting that sanctions were possible before 2009, and that the IAAF was negligent for not pursuing them, when they were possibly in the best position to know better We know the WADA-IC rejected both of these conclusions. You are also being highly misleading by ignoring the timeline -- the legal surety only changed in 2009: - IAAF, WADA and CAS agree with "peer-reviewed" Ashenden and Parisotto that pre-2009 blood values are an investigative tool - No one, not even "peer-reviewed" Ashenden and Parisotto, agrees with "Sunday Times" Ashenden and Parisotto that pre-2009 blood values alone could have lead to sanctions -- this is the "contradiction" - IAAF, WADA and CAS and Ashenden and Parisotto agree that post-2009 blood values alone, when collected according to ABP protocols established finally in 2009, can lead to sanctions As active competent scientists in the development of the ABP, they must have known the timeline of ABP implementation, and the importance of following the ABP protocols, developed as a result of much of their own research, in eliminating the legal uncertainties. You should take all the credit for this sidetracking of the discussion by failing to acknowledge the contradiction that his been placed in front of your nose.
casual obsever wrote:
rekrunner wrote:
I don't see how you can be confused by me referring you to the section 4.1.
I am neither confused nor do I ignore it. The question was about evidence for your evidently false statement:
rekrunner wrote:
Also, with respect to Ashenden and Parisotto, we should just stick to their peer-reviewed quotes, as much of what they said publicly contradicted their own peer-reviewed research, something confirmed by the WADA-IC.
False statement, because not only could you not provide a reference, you know finally admitted what I've been saying all along:
rekrunner wrote:
What is clear is that "peer-reviewed" Ashenden/Parisotto, describe blood testing as a screening tool, and say it cannot be considered as definitive proof on its own, and questioning the legal surety, while the "Sunday Times" Ashenden/Parisotto argued that blood data alone was sufficient to lead to sanctions.
Exactly my point. See for example:
casual obsever wrote:
The IAAF did wonder why they changed their mind between Parisotto's book in 2006 (normally not peer-reviewed, btw) and the 2015 IAAF scandal, that's all. Specifically back then, they thought that one can't use off scores etc. to ban athletes, and now they think the opposite (like IAAF, WADA and CAS do now too). Most likely in the meantime they had seen, like we all did, that one can - and did - ban athletes plainly based on abnormal blood values.
The irony is that IAAF, WADA and CAS agree with Ashenden and Parisotto: yes, blood testing results can be considered as definitive proof of doping. Yet you prefer their original opinion.
rekrunner wrote:
The pre-2009 blood data is reliable for some purposes, like scientific analysis, and can be reliable (but not necessarily) as secondary evidence to extend a sanction. The claim in question was regarding obtaining a sanction on the blood data alone.
Exactly, and that's really the only difference in opinion here. The IAAF says the data were good enough - in some cases - to extend a ban, and Parisotto and Ashenden think the data were also good enough - in some cases - to decide on a ban.
Parisotto and Ashenden wrote:
In our opinion, if the pre-2009 data are considered sufficiently reliable to extend a sanction, then they are also sufficiently reliable to undertake our analyses.
No need for all these petty snide remarks from the IAAF and you about Parisotto and Ashenden.
But granted, you succeeded again in getting the discussion off track with your insults towards selected experts. So congrats, I guess.