"I guess it's lose-lose for the athletes with people like you. Runs a lot of race, he must be on drugs. Runs very few races, must be on drugs. Consistant? must be the drugs. Not consistant...you get the picture?"
Not at all! Having been an avid follower of the sport for many years and having read numerous books and articles, I strongly believe that many middle and long distance guys in the late 90's were on EPO. The historical rate of progression in these years improved exponentially faster in practically every event from 1500m upwards. The fact that EPO was not detectable is the reason.
"And half of those things you mention at the end make absolutely no sense-being Morrocan I can under stand, but being paced by his teammates? Never missing championships? Never running the 800m? WTF ARE YOU ON?"
Yes, I do think the fact he didn't run 800m or suffer any major injury/illness in a 10 year career is very strange. No, it doesn't mean he was taking drugs, but the cumulative affect of several anomalies makes one wonder why. I can't think of any number one 1500m runner before him who didn't get beaten when coming back from injury, pull out of at least one Championship or major race through illness/injury or who didn't run the odd 800/1000m. None of these mean he was taking PEDs, but could be used to suggest his career was not a conventional one.
"Coe got his blood disorder (THAT is suspicious, if anything is)"
Why is this suspicious? Toxoplasmosis is something that anyone can pick up. It's no more strange than someone getting mono. There wasn't EPO in 1982/83 when he contacted it, and if he was blood doping (which is what I think you're insinuating) then he would only be having his OWN blood put back in. It's not as if he'd be sharing someone else's needle. It would have been suspicious had he come back a few weeks later and broke a world Record, but it decimated 2 whole seasons for him. This says more about the poor state of the British NHS and sports medicine at the time (the fact it took so long to diagnose) than anything about drug use.