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Rita Jeptoo tests positive before Chicago!
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Shalane Flanagan is quoted as saying that the benefits from doping extend for longer than two years and so the bans should be longer (I think she wants lifetime bans). It is true that EPO benefits extend that long. Yes, you can train harder, but how long would that effect really last. It is not like some possible effect for steroids, from which the implication has been drawn and for which, from what I have seen, there is no definitive evidence at all [and for those thinking that the case of Gatlin is a data point of interest, I would say that it is a data point that shows how completely untrue it is - in the earlier years where the effect was greatest, his results were the poorest, only four years later was he really back topping his earlier marks, which by then were 8-10 years gone and that is a bit beyond the major effects, and certainly at a point where the effects would be below those when the duration since doping were larger, if they did exist at any measurable level.]
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Quite right hedge clock - you'll find we tend to go off at tangents. (This particular tangent came in response to Jeptoo's agent, Rosa claiming that doping in Kenya only started 5 to 7 years ago. 26mi235 thought that was a plausible claim and speculated that it was an attempt by Kenyan runners to catch up with new standards set by Geb over the marathon. I won't bore you again with my alternative view).
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Some of us have veered off topic here, guys. Surely this is a thread about Jeptoo testing positive for EPO, and the 2014 WMM Award for women being shelved because of that?
How did we get into an entirely separate discussion comparing Geb with Tergat and Bekele and other East Africans over the marathon distance?
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Originally posted by gh View Postdevil's advocate question: what if if his "superb background/capabilities" were enhanced to begin with?
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Originally posted by 26mi235 View PostI have a hard time believing that there are several dozen new guys that are as good or better than Geb. One or two (Sammy, ..) maybe, a Tergat, yes; but are there really twenty of them.
In addition, after somewhat catching up the Americans etc., are not much behind this latest wave on the roads, despite the fact that they are catching up on the track. Are those that race primarily on the track more European oriented and tested more often outside of competition and with blood tests>
Geb over a marathon however, was not even close to the athlete he was at his peak running on the track. Despite what the IAAF scoring table suggest, I don't believe the new Marathon record compares to Bekele and Geb's track WRs. My hunch is that the 2:03 and 2:04 marathon runners are athletes who, had they been born in the 90s would have been running 26:30 or 26:40 for 10,000 on the track. There are more 2:04 Marathoners today than 26:40 10000m runners back in the 90s because there is more money and more opportunity to race on the roads today than on the track 20 years ago.
Put it another way: the standard of performance amongst the top Kenyan runners has not changed - it just manifests itself in different events. The number of great performances have increased but that's simply more of them out there training now. Either way I don't see doping as a variable in the equation - they are no more or likely to be doping now versus then.
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Originally posted by 26mi235 View PostThe drop in times corresponds with Geb getting things right and pushing the boundary lower. To me it is believable that Geb did it 'unassisted' because he had such a superb background/capabilities. ...
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Originally posted by Hedgecock View PostI don't get it. How can they detect use of EPO from a urine sample?
I thought that testing authorities needed a blood test to determine that.
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I have a hard time believing that there are several dozen new guys that are as good or better than Geb. One or two (Sammy, ..) maybe, a Tergat, yes; but are there really twenty of them.
In addition, after somewhat catching up the Americans etc., are not much behind this latest wave on the roads, despite the fact that they are catching up on the track. Are those that race primarily on the track more European oriented and tested more often outside of competition and with blood tests>
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I don't buy Rosa's assertion that doping started in Kenya in the last 5-7 years. The marathon times being run now are on a par with the 5000 and 10000m times the previous generation started dropping in the mid-90s. The new generation have chosen road racing over track because that's where the money is. There are more of them because more young Kenyans have realised what financial opportunities exist. They are not reaching higher levels of performance than their predecessors - 2:03 and 2:04 marathons are not better than the 12:3x and 12:4x 5000s and 26:2x and 26:3x 10000s we were seeing in the 90s. So , I'd argue that either they were doping in the 90s and still are or they weren't back in the day and still aren't. Of course, someone like Rosa, who coached Tergat might want to argue that Tergat was such a talent that he could achieve a level of performance clean that the new generation can't without PEDs.
Picking up 26mi265's point, I don't think there is any reason to believe Geb was more or less likely to have been doping than Tergat and Komen. They all started smashing pbs and WRs at the same time. Whether that was due to PEDs or advances in training, I have no first-hand knowledge but either way I see no reason to believe there wasn't a level playing field. Regarding the advance in the marathon times, I think Tergat move to the distance and his WR will have had as much of an impact on the younger Kenyans as Geb had. The next generation will have decided "We need to do what Tergat has been doing" in order to match and better his times.
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I don't get it. How can they detect use of EPO from a urine sample?
I thought that testing authorities needed a blood test to determine that.
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The drop in times corresponds with Geb getting things right and pushing the boundary lower. To me it is believable that Geb did it 'unassisted' because he had such a superb background/capabilities. Those that followed him now had a very difficult task. They had to work to get better than one of the very best distance runners of all time, and one who was using all of the easy elements left available -- very flat courses with a lot of pacing assistance and not too much of a race to worry about (usually one not four or five).
Keeping up and getting ahead of the Geb might have required pulling out every stop, including some that might not be legit with some of the runners.
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Originally posted by 26mi235 View PostThere is an interesting article on the Home Page: Kenya I think We Have a Problem
The Rosa interview is also interesting for those that have not looked at it yet.
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There is an interesting article on the Home Page: Kenya I think We Have a Problem
The Rosa interview is also interesting for those that have not looked at it yet.
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