Corrections to the article that Jeff Manning needs to make:
Drop "accused" her of using performance enhancing drugs. There was a positive test. This is not an accusation.
who are the "Others" who believe her? family and friends? I mean of course her mom believes her. But I'd say if the "others" are fans, we clearly don't believe her. And "respected" coach is a bit of a stretch at this point.
Quote TT directly. The way it's worded suggests that TT is still very skeptical of Houlihan.
--She did not order a pork burrito. she ordered a carne asada burrito
--she also has not maintained that the burrito was the source of the nandrolone. She suggested that it might not actually be the case too.
--the two scenarios paragraph is ridiculous. There was a positive test. So either she is guilty on purpose or guilty on accident.
--It wasn't cranny she was with when she discovered the positive test, it was Schweitzer.
--She will be 32 when the ban lifts, not 33.
--Gatlin was hardly celebrated as a lovable legend.
Other thoughts on the article.
--Shelby made a lot of money by normal standards and asking for money through a go fund me was disgusting. She should have gotten a job to support herself instead. it's shameful that all she's done is DoorDash while also asking for money.
--all of this stupid "she loves to run! she likes the hurt" garbage, like doesn't every distance runner love to run? Along with the descriptions of her blue green eyes and tiny body, it just creates this idea that she is the victim of something and not the clear perpetrator. Why didn't manning talk about the athletes she stole titles from instead?
There is no such think as a positive test in the Wada code.
You don’t think this is referring to a “positive test”?
”Sufficient proof of an anti-doping rule violation under Article 2.1 is established by any of the following: presence of a Prohibited Substance or its Metabolites or Markers in the Athlete’s A Sample where the Athlete waives analysis of the B Sample and the B Sample is not analyzed; or, where the Athlete’s B Sample is analyzed and the analysis of the Athlete’s B Sample confirms the presence of the Prohibited Substance or its Metabolites or Markers found in the Athlete’s A Sample; or where the Athlete’s A or B Sample is split into two parts and the analysis of the confirmation part of the split Sample confirms the presence of the Prohibited Substance or its Metabolites or Markers found in the first part of the split Sample or the Athlete waives analysis of the confirmation part of the split Sample.”
There is no such think as a positive test in the Wada code.
You don’t think this is referring to a “positive test”?
”Sufficient proof of an anti-doping rule violation under Article 2.1 is established by any of the following: presence of a Prohibited Substance or its Metabolites or Markers in the Athlete’s A Sample where the Athlete waives analysis of the B Sample and the B Sample is not analyzed; or, where the Athlete’s B Sample is analyzed and the analysis of the Athlete’s B Sample confirms the presence of the Prohibited Substance or its Metabolites or Markers found in the Athlete’s A Sample; or where the Athlete’s A or B Sample is split into two parts and the analysis of the confirmation part of the split Sample confirms the presence of the Prohibited Substance or its Metabolites or Markers found in the first part of the split Sample or the Athlete waives analysis of the confirmation part of the split Sample.”
If you are going to debate Wada you must use the terms that they actually use and not invent your own. You can’t assume that your understanding of words and concepts outside of Wada are transferable to Wada however sensible you may feel that is.And I can very much see how sensible that might seem.
If you read the copious technical documents from WADA and then begin to relate them to the debates within decisions you will begin to see my point more clearly.
This has been my theory with SH all along - she was not doing nandrolone by itself, but ‘stacking’ it with other drugs or taking something else which was contaminated with it. Either way, still guilty and much more believable/plausible than the boar nuts burrito story.
this is THE Houlihan theory, all but accepted fact.
she wasn't taking nandrolone independently, but she was probably doing a cocktail of some kind.
The biggest question is, how many more BTC-ers were using the same cocktail?
My personal question is for Colleen--did it cause her to leave?
Colleen Quiqley also fits the above description (non-medalist, not particularly attractive, charismatic or interesting) and she doesn't have a regular job.
Isn't she getting married to a sugar daddy in finance? That's her life plan it seems not that there is anything wrong with that.
