Check the name. Younger being trolled by a person pretending to be someone else
test2 wrote:
Taking a couple sentences out of order, I'd like to make a few points.
rekrunnner wrote:These "controversies" you speak of are all readily explainable when you presume innocence instead of guilt.
For someone who didn't presume anything about Salazar's guilt (e.g. me) the androgel experiment on Salizar's sons looks very bad because this experiment gives a coach precisely what he needs to dope his athletes. Yes, his sabotage justification is possible but it's not particularly believable which leads me to:
rekrunnner wrote:
...He's quite the innovative genius. Always looking ahead and foreseeing possible problems. Always looking out for his athletes.
I agree Salazar is smart which is what makes it so hard to wrap my head around his explanation for this Androgel-positive-test-triggering experiment because the risk/reward balance is so heavily skewed against running this test. On one hand you have the small chance that an enemy of the NOP would secretly rub androgel on Rupp but on the other hand the much larger chance that this test become public and everyone assume the entire NOP is dirty to the core.
If Salazar really is being honest, running this test amounts to a colossal lapse in judgement, perhaps clinical paranoia. Just to throw out a pet theory but when the Propublica articles first came out it occurred to me that if Salazar has a paranoid mental health condition it explains some of the evidence and criticisms of him, for example, the androgel test on his sons, the pills mailed in hollowed out books, the perceived secrecy surrounding Salazar and Rupp's "inner circle." My broader point is that Salazar would need to be crazy to run this androgel test for the reason given.