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#76
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Depends on the test. The vast majority of testing, especially of amateurs, is urine testing. Urine tests are relatively cheap. Blood tests are a lot more expensive.
#77
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You also have to account for having the testers show up to the race (likely flights and hotels) and handling the samples in a controlled manner. I bet there is a set fee of a few thousand just to have testers show up, plus extra for each sample tested, but I'm just guessing. Still, I'm for the increased fee even if it means testing at just a few more races.
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yes, fair enough.
but before you go patting yourself on the back, i was just making a different point than the upgrade-specific comments you made, and i didn't agree with "IRL" vs offline.
fwiw, i've never heard anyone denigrate a pack finish upgrade, but i have heard had cat 1 upgrades talked about (no, it's not about you!) and p12 wins. my POV is that one can't control who show sup and no win is ever easy. not everyone shares that stance.
but before you go patting yourself on the back, i was just making a different point than the upgrade-specific comments you made, and i didn't agree with "IRL" vs offline.
fwiw, i've never heard anyone denigrate a pack finish upgrade, but i have heard had cat 1 upgrades talked about (no, it's not about you!) and p12 wins. my POV is that one can't control who show sup and no win is ever easy. not everyone shares that stance.
It also proves definitively that self-coaching is the way to go.
I think people upgrading however they want is a fine goal. I hope 2->1 is never achievable via masters-only racing only because I selfishly like having that 1 and I prefer it remain as hard to get as possible.
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You also have to account for having the testers show up to the race (likely flights and hotels) and handling the samples in a controlled manner. I bet there is a set fee of a few thousand just to have testers show up, plus extra for each sample tested, but I'm just guessing. Still, I'm for the increased fee even if it means testing at just a few more races.
i'm genuinely curious. i had heard some high #s per test discussed in the past, really high. i wonder what the real answer is.
my guess? $500/test, all-in.
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Cat 1 is the only upgrade where some cat-6 guy asked me what category I raced and they seemed genuinely impressed. For that alone the years of work and toil were worth it.
It also proves definitively that self-coaching is the way to go.
I think people upgrading however they want is a fine goal. I hope 2->1 is never achievable via masters-only racing only because I selfishly like having that 1 and I prefer it remain as hard to get as possible.
It also proves definitively that self-coaching is the way to go.
I think people upgrading however they want is a fine goal. I hope 2->1 is never achievable via masters-only racing only because I selfishly like having that 1 and I prefer it remain as hard to get as possible.
i agree that the points system shouldn't be based on age-adjusted performances, which then grant entry to non-age-restricted stuff.
late starter in the sport? well...it's not a participation thing. live in an area where there isn't 3 options to race every weekend? tough.
you beat 45yo cat 1s in a 45+ 1/2/3 race? you don't race the NRC.
(takes nothing away from that win....lots of masters racers are insanely good...but it doesn't warrant the upgrade IMO.)
i wonder what the stats are on # of legacy 1s (who don't race p1 any more) vs active 1s who have been in a p/1 race in the current year.
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more people to blame, less people to blame you. win-win...or something.

#83
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love this. didn't watch the clip but i instantly remembered it from whenever it originally aired.
comparing this guy to homer simpson would give him more credit than he deserves.
he was facing a HUGE felony charge....20+ years in federal prison. kind of sad as he was clearly just a runner and not the brains of an operation. he was probably seduced by a few grand and didn't realize the significant risk.
stopped for a tail light out when you're carrying that much? you don't check that everything on your vehicle is tip-top and that you do full stops at every stop sign and drive 24 in a 25?? rumor was that it must have been some kind of tip-off from a rival.
wonder what the outcome of his case was. last i heard he was on house arrest and living with his parents on long island.
anyone know of a way to look up status of a case when you know the jurisdiction + name of those involved? last time i checked a few years ago i couldn't find anything through public sources.
comparing this guy to homer simpson would give him more credit than he deserves.
he was facing a HUGE felony charge....20+ years in federal prison. kind of sad as he was clearly just a runner and not the brains of an operation. he was probably seduced by a few grand and didn't realize the significant risk.
stopped for a tail light out when you're carrying that much? you don't check that everything on your vehicle is tip-top and that you do full stops at every stop sign and drive 24 in a 25?? rumor was that it must have been some kind of tip-off from a rival.
wonder what the outcome of his case was. last i heard he was on house arrest and living with his parents on long island.
anyone know of a way to look up status of a case when you know the jurisdiction + name of those involved? last time i checked a few years ago i couldn't find anything through public sources.
#84
out walking the earth
whether it is urine or blood, isn't the deal that they have to follow a strict protocol that is different from your run-of-the-mill lab test, in case there are disputes? security, storage of samples, etc....i'd imagine that adds quite a bit more to the cost.
i'm genuinely curious. i had heard some high #s per test discussed in the past, really high. i wonder what the real answer is.
my guess? $500/test, all-in.
i'm genuinely curious. i had heard some high #s per test discussed in the past, really high. i wonder what the real answer is.
my guess? $500/test, all-in.
#85
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Travel expenses would add up very fast.
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isn't there a requirement to keep these samples for years? my local lab tosses my blood sample right after they analyze it (i've asked -- when an instruction was missed from my doctor). i would think that storage and tracking would cost a fair bit.
pretty interesting to see where the money actually goes.
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i've often thought it would be funny to show up at a race with a white van with USADA stickers and doping control stenciled on it -- park it near registration and see who walks away. if stories are true, could be especially funny in some regions' masters events.
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e.g., if you are caught, the penalties include funding your own testing and more.
probably impossible, but nice in theory.
i like the idea of having a convicted doper having to man the reg table at all events they participated in during their period of doping. (someone else's idea, but i thought it was funny...and appropriate.)
#89
out walking the earth
a NJ promoter floated a rumor at one of his races a couple years back that it would be tested. I think he wrote it on the sign in sheet. A number of riders dropped out of one of the races, and several got stuck in traffic. I won, btw