Colleen Quigley is literally marrying her high school sweetheart.
My personal question is for Colleen--did it cause her to leave?
No, she was forced out by Nike. They offered her a super low deal, knowing she wouldnt be able to accept it and that way she left on her without it looking like they dropped her.
Colleen and Shelby have beef with each other and possibly pork. There are theories that Colleen had a hand in making sure Shelby got this ban.
So this is actually an incredibly tone-deaf and poor choice of words from a person head of a major anti-doping agency in sport. It's actually f-ing unbelievable to be honest.
For the head of an organization that is fundamentally about upholding ethics to leverage the guilt of an athlete vs a rival organization for (presumably) his or his organizations gain is unconceivable. Because yes the implication and default interpretation for many readers, especially the less-informed which are the vast majority, is that Houlihan in fact isn't guilty. No he doesn't say this, but the narrative of his comments pertain to that.
So if he doesn't think she is guilty (which is a) hard to believe or b) we have no idea) this statement is about as wreckless as possible. What an unbelievable a$hole, he should have been removed after these comments immediately.
Who is the deaf one, if you are not actually listening to what Tygart is saying -- not just here, but in many statements since WADA Code changes in 2015, when the burden of proving intent shifted to the athlete to prove not intentional?
WADA says on their website: "WADA was established on 10 November 1999 to protect athletes ..."
while the AIU says "it is the Athletics Integrity Unit’s role to drive cheats out of our sport, and to do everything within its power to support honest athletes ...
Tygart has told us repeatedly that, in some cases, the WADA Code -- with its principle of strict liability, and shifting of burden onto the athlete to solve the mystery in order to prove their innocence, combined with the risk today of ingesting small amounts of many banned substances in USDA approved food, and the small likelihood of the athlete being able to prove it -- is causing WADA to fail to live up to one of the reasons it was established -- to protect athletes.
Similarly, the AIU promises to do "everything in its power to support honest athletes", while they appear to have done the opposite for Houlihan -- done everything in its power to argue that Houlihan is not an honest athlete for not being able to prove the contents of a long consumed/discarded meal. For example, it was well within the AIU's power, and WADA guidelines, in light of the ambiguities, to declare the result an ATF and request more tests. The AIU did not do everything in its power.
Just curious, is there a particular race or races where it seemed like SH was "enhanced?"
I'd like to provide a thorough response and a couple of these races have been mentioned already.
2018 Pre Classic and 2018 15 US Title--blowing by Jenny Simpson, the world silver medalist from the year before was nuts. She came out of no where and her monster kick had no rival. They all called it a "changing of the guard" but was it? Jenny was the world silver medalist! Shelby did poorly at worlds the year before. She came out of no where.
14:34 5k (2018)--Shalane and Jerry thought the reasonable goal would be for Shelby to break 15, but she kept "surprising" them with her fitness from that year. Crazy to think a coach could be surprised by his own athlete's fitness...
2019--US XC Title (10K) Indoor mile runner up, 2 mile champ--Shelby had a busy busy couple weeks of racing going from dominating a 10K XC to circling back at the US championships and winning the 2 Mile and placing runner up in the mile to a way more rested Steeple Squigs. The amount she was willing to put on her legs and still come away with a 1-2-1 finish is pretty extreme at the pro level. Mind you, she was the ONLY athlete to compete at both USA indoor and XC.
2019 World Outdoor 1500--this gets overshadowed by Sifan's disgusting "performance" as it should but Shelby running 3:54.99 was. a huge leap from her previous PR 3:57, which was a huge leap from her previous year's best 4:03. Going from 4:09 in college to 4:03 as a pro is understandable, but the continued jumps is a little hard to justify.
2020 14:23 AR--slashing yet another eleven seconds off her PR and AR, the thing that struck me is that Shelby closed in a 60. A 60! in a dual with Karissa. No American woman has ever gone under 14:30 and she made it look easy. Again continued progression and improvement is suspect. Shelby makes it look easy.
