Friday, September 08, 2006

Mea Culpa?

So, Marion Jones is clean.

Good for her.

But still bad for Floyd.

Last June, Jones' "A" sample from the U.S. track and field championships came back positive for the endurance-booster EPO. This past week, her "B" sample came negative.

Case closed. Rush to judgment, writes LATimes columnist Bill Plaschke: "I have since tested positive for that deadly journalistic drug known as 'haste.' "

Plaschke also wrote "that if Jones' 'B' sample refuted her 'A' sample, I would give fallen cycling hero Floyd Landis a ride down the Harbor Freeway on my handlebars. I am saying, does anybody know if the 110 has a bike lane?"

So, if Marion Jones is innocent (in THIS instance), what about Bad Boy Floyd, who got a quick positive on his "B" test following the postive "A" test?

"There are many reasons the samples might not have matched, including the fact that EPO disintegrates in the specimen," adds Plaschke, who is one of the best sports columnists in the business.

So why did Jones get three months of grace (if you can call what she's been through "grace") and Floyd's sample got the bum's rush?

Why do the testing authorities release the results of the "A" sample before the potentially damning results of the "B" sample are known?

Why was the timing of the process different for Landis than it was for Jones? What if Floyd had been given the same three months of grace that Jone's procedure received. And what does that say about the process in general?

Plaschke doesn's address that.

But you can bet we'll be hearing the recently quiet Landis camp about this.

More on the subject:
Jim Litke: Is There Gaping Hole in Anti-Doping Net?
Velow News: The Landis story doesn't spell the end for American cycling

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Floyd is demanding a dismissal, to be filed on monday. Apparently there was a lot in the actual report that showed the tests were high in bogosity.

Covered at http://trustbut.blogspot.com

TBV

citizen***146 said...

To quote Alan Partridge Radio Norwich sports guru "Back of the net"
ie got it one, with the whole CSI thing as big as it is, how on earth can these labs and there procedures not be standardised and verifiable?

citizen***146 said...

and another thing,
with all the interest in cycling and its wealth of drug cheats, Golf is the next big thing as Tiger Woods calls for mandatory testing, and all those very strong men in their sixties say "nothing to see here"
Cycling should be applauded for serious self analysis

Friday, September 08, 2006

Mea Culpa?

So, Marion Jones is clean.

Good for her.

But still bad for Floyd.

Last June, Jones' "A" sample from the U.S. track and field championships came back positive for the endurance-booster EPO. This past week, her "B" sample came negative.

Case closed. Rush to judgment, writes LATimes columnist Bill Plaschke: "I have since tested positive for that deadly journalistic drug known as 'haste.' "

Plaschke also wrote "that if Jones' 'B' sample refuted her 'A' sample, I would give fallen cycling hero Floyd Landis a ride down the Harbor Freeway on my handlebars. I am saying, does anybody know if the 110 has a bike lane?"

So, if Marion Jones is innocent (in THIS instance), what about Bad Boy Floyd, who got a quick positive on his "B" test following the postive "A" test?

"There are many reasons the samples might not have matched, including the fact that EPO disintegrates in the specimen," adds Plaschke, who is one of the best sports columnists in the business.

So why did Jones get three months of grace (if you can call what she's been through "grace") and Floyd's sample got the bum's rush?

Why do the testing authorities release the results of the "A" sample before the potentially damning results of the "B" sample are known?

Why was the timing of the process different for Landis than it was for Jones? What if Floyd had been given the same three months of grace that Jone's procedure received. And what does that say about the process in general?

Plaschke doesn's address that.

But you can bet we'll be hearing the recently quiet Landis camp about this.

More on the subject:
Jim Litke: Is There Gaping Hole in Anti-Doping Net?
Velow News: The Landis story doesn't spell the end for American cycling

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Floyd is demanding a dismissal, to be filed on monday. Apparently there was a lot in the actual report that showed the tests were high in bogosity.

Covered at http://trustbut.blogspot.com

TBV

citizen***146 said...

To quote Alan Partridge Radio Norwich sports guru "Back of the net"
ie got it one, with the whole CSI thing as big as it is, how on earth can these labs and there procedures not be standardised and verifiable?

citizen***146 said...

and another thing,
with all the interest in cycling and its wealth of drug cheats, Golf is the next big thing as Tiger Woods calls for mandatory testing, and all those very strong men in their sixties say "nothing to see here"
Cycling should be applauded for serious self analysis