On August 2, Paul Kimmage appeared on the Irish Sports Radio show "Off the ball"
https://soundcloud.com/offtheball/sunday-paper-review-august-2nd
It's worth listening to the whole episode, but here is what he said (from about 18:55):
They know who the highest profile is.
And they track - I have to be careful with the gender - the athlete down, to a London hotel.
And they present the athlete with the data.
And she threatens to sue them. And she says, "It won't be like Lance Armstrong. You won't be getting it back", right, "You'll never get it back", the athlete says.
And what strikes me about that is the cynicism of it.
The cynicism of this athlete, who has been presented with this, and is threatening to sue, and will go on then, in two weeks time, on some celebrity program, and be presented as a hero, and all this...
At this point, the moderator interjects: "We don't know the identity of this person, and we shouldn't allude to any aspect...", and Kimmage says he isn't "talking about the identity, but about how cynical this person is", and then continues to refer to "this person", and "the athlete".
He gives a clear impression of knowing who the person is, but he seems so enraged that he appears to let his guard slip, being deliberately careful not to mention the gender in one sentence, and then revealing it in the next.
Paul Kimmage himself has tweeted a link to the radio program, so he clearly either thinks it wasn't a big deal, doesn't remember the apparent slip-up, or he doesn't mind it being out there.