Note that Houlihan's sample collection was on 15 December 2020 at 6:15 am. To the extent you suggest or believe that any of these above races were influenced by doping, or doping cocktails, there is no real evidence for that, and requires further imagination.
Note also that it is undisputed that the nandrolone was ingested, and the quantity, to use WADA's own words was "in the low ng/mL range (< 10 ng/mL)". According to studies on ingestion of steroids, the ingestion of quantities in the low ng/ml range is unlikely to impact performance, mainly because most of it is filtered out on "first pass" before even getting into the blood stream.
If micro-dosing/ingesting nandrolone, with or without other cocktails is so effective, it seems unusual that the USA would have waited as long as 2018-2020 for someone to achieve these kinds of jumps in and these levels of American record performances.
You live in a fantasy world if you imagine for one second that athletes can or do take the care that you suggest Brady does. And do you know that Brady has his cook monitor, record and keep samples of all his food.
There are thousands of athletes who are on various testing lists that are on the breadline let alone afford to avoid cheap food outlets or a chef. Get real.
Well, then I guess they keep taking risks by eating sketchy things and taking sketchy supplements. The athletes that do that are taking a known risk and shouldn't be complaining when they are caught.
Logging what you eat requires nothing more than a $0.99 pad of paper and a pen, often free at just about any business. I'm sure Nike could have even ponied up for a free pad and pen for Shelby to log what exactly she ate and from where along with logging her shady supplements.
You aren't being realistic. I think no one reasonably considered/considers eating pork from a food truck in Oregon sketchy/risky. Supplements are a different story, as WADA calls that out specifically saying athletes are at their own risk in this unregulated industry.
Just logging what you eat on a $0.99 pad, would not be enough. If we consider a hypothetical scenario where nandrolone comes from meat and organs mixed into a spicy chorizo from an intact boar fed a diet of soy, what can the athlete write in the log that would convince a panel on the balance of probability?
Well, then I guess they keep taking risks by eating sketchy things and taking sketchy supplements. The athletes that do that are taking a known risk and shouldn't be complaining when they are caught.
Logging what you eat requires nothing more than a $0.99 pad of paper and a pen, often free at just about any business. I'm sure Nike could have even ponied up for a free pad and pen for Shelby to log what exactly she ate and from where along with logging her shady supplements.
You aren't being realistic. I think no one reasonably considered/considers eating pork from a food truck in Oregon sketchy/risky. Supplements are a different story, as WADA calls that out specifically saying athletes are at their own risk in this unregulated industry.
Just logging what you eat on a $0.99 pad, would not be enough. If we consider a hypothetical scenario where nandrolone comes from meat and organs mixed into a spicy chorizo from an intact boar fed a diet of soy, what can the athlete write in the log that would convince a panel on the balance of probability?
Even if they could convince them they still get sanctioned.
Well, then I guess they keep taking risks by eating sketchy things and taking sketchy supplements. The athletes that do that are taking a known risk and shouldn't be complaining when they are caught.
Logging what you eat requires nothing more than a $0.99 pad of paper and a pen, often free at just about any business. I'm sure Nike could have even ponied up for a free pad and pen for Shelby to log what exactly she ate and from where along with logging her shady supplements.
You aren't being realistic. I think no one reasonably considered/considers eating pork from a food truck in Oregon sketchy/risky. Supplements are a different story, as WADA calls that out specifically saying athletes are at their own risk in this unregulated industry.
Just logging what you eat on a $0.99 pad, would not be enough. If we consider a hypothetical scenario where nandrolone comes from meat and organs mixed into a spicy chorizo from an intact boar fed a diet of soy, what can the athlete write in the log that would convince a panel on the balance of probability?
What is the universally accepted meaning of “ a supplement “?
So this is actually an incredibly tone-deaf and poor choice of words from a person head of a major anti-doping agency in sport. It's actually f-ing unbelievable to be honest.
