U.N.O. wrote:
YOU ARE SO STUPID THAT YOU CAN NOT EVEN READ.
I TOLD THE REASONS BEHIND VIREN`S MEDIOCRE (but still quite close to his best) PERFORMANCES BETWEEN OLYMPICS. HERE WE GO AGAIN:
Viren didn´t need doping (legal or illegal) to run pb´s of 7.43, 13.16 and 27.38. He was a phenomenal talent, running 13.55 when was 20years old with little training.
1973 was sub par because of lack of motivation (no big enough races) and training peace, -74 he ran a lot and trained hard but foot injury prevented the speedwork before european championships (was 3rd in ~13.25) and that injury forced him to go through big surgery and rehabilitation period which was the reason why -75 went by without real races. When he was back running, he was so eager that nothing couldn´t stop him.
SEE? There was a meeting between 10k and 5k races at Montreal, there they accused him beeing professional and later after 5000m race when bitter Kiwi´s had been given statements about Viren and blood doping, the journalists asked Viren what he had to say about it. He told them that he doesn´t even know what it is and asked the journalists tell him more about it. Also when they asked his secret he was so full of those questions that he said "reindeer milk" or "horny cows milk". He is very kind person but false arguments made him angry.
Say what? Calm down, buddy. I'm not quite as "STUPID" as you suggest. This entire line of discussion began as "debate" about how good or bad Viren was between Munich and Montreal. Of course Viren was physically gifted--that should go without saying. However, I provided a summary of his actual record in that period to counter the implication that he was consistently "good" on the world stage between '72 and '76.
You have provided reasons for Viren's "mediocity" during the '73, '74, '75 seasons without disproving that "mediocrity" (terms being relative here to the standards of world-class). I stated above that Viren was on top of the world in the '72 and '76 seasons but that--by any objective criteria--if his historical stature was to be judged ONLY by his 3 seasons in between, he'd be merely an athletics historical footnote. I really don't see how that's debatable. Few other 5th or 7th or 9th place world-rankers from that period are considered athletic gods today.
It's entirely possible that your explanation for his less-than-stellar performances in '73-'75, AND the assertions of Viren benefitting from a systematic blood-doping regime are BOTH TRUE. Your assertion that Viren "didn't need" anything other than his own ability to run 13:16 and 27:38 is not convincing, to me at least.