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P**P
Oh, now I understand...
The book will allow serious cycling fans to finally say, "Oh, now I understand..."Anybody that has been a cycling fan over the past few decades has heard plenty of stories, tidbits, rumors and insight on the sport of professional cycling. Based on all of the information that has evolved, fans have most likely formed their own conclusions on certain matters, especially in regards to doping.But for many, there were still so many questions that needed tighter answers such as;* "Why would fundamentally good people start to make and continue to make compounding bad decisions?"* "How exactly did athletes dope?"* "Who helped them?"* "Why did they not fail drug tests given at the time?"* "Where did the drugs come from?"* "What was at stake?"* "Isn't it possible that some at the top are completely innocent and being falsely accused?"If there was one thing that this book did (in addition to being such an enjoyable and smooth read) is that it allows the reader to "connect the dots" and "follow the bouncing ball" so to speak. The reader starts to get a much clearer view and perspective on how things evolved in the sport and how circumstances created such an explosive environment.The enjoyable part of the book (in addition to just gaining insight into the biggest names in the sport) is the level of detail (or lack of "fluff.") The book isn't centered around whispers or rumors. The book is a first-hand account of Tyler Hamilton's own personal journey as he proceeded through the minefield of professional cycling. Hamilton was able to recount the details of his training with the quantitative details of heart rate, watts, power-to-weight ratio, testing, training both riding clean and not-clean.If you have asked yourself, "How could a cyclist who has been tested countless times be doping," you will find the answers within this book (and I'm not referring to just Lance Armstrong's most commonly used defense). I'm referring to Tyler Hamilton's own personal experience.This book lays out all of the medical details on hematocrit, EPO, testosterone, blood transfusions, how the athletes used the substances, how they prepared for drug testing and what the clear benefits of doping were (and most importantly what the ramifications were if you chose not to dope.)This is a very important book for up and coming professional and amateur cyclists, cycling fans, people on the business side of cycling (there is a tremendous amount of money involved in the sport) and also lessons to be learned for those outside the sport of cycling. You may not agree with all of Tyler Hamilton's past personal decisions, but you may end up like me and being very appreciative that he laid it all out on the table and didn't hold anything back. And for that, I thank him tremendously and feel he is now part of the solution rather than being part of the problem.If you enjoyed reading Daniel Coyle's previous book, "Lance Armstrong's War" I highly recommend this book. The author came through with another fantastic book on professional cycling.And for me, after having so many unanswered questions and uncertainties on the sport, I can finally say, "Oh, now I understand...That makes sense..."
C**N
Powerful, credible, and depressing chronicle of the doping era
This is the most devastating chronicle yet of the recent history of pro bike racing, for several reasons:- First, the co-author, Daniel Coyle, knows his way around pro bike racing. He wrote Lance Armstrong's War: One Man's Battle Against Fate, Fame, Love, Death, Scandal, and a Few Other Rivals on the Road to the Tour de France, and his experience shows. More than just a story about Hamilton, "The Secret Race" weaves in all the significant doping scandals of the past 15 years. Although the publicity surrounding this book is driven by the interest in Lance Armstrong, the book exposes a sport-wide culture where doping was expected and the infrastructure to support it was easily accessible to the best riders.- Second, the level of prosaic detail adds credibility. It's more than just a chronicle of what drugs were taken -- but also detail on how they worked; how they were concealed; how tests were beaten; the logistics of getting to and from the doping doctors; and the strategy of timing blood doping sessions to correspond with key stages of big races. Hamilton even details the bonus schedule he paid to his doping doctors for each major victory. Although I've read previous books on the topic, I was still surprised by the intensity of doping activities outlined here. It's the difference between having the story told by "outsiders" (investigators, journalists, team assistants) vs. "insiders" (someone like Hamilton who is finally willing to tell the story).- Third, Hamilton's own personal story is believable. He helps explain why bike racers decide to dope, why lying about it becomes so central to their day to day lives, and what it takes to turn the corner and start telling the truth. The co-author's key challenge in this book is to make the reader accept the story of someone who lied for so long, and inevitably we have to wonder, "He lied then, is he telling the truth now?" The context provided here allows the reader to make that leap.Two other individuals are worth mentioning. The first is David Walsh, the London Times journalist who wrote, From Lance to Landis: Inside the American Doping Controversy at the Tour de France, which outlined way back in 2007 what was happening inside pro racing during the "Lance Armstrong era." None of the recent doping scandals has been a real surprise to anyone who read Walsh's book. "The Secret Race" has a lot more detail, since it's told by a true insider, but without David Walsh, Paul Kimmage and a few others continuing to tell this story the facts likely would have never come out (One thing that's clear from "The Secret Race" is that the sport's governing body, the UCI, was never going to blow the whistle on itself).[Nov. 2012 update: David Walsh's stories that laid out the original allegations against Lance Armstrong have just been released in a Kindle edition, Lanced: The shaming of Lance Armstrong, and coming soon is his new e-book, Seven Deadly Sins ]The second person to mention is Andy Hampsten, another American cycling hero whose 1988 ride in the Tour of Italy is still legendary. Hampsten was competing at the top level of international cycling before the EPO era but then found himself out-muscled by back-of-the-pack competitors who suddenly transformed themselves, turbocharged by EPO and blood transfusions. For anyone who thinks that it's OK to excuse continuing coverups because "it was a level playing field; they all doped," it's worth reading Andy Hampsten's quotes:"In the mid eighties, when I came up, riders were doping but it was still possible to compete with them...bottom line, a clean rider could compete in the big three-week races. EPO changed everything...all of a sudden whole teams were ragingly fast, all of a sudden I was struggling to make time limits. By 1994, I'd be on climbs, working as hard as I've ever worked, producing exactly the same power, at the same weight, and right alongside me would be these big-assed guys, and they'd be chatting like were were on the flats! It was completely crazy. As the 1996 season went by...everybody knew what was up, everybody was talking about EPO, everybody could see the writing on the wall."Hampsten retired from pro bike racing at that time. Other racers made a different decision, and signed up for in-depth doping regimes; their story is told here. To believe that anyone raced clean and then won the Tour de France 7 times in a row at the height of the doping era seems to defy reality. To use a term repeated often in "The Secret Race," it would have to be "extraterrestrial."
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