Merde
Is it over? Is track not savable?
Crazy stuff. That means you SHOULD microdose at the elite level. There's no way to get caught.
Just because you can not get caught micro dosing doesn't mean it would bring any performance increase. Look at Kenyan, no money for costly doping, instead train hard, still achieve world class level. Only runner in Europe and Americas, think, doping, no other will lead to greatness, and then become vain, try drug, and thus placebo effect, will continue, thinking, works.
Micro dosing by itself is so yesterday's news. Today we use special lab-brewed supplement cocktail-sauce-juice variety pack, which do not increase performance on their own, but allow for slow-steady improvements, great finishing kicks, epic post-race workouts, and avoidance of injuries.
This is amazing. Anyone able to translate?
I've been saying for years that there needs to be a study like this done, with fit athletes, so we know what we're looking for. This bullsh1t about guessing based on who we think might be doping is ridiculous. Cold, hard data.
The bad news is this makes basically everyone suspect. I think I understood from the video that the improvement in running ability was significant enough to take a 7:48 3000m runner to a 7:32 in a month. And this is microdosing.
Christ.
Imagine of you were a huge shoe company and had a sophisticated medical lab on your campus, even though there is no reason for having a sophisticated medical lab in order to design, make or market your product. Wouldn't you expect people to be skeptical?
Every NOPer is a doper.
of course it is... just quit worrying about others and concentrate on yourself.I don't get the idiotic nonsense about doping. who cares???what's killing the sport is the media focus on doping, the vast majority of potential viewers/consumers could care less. just run
Agip wrote:
Merde
Is it over? Is track not savable?
So, "A Duvk" you have seen the light, and are now in acceptance, and fulltime defense, of your favorite "running" program.
Horace Clarke wrote:
of course it is... just quit worrying about others and concentrate on yourself.
I don't get the idiotic nonsense about doping. who cares???
what's killing the sport is the media focus on doping, the vast majority of potential viewers/consumers could care less.
just run
Agip wrote:Merde
Is it over? Is track not savable?
Horace Clarke wrote:
I don't get the idiotic nonsense about doping. who cares???
what's killing the sport is the media focus on doping, the vast majority of potential viewers/consumers could care less.
just run
Yeah who cares, lets stick our heads in the sand and go for it. Who gives a shit if we end up like cycling, they've just about managed to get themselves out of the quagmire so we can do the same if it all goes tits-up, can't we?
Horace Clarke wrote:
I don't get the idiotic nonsense about doping. who cares???
what's killing the sport is the media focus on doping, the vast majority of potential viewers/consumers could care less.
just run
Agip wrote:?
Exactly! Who cares??? I want to see some FAST running!!!
dude, please... there's like 6 people who can tell you who won the TdF last year and 12 who'll follow it this year.
MMA, NFL, NBA - all doped to the gills
NASCAR - every single car in the starting grid has a crew that knows how to cheat and get away with it.
what's popular and what's not?
you can stick your head in the sand and pretend people care or you can live here in realityville
quote]Getting deeper in to it wrote:
[/quote]
Yeah who cares, lets stick our heads in the sand and go for it. Who gives a shit if we end up like cycling, they've just about managed to get themselves out of the quagmire so we can do the same if it all goes tits-up, can't we?[/quote]
"The Tinkoff-Saxo rider was provisionally suspended by the UCI in August of this year after anomalies were detected in his biological passport dating back to 2011 and 2012, when he raced for the Astana team. He moved to Tinkoff-Saxo at the start of 2013.
Last week he decided to publish his passport data on his personal website. He published data from 2007 to 2013. The data shows that his haematocrit rose at certain points, when it would typically fall and that his reticulocytes remained constantly high during periods of racing. Kreuziger's defence relies on his claim that he used the substitute hormone L-Thyroxine as treatment for an under-active thyroid and this affected his blood values. L-Thyroxine is not on the WADA banned list and does not require a therapeutic use exemption."
Brooks Robinson wrote:
you can live here in realityville
quote]?
[/quote]
Get my drip line ready with el sauso
You are "limited" to a 50ml drip every 6 hours for each different supplement. The underlined part is how a northwestern professional distance coach would read it. Five different substances would total to 1 liter of drip per day.
Brooks Robinson wrote:
dude, please... there's like 6 people who can tell you who won the TdF last year and 12 who'll follow it this year.
MMA, NFL, NBA - all doped to the gills
NASCAR - every single car in the starting grid has a crew that knows how to cheat and get away with it.
what's popular and what's not?
you can stick your head in the sand and pretend people care or you can live here in realityville
quote]Getting deeper in to it wrote:
Yeah who cares, lets stick our heads in the sand and go for it. Who gives a shit if we end up like cycling, they've just about managed to get themselves out of the quagmire so we can do the same if it all goes tits-up, can't we?[/quote][/quote]
"what's popular and what's not?" - In Europe and other parts of the world cycling is one of the most popular, along with real football and real car racing i.e. F1, etc, etc. Suggest "dude" you get your head out of your arse, get yourself educated and realise there's a whole world out there who couldn't give a flying fvck about MMA (what ever that is), NFL, NBA or NASCAR. FMD, I'm glad I don't live in your so called "realityville".
Have a nice day y'all.
fred wrote:
"The Tinkoff-Saxo rider was provisionally suspended by the UCI in August of this year after anomalies were detected in his biological passport dating back to 2011 and 2012, when he raced for the Astana team. He moved to Tinkoff-Saxo at the start of 2013.
Last week he decided to publish his passport data on his personal website. He published data from 2007 to 2013. The data shows that his haematocrit rose at certain points, when it would typically fall and that his reticulocytes remained constantly high during periods of racing. Kreuziger's defence relies on his claim that he used the substitute hormone L-Thyroxine as treatment for an under-active thyroid and this affected his blood values. L-Thyroxine is not on the WADA banned list and does not require a therapeutic use exemption."
This guy's results don't look nearly as impressive now as when his BP was dodgy.
http://velonews.competitor.com/2015/03/news/kreuziger-blasts-delays-in-his-doping-case_36422750ml 4x per day wrote:
You are "limited" to a 50ml drip every 6 hours for each different supplement. The underlined part is how a northwestern professional distance coach would read it. Five different substances would total to 1 liter of drip per day.
How is that related to the topic?
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