Jump to content

Yolande de Villiers sanctioned for anti-doping rule violation


News bot

Recommended Posts

I'm not defending anyone. I am stating that I don't trust the process

I agree that in SA many processes are flawed. But that does not automatically make the athletes victims or innocent, in fact flawed systems are easier to exploit by those who intend to cheat.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 687
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

I agree that in SA many processes are flawed. But that does not automatically make the athletes victims or innocent, in fact flawed systems are easier to exploit by those who intend to cheat.

 

 

Flawed systems also target results before quality. The system has as much a duty to fulfill in ensuring real cheats are caught as the riders do need ensure they are clean.

 

Placing blind faith in a non transparent  bureaucratic process is foolish. The value of these processes is not to provide Friday Bikehub banter but to police fair sporting activity.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I agree that in SA many processes are flawed. But that does not automatically make the athletes victims or innocent, in fact flawed systems are easier to exploit by those who intend to cheat.

 

Agreed.

 

Slight tangent, but I also see a gap in the education of young sports people in the processes and responsibilities of not only following the rules of a specific race (e.g. junior gearing), but also the anti-doping rules and how to stay on the correct side of those rules in terms of supplements, medicines, etcetera. I guess the parents and team managers would fill some role there, but the final responsibility falls on the rider therefore the rider should also know all the rules and processes.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Flawed systems also target results before quality. The system has as much a duty to fulfill in ensuring real cheats are caught as the riders do need ensure they are clean.

 

Placing blind faith in a non transparent bureaucratic process is foolish. The value of these processes is not to provide Friday Bikehub banter but to police fair sporting activity.

Oh absolutely they have function other than providing us with cannon fodder. But I am sure they do catch real "cheats too

 

What's your arguement against them? Does this make Yolande innocent by default? And why only this case?

Edited by Patchelicious
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm not defending anyone. I am stating that I don't trust the process

 

Cool, what about the process don't you trust? 

 

That part where the athlete is responsible?

The way the rules are applied?

The people responsible for the process? If this is the case, which people?

Or is there another part of the process you are not happy with? 

 

Thanks 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Cool, what about the process don't you trust? 

 

That part where the athlete is responsible?

The way the rules are applied?

The people responsible for the process? If this is the case, which people?

Or is there another part of the process you are not happy with? 

 

Thanks 

 

 

Good questions. I'll come back you to once I've structured my arguments. Just banging out random thoughts just to respond wouldn't be respectful to the quality of the questions

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Mmmmm.

A quick question to all the experts out there...?

Would said athlete be liable to pay back winnings after first test was taken...?

That means winnings from Epic 2015 podium and stages etc..?

Just interesting, as this could amount to well over ZAR80000, if I'm not mistaken..

And then , will their innocent Epic team mate be liable for forking out their deserved share of the loot..? Just because their team mate was a bamboozler....?

Wow, this could be a costly one.. If that is the case?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Mmmmm.

A quick question to all the experts out there...?

Would said athlete be liable to pay back winnings after first test was taken...?

That means winnings from Epic 2015 podium and stages etc..?

Just interesting, as this could amount to well over ZAR80000, if I'm not mistaken..

And then , will their innocent Epic team mate be liable for forking out their deserved share of the loot..? Just because their team mate was a bamboozler....?

Wow, this could be a costly one.. If that is the case?

 

I'm no expert, but following your line of thinking. 

 

You would think that all results from the start of the ban are null and void, therefore requiring the athlete to #paybackthemoney 

 

As for the partners in those races, they would also need to #paybackthemoney. Did they get told by the athlete after she was notified? Did they race with her knowing the potential for a DQ down the line? 

 

There is a further point to consider. What is a podium at Epic, Sani, J2C, SA's etc worth to the individuals that did not get the recognition at the time? Not only the prize money but their ability to market themselves to potential sponsors and partners for future races.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

So as part of my formulating my arguments to illustrate my distrust of the system I've been reading through transcripts of SAIDS hearings with athletes who have found themselves on the wrong side of the process.

 

The challenge with educating people about the system is not with the process but rather what is allowed and what is not , knowing all the names of the substances. This burden lies with the athlete. This in itself is a bit of an unfair expectation since one really needs a degree in sports medicine, pharmacy or biochemistry to make head or tail of it. The app on their website is helpful but it wouldn't have helped the kid who bought supplements from dischem and 32Gi.

