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Merckx-dokumentar Så den fredag i Brøndby, men den bliver vist mange steder i de kommende dage, så det kan nås endnu. Noget af et sansebombardement og koncentreret til Merckx' aktive år. Nok mest interessant for den gamle garde, men flot klippet og redigeret. https://cphdox.dk/film/merckx-race-of-a-champion/
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... og spørger man Grok, er der ingen rygende pistoler: **Yes, there have been doping suspicions around UAE Team Emirates (often called Team UAE), though no team-wide scandal or systematic program has been proven.** The team’s extraordinary dominance—especially with riders like Tadej Pogacar—has fueled widespread speculation in recent years, particularly in 2025–2026 as Pogacar continued winning major races. Analysts and media have openly discussed whether the success is “too good to be true,” noting cycling’s history makes dominance automatically raise questions. Specific proven cases are limited but notable: - In 2019, rider **Kristijan Đurasek** received a four-year ban for blood doping as part of the **Operation Aderlass** scandal (involving autologous blood transfusions). - In 2026, support rider **Marc Soler** came under scrutiny after reports of his father meeting banned coach **Pepe Martí** in 2023 for lactate testing sessions; Spanish authorities sanctioned the father, though Soler and the team denied any wrongdoing. Broader 2026 coverage (e.g., The Athletic, Canadian Cycling Magazine) highlighted “rising suspicions” across the sport, with UAE often cited due to its hegemony, but emphasized that performance alone is not evidence. **Yes, speculations are directly linked to Mauro Gianetti’s central role in forming and running the team.** Gianetti has been CEO, Team Principal, and a Board member since around 2017; he is widely seen as a key architect of the modern UAE project. His past has repeatedly been dragged into discussions: - As a rider in 1998, he collapsed dramatically during the Tour de Romandie, was hospitalized for 12 days, placed in an induced coma, and suffered organ failure. Publicly he blamed an allergic reaction plus respiratory infection. - A 2025 Radio France investigation revealed he allegedly confessed to doctors that he had injected **perfluorocarbon (PFC)**—an experimental artificial blood/oxygen-carrying substitute diluted with lecithin. He has denied doping suspicions for years, stayed silent publicly, and (per reports) even edited his own Wikipedia page to downplay or remove the incident. - Earlier, as manager of Saunier Duval (pre-UAE), the team imploded at the 2008 Tour de France after riders Riccardo Riccò and Leonardo Piepoli tested positive for CERA (a blood-boosting agent). Gianetti was never personally sanctioned. Analyst Thijs Zonneveld (and others) explicitly called out Gianetti and fellow UAE sporting director Joxean Matxin: “There are two guys at the top who, in the past, facilitated doping.” This history is repeatedly cited as the reason why UAE’s success triggers immediate skepticism, even though “the evidence is zero” for current systematic doping. The shadow of Gianetti’s past is said to “haunt” Pogacar’s achievements. **Speculation on the kind of doping (if any illegal substances were involved) centers on blood manipulation and advanced oxygen-carrying methods.** - Gianetti’s own alleged incident involved **perfluorocarbon (PFC)**, a then-experimental synthetic blood substitute designed to carry oxygen (not EPO-style hormone doping). - The proven case (Đurasek) was **autologous blood transfusion** (blood doping). - Soler-linked suspicions point toward involvement with doctors tied to classic EPO, testosterone, HGH, and cortisone programs (Pepe Martí was banned for his role in the Lance Armstrong/US Postal scandal). Broader chatter in 2025–2026 includes rumors of micro-dosing, biological-passport manipulation, or new designer substances that stay ahead of testing—classic “sophisticated, well-funded” regimes. Analysts stress that team-wide organized doping would be extremely difficult to hide today. **Yes, it is still possible to hide doping today, though it is harder than in the 1990s–2000s and riskier for entire teams.** The UCI and International Testing Agency (ITA) run advanced biological passport monitoring, out-of-competition testing, and more frequent checks, and positive cases have trended downward (averaging ~20 per year recently). However, investigations (e.g., Operación Ilex) show riders can still exploit loopholes: - In Spain (a hub for many cyclists), privacy laws ban home tests between 11 p.m.–6 a.m. and on weekends → doctors can administer substances late at night, allowing clearance by morning. - 48-hour sample-analysis rules create testing “windows.” - Knowledge of exact substance clearance times lets riders time micro-doses around known test schedules. Many analysts and Reddit-style discussions note that “doping is far ahead of testing” in sophistication for individuals; full team programs are riskier due to the passport and scrutiny. No one claims the sport is 100 % clean, but organized, blatant EPO-era doping is considered largely obsolete. In short: suspicions exist and are amplified by Gianetti’s documented history and the team’s results, but concrete evidence against current star riders (Pogacar included) remains absent. The sport’s past makes doubt inevitable; modern controls make proof harder to obtain either way.
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Gianetti er godt nok en 'interessant' person at læse om https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mauro_Gianetti
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14. november: Løb på løbebånd i SATS Parken. Ingen stats.· 0 replies
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