- 27 avr. 2018, 00:32
#2805375
Ce qui se dit, c'est que Mejia s'est sauté définitivement caisson à vouloir suivre les cyclistes augmentés sur le Tour 93.marcella a écrit : ↑26 avr. 2018, 17:59Gato n'a pas tort sur ce coup-là.Nopik a écrit : ↑26 avr. 2018, 15:36Pour 1984 il y a pas mal de sources me semble t'il, j'ai aussi li ca...
Rapido ici
At the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games, the US cycling team not only won its first Olympic cycling medal since 1912 but also added eight more, marking a triumph for the team and its Polish-born coach, Eddie Borysewicz. Soon, however, news leaked that the seven members of the US cycling team, four of whom won medals, had employed controversial blood transfusions. Though not prohibited by the International Olympic Committee (IOC), the news caused a firestorm within the press and led to a significant revision of the IOC Medical Commission's anti-doping rules. Previous historical scholarship has ignored this event, focusing instead on early doping scandals such as Knud Jensen or more recent controversies such as Ben Johnson and Lance Armstrong. However, this event caused a significant shift within the IOC Medical Commission's attitude towards doping. Prior to 1984, the IOC Medical Commission had hesitated to prohibit any substance, including anabolic steroids, if it could not detect the substance through testing. The willingness of the US team to experiment with new medical procedures to improve performance galvanised the Medical Commission and set in motion new anti-doping policies that remain in place today.
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10. ... ode=fhsp20
et là
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_d ... cling#1984
Il y a bien longtemps que j'en ai également entendu parler, notamment pour A. Grewal.
Un autre qui avait une bonne réputation c'est Alvaro Mejia.