 

The whole burden of proof lying with the athletes smacks of a witch hunt since the athletes; particularly at an amateur or lower level pro will not have the resources to establish the contents of every vitamin or supplement they ingest without having a lab do analysis of the products. It's here where I feel WADA and moRe locally SAIDS needs to be assisting by identifying which products actually contain banned substances and approve products that are clean by either developing an SABS standard or applying a SAIDS approved mark to products.

 

In a he mean time it feels like picking the low hanging fruit to serve as sacrificial lambs and a deterrent to others is the real objective. If a real doper gets caught then that's a bonus.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Call me a sceptic (or whatever else you want) but I get the feeling that this would have been swept under the carpet if it wasn't for the UCI publishing the sanction. 

And that's because you can be certain that the bungling bafoons that are SAIDS (and CSA) knew they wrongly allowed her to keep racing and racking up results, possibly knowing full well that what she was taking for medical reasons contained something illegal, and when the UCI stepped in and said "oi, what's going on here fellas...?", they hung her ass out to dry, offering "no further comment on the matter", which is the same as sticking their fingers in their ears and going "LALALALALALALALALA...!!!"

Link to comment
Share on other sites

So as part of my formulating my arguments to illustrate my distrust of the system I've been reading through transcripts of SAIDS hearings with athletes who have found themselves on the wrong side of the process.

 

The challenge with educating people about the system is not with the process but rather what is allowed and what is not , knowing all the names of the substances. This burden lies with the athlete. This in itself is a bit of an unfair expectation since one really needs a degree in sports medicine, pharmacy or biochemistry to make head or tail of it. The app on their website is helpful but it wouldn't have helped the kid who bought supplements from dischem and 32Gi.

 

The whole burden of proof lying with the athletes smacks of a witch hunt since the athletes; particularly at an amateur or lower level pro will not have the resources to establish the contents of every vitamin or supplement they ingest without having a lab do analysis of the products. It's here where I feel WADA and moRe locally SAIDS needs to be assisting by identifying which products actually contain banned substances and approve products that are clean by either developing an SABS standard or applying a SAIDS approved mark to products.

 

In a he mean time it feels like picking the low hanging fruit to serve as sacrificial lambs and a deterrent to others is the real objective. If a real doper gets caught then that's a bonus.

 

I get what you're saying but is the answer not to ask when not sure? 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This is obviously speculation, but their fingers are still in their ears, and they're still going "LALALALALALALALALA....!!!!", so anything here is all pure speculation.

 

One has to wonder why she only got 10 months, and why they are considered to have already been served.

 

I smell rats...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I get what you're saying but is the answer not to ask when not sure? 

 

 

Have you tried asking a pharmaceutical company what their products contain? I have all they will offer is printed on the side of the container. Add up those numbers and they don't reconcile to 1 so theres also stuff in there they won't disclose. To find out what that "other stuff" is I would need to send the product to a lab and have it analysed and then I'll fall foul of patent or copyright law.

So either way, as an athelete, unless you live on organic produce groen in your own backyard and fertilized by a free range cow, drink natural spring water and are one of those 0.005% of the worlds population who never gets ill, you're rolling the dice when you turn up to start a bike race and you're asked to pee in the cup.

 

Without full disclosure of what any foodstuff contains, the athlete cannot be 100% responsible for what they ingest because of the lack of transparency in the food/medication/ manufacturing and supply chain.

Only WADA and its affiliates can demystify that. In the mean time, we're all guinea pigs, and sacrificial lambs in the game of laying down markers to act as a deterrent.

 

I don't find that particularly fair when WADA is all about promoting fair sport. This is like justifying the Spanish Inquisition as a good cause that had to step over the line in order to givet Christianity credibility by identifying witch craft. The only difference is that witches never really existed.

 

So whats the alternative?

 

WADA needs to speed up identifying which products contain banned substances.

Where people are claiming they only ingested a supplement then that supplement shou;d be immediately tested to understand if there is truth.

New products for use as sports supplements should be SAIDS and WADA approved and frequency testing on these products needs to implemented,

Supplements at events should also be tested, not just the riders

 

it feels like the pharmaceutical companies are let off the hook here in exchange for financial support to WADA and affiliates. that's a perfect way to shift blame back to the (unwitting) athlete.

Edited by raptor-22
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I get what you're saying but is the answer not to ask when not sure? 

 

I think you hit the nail on the head - seems the current  way of doing things is to go ahead anyway and hope for the best (Seems to be the method KE & BS was following).

 

For how long can athletes keep on hiding behind ignorance given the tainted history of the sport?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
Settings My Forum Content My Followed Content Forum Settings Ad Messages My Ads My Favourites My Saved Alerts My Pay Deals Help Logout