Should teams have to pay ?

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yenrod

Guest
http://uk.eurosport.yahoo.com/06032009/58/teams-slam-uci-fees.html

Top flight teams have criticised the UCI after being made to pay a contribution to their biological passport fees in full to avoid a ban for this weekend's Paris-Nice race.

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Five of the 18 ProTour teams were told to settle half of their 120,000 euro fee towards the passport used to detect doping by the end of business on Friday and they all did.

"Cofidis and Quick Step have paid their fees to the UCI," the UCI said in a statement. Bbox Bouygues Telecom and Caisse d'Epargne said they had also settled.

"Silence-Lotto's situation has been settled, they have paid," UCI president Pat McQuaid told Reuters.

But anger was growing within the teams, who said they had arranged instalments to pay and were caught off guard by a letter from McQuaid saying they would not take part in Paris-Nice unless they had paid their contribution.

"This was a threat, pure and simple. We paid but all teams were with their backs to the wall," Francis Lafargue, head of communications at Caisse d'Epargne, told Reuters.

"We had already paid 30,000 euros, just like last year when we paid in four instalments. We have been blackmailed."

Cofidis manager Eric Boyer said: "It is deplorable. Race organisers have not paid anything in 18 months. As for us, we pay and we are threatened."

"The money will be wired tonight, it is a huge mistake. We had agreed months ago to pay by instalments. This was purely a threat, it's unfair as we all back the biological passport," Bbox Bouygues Telecom manager Jean-Rene Bernaudeau told Reuters.

Quick Step manager Patrick Lefevere said in a statement: "The UCI did not accept our request, and they ordered the team to pay 60,000 euros or risk being excluded from the Paris-Nice".

"Thus we have decided (to make) the full and total payment today for the Biological Passport, paying an additional 90,000 (making a total of 120,000) to avoid speculation about the team and to show once more that it wasn't a question of economics but a point of principle, which evidently was not well received."

Paris-Nice race director Christian Prudhomme told Reuters: "We were very surprised but the most important thing for us is that everything seems to (be getting) back in order".

In October 2007, the UCI and the WADA announced they would collect blood samples from all professional riders to create a medical profile, or passport, that would be compared to the data registered in doping tests.

Jonathan Vaighters, manager of team Garmin-Slipstream and president of the Association of Professional Cycling Teams said the UCI should have shown more understanding.

"I'm confident that the five teams listed by the UCI are fully supportive in spirit and in finance of the Biological Passport," he said.

"They all take part in the programme, all have had their athletes tested multiple times and all are fully invested in the full execution of the Biological Passport."

"In these difficult times, financial flexibility is something everyone in cycling will need to have.

"Hopefully, in the future, the AIGCP and the UCI will be able to negotiate payment plans acceptable for everyone far in advance of deadlines so these situations don't become a controversial matter."

Reuters
 

rich p

ridiculous old lush
I don't get your point Yenrod. The teams agreed to pay, it was just a question of whether they could pay on the knock.
Do you think it should be funded by the UCI or what?
 

bonj2

Guest
I'll say as I've said before that the best method to avoid cheating by taking drugs is to make it not cheating. Let them all get smacked up to thier tits on whatever they like then they're all on a level playing field. All this palaver would be unnecessary then, and it would leave people to concentrate on the sport in hand.
 

rich p

ridiculous old lush
I'll say as I've said before, the price of Pernod is outrageous.

That's got bugger all to do with this thread either;)
 

yello

Guest
Should teams pay? Yes... it needs to be paid for and there is no other realistic source of funding. They'd end up paying for it one way or another anyway, either directly like this or indirectly. It's part of the cost of competition for teams so I don't see an issue really.

Reading between the lines, it sounds as though there was a 'misunderstanding' over WHEN teams had to pay. It sounds to me like McQuaid then came over all heavy handed (to show people who really is boss over an ASO event??) and the proverbial excrement impacted on the impellers.
 

bonj2

Guest
rich p said:
I'll say as I've said before, the price of Pernod is outrageous.

That's got bugger all to do with this thread either;)

I agree that pernod should be drastically reduced in price, largely to reflect the fact that it's absolutely foul. If it's expensive people might think it's nice, besides it's best if people can console themselves in the fact that at least they haven't wasted much when they discover how horrible it is.
 

bonj2

Guest
I think whether they should payor not, a 5-6 figure sum is a bit excessive. That's just all going on greasing palms all down the line.
 

kyuss

Veteran
bonj said:
I think whether they should payor not, a 5-6 figure sum is a bit excessive. That's just all going on greasing palms all down the line.

I think it's probably going on the millions of pounds worth of equipment, specialised staff and the organisation/logistics involved in reliable testing.

I'm no great fan of the UCI/Pat McQuaid or the way they handle things, but I doubt you just piss in an empty milk bottle and test for drugs with a bit of litmus paper. This stuff costs money and if teams are serious about beating doping they need to pay for it.
 

bonj2

Guest
kyuss said:
I think it's probably going on the millions of pounds worth of equipment, specialised staff and the organisation/logistics involved in reliable testing.

I'm no great fan of the UCI/Pat McQuaid or the way they handle things, but I doubt you just piss in an empty milk bottle and test for drugs with a bit of litmus paper. This stuff costs money and if teams are serious about beating doping they need to pay for it.

It could get so far as requiring every cyclist to be chopped down into his billions and billions of constituent atoms and each one examined with a tunnelling electron microscope and a separate form filled in for each one and filled, the results of which would be examined in triplicate by a cray supercomputer, before being completely reassembled exactly as he was before, and they'd be none the wiser. The UCI should stop being so anal and just let 'em get smacked up to t' tits and have done with it.
And while we're at it they should let recumbents enter as well but then just then laugh when they fail to get up the steepest of the hills.
 
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