For the head of an organization that is fundamentally about upholding ethics to leverage the guilt of an athlete vs a rival organization for (presumably) his or his organizations gain is unconceivable. Because yes the implication and default interpretation for many readers, especially the less-informed which are the vast majority, is that Houlihan in fact isn't guilty. No he doesn't say this, but the narrative of his comments pertain to that.
So if he doesn't think she is guilty (which is a) hard to believe or b) we have no idea) this statement is about as wreckless as possible. What an unbelievable a$hole, he should have been removed after these comments immediately.
You have missed the point. Guilty of breaking the rules but no guilt for cheating. I suggest you read the rules and then you may grasp what is being said.
What point exactly did I miss? I never even used the word "cheat" in what I wrote - you quoted it so go back and check. I used the word guilty, which she was found to be, and in this context it means guilty in breaking the rules which is enough for her to go bye-bye for 4 years.
So I suggest you read the post again and then you may grasp what is being said.
You know honestly the single biggest issue with this message board isn't peoples opinion or points of view - it's what you just did here. People like yourself don't even read other peoples opinions and concoct sh$t out of thin air to perpetuate their agenda/narrative. In this case your whole deal is suggesting that Shelby wasn't found to be a cheater, just a breaker of rules and that doesn't necessarily mean she cheated. Yeah yeah, f-ing yeah - what an doyen of policy interpretation and legislative nuance you are. What you are is an a$$hole like Travis Tygart.
So this is actually an incredibly tone-deaf and poor choice of words from a person head of a major anti-doping agency in sport. It's actually f-ing unbelievable to be honest.
For the head of an organization that is fundamentally about upholding ethics to leverage the guilt of an athlete vs a rival organization for (presumably) his or his organizations gain is unconceivable. Because yes the implication and default interpretation for many readers, especially the less-informed which are the vast majority, is that Houlihan in fact isn't guilty. No he doesn't say this, but the narrative of his comments pertain to that.
So if he doesn't think she is guilty (which is a) hard to believe or b) we have no idea) this statement is about as wreckless as possible. What an unbelievable a$hole, he should have been removed after these comments immediately.
Who is the deaf one, if you are not actually listening to what Tygart is saying -- not just here, but in many statements since WADA Code changes in 2015, when the burden of proving intent shifted to the athlete to prove not intentional?
WADA says on their website: "WADA was established on 10 November 1999 to protect athletes ..."
while the AIU says "it is the Athletics Integrity Unit’s role to drive cheats out of our sport, and to do everything within its power to support honest athletes ...
Tygart has told us repeatedly that, in some cases, the WADA Code -- with its principle of strict liability, and shifting of burden onto the athlete to solve the mystery in order to prove their innocence, combined with the risk today of ingesting small amounts of many banned substances in USDA approved food, and the small likelihood of the athlete being able to prove it -- is causing WADA to fail to live up to one of the reasons it was established -- to protect athletes.
Similarly, the AIU promises to do "everything in its power to support honest athletes", while they appear to have done the opposite for Houlihan -- done everything in its power to argue that Houlihan is not an honest athlete for not being able to prove the contents of a long consumed/discarded meal. For example, it was well within the AIU's power, and WADA guidelines, in light of the ambiguities, to declare the result an ATF and request more tests. The AIU did not do everything in its power.
And even more insufferable than the "don't read anything just pander my narrative" d-ckheads that pervade this forum are people like you who love playing the devils advocates of grammar and terminology and living in this grey area of "well if it walks like a duck and sounds like a duck, it might be a duck but you can't say for sure because, well, what really constitutes a duck"
"the AIU does everything in its power to support honest athletes". Okay, and? There was a lengthy and elaborate process which I'm sure cost a lot of money to determine if Houlihan was honest or not. It was determined she wasn't. Maybe if she had just actually been honest about how 2.5 times the legal limit of nandrolone was found in her system the AIU would have then supported her (maybe a palatable 2 year ban vs 4 for example). But the statement reads "support honest athletes" and last time I checked she made the choice to go with a story that was thoroughly debunked which I'm pretty sure makes her dishonest. Like isn't this the way honesty works? If I steal a packet of gum from the store, I get caught and say I bought it then camera footage shows that I just pocketed it, am I not presumed in that instance to be have been dishonest?