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@Hermes -- did your wife have to get into the whole testing pool to go for her (national? world?) record? i read about that for some hour record participants; not sure if it applied to her. wasn't inexpensive.
enthalpic, is the main difference that our amateur samples are essentially one-offs, vs longitudinal tracking of the pros?
i thought there were special labs, proper chain of command, and a whole bunch of other things going on, but perhaps that is just simply what every industry does to make outsiders think things are far more complex than what is really going on.

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and that administration doesn't materially add to the cost?
enthalpic, is the main difference that our amateur samples are essentially one-offs, vs longitudinal tracking of the pros?
i thought there were special labs, proper chain of command, and a whole bunch of other things going on, but perhaps that is just simply what every industry does to make outsiders think things are far more complex than what is really going on.
enthalpic, is the main difference that our amateur samples are essentially one-offs, vs longitudinal tracking of the pros?
i thought there were special labs, proper chain of command, and a whole bunch of other things going on, but perhaps that is just simply what every industry does to make outsiders think things are far more complex than what is really going on.

Longitudinal tracking is usually done with a database by the client - not the lab.
If you are talking about new drugs and having to develop new tests that is another story.
#94
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The EPO urine test was pretty famously developed in the early 2000s (after being delayed a few years) and caused a big shift in doping technique from just injecting EPO to blood transfusions. It still catches amateur dopers, cause homologous blood transfusions require much more resources and coordination than just injecting drugs.
#95
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The EPO urine test was pretty famously developed in the early 2000s (after being delayed a few years) and caused a big shift in doping technique from just injecting EPO to blood transfusions. It still catches amateur dopers, cause homologous blood transfusions require much more resources and coordination than just injecting drugs.
My understanding is that the EPO urine test only catches non-micro-dosing, i.e. regular injections. Microdosing (small amounts in the blood stream? correct me if I'm wrong) won't get caught out by a urine test because the EPO is gone in 10 or 12 hours.
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it would be kind of neat if somehow the dopers could foot the bill for the testing.
e.g., if you are caught, the penalties include funding your own testing and more.
probably impossible, but nice in theory.
i like the idea of having a convicted doper having to man the reg table at all events they participated in during their period of doping. (someone else's idea, but i thought it was funny...and appropriate.)
e.g., if you are caught, the penalties include funding your own testing and more.
probably impossible, but nice in theory.
i like the idea of having a convicted doper having to man the reg table at all events they participated in during their period of doping. (someone else's idea, but i thought it was funny...and appropriate.)
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on the one hand, since so very few are caught, i think you need a big deterrent. a lifetime ban makes sense in that context.
on the other, no matter how careful you are you occasionally wind up with amateur who legitimately made a mistake or took some off-brand vitamin that was tainted. sure, it's on him to know, but there are degrees of guilt.
if i had to decide, i'd choose to throw a few babies out with the bathwater....but what if one of us were the baby? maybe it's not so simple.
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whether it is urine or blood, isn't the deal that they have to follow a strict protocol that is different from your run-of-the-mill lab test, in case there are disputes? security, storage of samples, etc....i'd imagine that adds quite a bit more to the cost.
i'm genuinely curious. i had heard some high #s per test discussed in the past, really high. i wonder what the real answer is.
my guess? $500/test, all-in.
i'm genuinely curious. i had heard some high #s per test discussed in the past, really high. i wonder what the real answer is.
my guess? $500/test, all-in.
#99
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seems like there would be a bang-for-the-buck deal going....do a bunch of testing at once, minimize travel expenses as a % of each test.
i've often thought it would be funny to show up at a race with a white van with USADA stickers and doping control stenciled on it -- park it near registration and see who walks away. if stories are true, could be especially funny in some regions' masters events.
i've often thought it would be funny to show up at a race with a white van with USADA stickers and doping control stenciled on it -- park it near registration and see who walks away. if stories are true, could be especially funny in some regions' masters events.