So the AIU has not infringed on any of their "obligations" at all. But of course this is when someone like yourself gets to work right? "They could have ordered more tests, done more, asked more experts, turned heaven and earth upside down to support and protect this young woman". And when exactly does that end? Seriously. By that logic we would simply never weed out any rule-breakers in the sport because "doing everything" is simply an infinite f-ing landscape. What dream world do you live in? Your expectation is that WADA/the AIU does this for every rule-breaking athlete in their jurisdiction? So in this case your expectation of the AIU was that even though her story was shown to be dishonest they should keep going until someone says she's not dishonest?
Your gimmick is so transparent. Just smart enough to pick apart the statement you did and think you are asking poignant questions that point to some kind of conspiracy. Just smart enough to push a topic into that grey zone of infinite ambiguities and sit back in the rocking chair and say "so you can't say for certain it's really that duck can you". But for every person like you there is always someone smarter than can pick you out in a crowd and in this case it's me. Shelby broke the rules, interpret that as you may (premeditated cheater, inadvertent cheater, liar, misguided) - it doesn't matter. She's gone, so is your comically transparent logic.
Shelby broke the rules, interpret that as you may (premeditated cheater, inadvertent cheater, liar, misguided) - it doesn't matter. She's gone, so is your comically transparent logic.
+1
Fortunately. Drug cheats out! But, the facts won't stop rekrunner aka liar sorer aka twoggle from repeating his visibly nonsensical talking points. Over and over and over again, as history shows.
If you are going to debate Wada you must use the terms that they actually use and not invent your own. You can’t assume that your understanding of words and concepts outside of Wada are transferable to Wada however sensible you may feel that is.And I can very much see how sensible that might seem.
If you read the copious technical documents from WADA and then begin to relate them to the debates within decisions you will begin to see my point more clearly.
How about words like "positive sample" or "tested positive" or "a positive test"?
If you are going to debate Wada you must use the terms that they actually use and not invent your own. You can’t assume that your understanding of words and concepts outside of Wada are transferable to Wada however sensible you may feel that is.And I can very much see how sensible that might seem.
If you read the copious technical documents from WADA and then begin to relate them to the debates within decisions you will begin to see my point more clearly.
How about words like "positive sample" or "tested positive" or "a positive test"?
Is CAS allowed to use words like "positive test" and "tested positive"?
Can't believe there are still so many people talking about food contamination. Say it with me 'the nandralone wasn't from a burrito!' The science showed the likelihood of it being from contaminated food was virtually zero. Ross Tucker told the Brojo's this and yet they are still talking about food contamination and Shelby getting off because of it if USADA tested her on their podcast. Shelby pretty much admitted they only used the argument of the burrito because they couldn't think of anything better. She had nandralone in her system above legal limits, the burrito excuse is BS, she got a ban. What other option was there, believe everyone who says they didn't cheat and let them off? There is nothing wrong the the anti doping system in this case. There was no other option. Trying to make out there are major problems with anti doping so one of your faves is looked upon favourably and you don't have to admit you were wrong is some weak ass BS.
And even more insufferable than the "don't read anything just pander my narrative" d-ckheads that pervade this forum are people like you who love playing the devils advocates of grammar and terminology and living in this grey area of "well if it walks like a duck and sounds like a duck, it might be a duck but you can't say for sure because, well, what really constitutes a duck"
"the AIU does everything in its power to support honest athletes". Okay, and? There was a lengthy and elaborate process which I'm sure cost a lot of money to determine if Houlihan was honest or not. It was determined she wasn't. Maybe if she had just actually been honest about how 2.5 times the legal limit of nandrolone was found in her system the AIU would have then supported her (maybe a palatable 2 year ban vs 4 for example). But the statement reads "support honest athletes" and last time I checked she made the choice to go with a story that was thoroughly debunked which I'm pretty sure makes her dishonest. Like isn't this the way honesty works? If I steal a packet of gum from the store, I get caught and say I bought it then camera footage shows that I just pocketed it, am I not presumed in that instance to be have been dishonest?
So the AIU has not infringed on any of their "obligations" at all. But of course this is when someone like yourself gets to work right? "They could have ordered more tests, done more, asked more experts, turned heaven and earth upside down to support and protect this young woman". And when exactly does that end? Seriously. By that logic we would simply never weed out any rule-breakers in the sport because "doing everything" is simply an infinite f-ing landscape. What dream world do you live in? Your expectation is that WADA/the AIU does this for every rule-breaking athlete in their jurisdiction? So in this case your expectation of the AIU was that even though her story was shown to be dishonest they should keep going until someone says she's not dishonest?
Your gimmick is so transparent. Just smart enough to pick apart the statement you did and think you are asking poignant questions that point to some kind of conspiracy. Just smart enough to push a topic into that grey zone of infinite ambiguities and sit back in the rocking chair and say "so you can't say for certain it's really that duck can you". But for every person like you there is always someone smarter than can pick you out in a crowd and in this case it's me. Shelby broke the rules, interpret that as you may (premeditated cheater, inadvertent cheater, liar, misguided) - it doesn't matter. She's gone, so is your comically transparent logic.
I don't think it even walks or quacks like a duck. I interpret it as she broke rules that do not require establishing intent, fault, negligence, or knowing use, and she was not able to prove "not intentional". She's gone for 4 years, but the question is, was the process just?
For all your lecturing, it looks like you didn't read any of Tygart's statement before your initial post. For example: "We need to work just as hard to exonerate the innocent as we do pursuing the true cheaters." This is where the AIU failed Houlihan in a big way. My expectation is what USADA anti-doping chief Tygart has done for 27 US athletes since 2015 -- help them navigate through the WADA Code around this nearly impossible athlete burden to prove what is caused by the various meat industries, or in other cases (e.g. Getzmann) during manufacture of prescription drugs. Because on face value, the standard of "strict liability" is quite a convenient shortcut for organizations prosecuting ADRVs, but it is not a fair process for athletes who have innocently ingested small amounts of a banned substance. We have seen this in the cases of Getzmann, Lawson, and 27 USADA athletes.
Tygart doesn't speak about all rule-breaking athletes, but just this small class of athlete who tests positive consistent with unknowingly ingesting small amounts a banned substance, e.g. from normal meals, who are suddenly forced to become experts in the world of meat processing, and in Houlihan's case, the temporary but signficant deviations from the normal practices during the pandemic.
The lengthy and elaborate process was according to the WADA Code, which, if you had seen any of his statements, is precisely what Tygart has repeatedly claimed needs to be reformed, for this small class of USDA approved meat eating athlete.
For all these calls of honesty, from "fans", the process is so one-sided, that there is just no way to tell from the AIU prosecution and the CAS report that Houlihan was not being honest. (And the CAS did not find her dishonest, but rather "credible"). The AIU did not "debunk" Houlihan's story, but gave the equivalent argument of "people struck by lightning rarely happens". All we can say is that Houlihan was unable to obtain "concrete and specific" evidence she needed to clear her name to the burden required, and "guilty until proven innocent" did the rest. The AIU "near-zero" argument fails in the public domain for the same reason the AIU says Houlihan's arguments should fail: it is not "based on specific and concrete elements". None of the AIU arguments, or speculated alternative, are connected to Houlihan, except for the unexplained presence of a small amount of nandrolone, which can be of endogenous, or exogenous origin.
All you "smart persons" may have fallen for it, but I'm not going to pretend "2.5x the limit" is a large amount, when, according to studies on small sample sizes, including by Prof. Ayotte's own study, eating pork offal can put you 65x-80x above the limit, and intentionally injecting nandrolone can put you 1000x-1500x above the limit. The 2 ng/ml threshold is too small a threshold for intact pork offal ingestion -- something WADA explicitly considers "endogenous" and will give positive values of the low ng/ml range of less than 10 ng/ml.
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