Showing posts with label Jonathan Vaughters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jonathan Vaughters. Show all posts

03 August 2015

The sad case of Tom Danielson

And why Danielson is not like Di Luca

When I awoke early this Monday morning to a tweet from a cycling friend in Indiana with the simple words, "Looks like you were right all along." My first reaction was, I don't like when I am right. What has happened now? Tom Danielson: A Sample, positive for synthetic testosterone. Cannondale-Garmin: NOT CLEAN.

How surprising - not at all. How tragic - yes. For Tom - who cares.

Poor Tom Danielson.  Photo by Karen Rakestraw of Pedal Dancer®

Tragic not because we actually believed doping had exited out the front door of pro cycling (while partially returning through the back door). Not tragic because we believed that Tom Danielson - via continued high salary and stage wins - had seen the light, was suddenly a changed man and no longer doping. Tragic because today's breaking news of Danielson's positive doping test represents the reputation of a team. THE team which based its entire premise on racing clean.

Truth #1: We might think of Italian Danelo Di Luca as the lowliest of doping slime but he didn't bring down his team with him.

Can we isolate the slime of Tom Danielson from his entire "clean" team? Sports fans tend to think of the team unit as winning or loosing. It took lots of work by journalists and lawyers to convince the fans that Tom Brady's deflategate did not reflect upon the integrity of his entire New England Patriots football team. In the sport of professional cycling, journalists and public relations staff work very effectively to isolate a rider kicked to the curb for doping, without taking down his entire team, and thus the sport. Any team wants to distance themselves fast from a dirty athlete.

Truth #2: The Argyle bravado was doomed to fail.

Team Cannondale-Garmin is different than other World Tour teams. Every rider on the team represents the standard of the Argyle brigade. The team has vocally built their business model on the premise of being clean. A stance that in a way said arrogantly, we are better than the rest, we are right, we are the strong against the weak of character. When the righteous fall and appear wrong, the ripple is great. There is no way an entire team can be clean, it was a house of cards waiting to crumble.  

Truth #3: People you like dope.

Doping exists in cycling. Doping continues in World Tour, Pro-Continental, Continental, National, State, Collegiate, Amateur and Club Cycling. Doping is all around us on every level. Please set aside the arguments and overused statements of how doping exists in all sports, how "everyone does it," or that only athletes who stand on podiums use drugs. Being a seemingly nice person, does not equate to fair sportsmanship. Unless the rules say all can dope, it is cheating.

Truth #4: This is a bummer!

The tires were deflated for many specific fans of pro cycling today. On this sad morning, I don't want to talk about a cleaner sport. It is insulting to think we would so easily refocus our attention on the return after injury of Peter Stetina or Taylor Phinney. Two men at the Tour of Utah, who would rightly want to earn their race coverage from a different angle. I want to acknowledge how sad today's headline was: not for Tommy D, not for the team, but for the fans who believed that racing clean was possible.

Truth #5: There are a lot of really sad Cannondale-Garmin fans today.

Fans have stood by this team for years, even with recent poor performances. The Argyle Regatta was their team, a team they could believe in. When the world of pro cycling looked bleak, their team was "clean," different from the harsh world of doping reality. Every man on the Cannondale-Garmin team stood for principal of fair sport, until today. Said one friend, "I'm just so disgusted with Tommy D. This stupid sport."

Truth #6: Danielson is a drop in the bucket.
 
Nobody really cares about Tom Danielson anyway (other than all those STRAVA 2nd place record holders). If Danielson sticks by his denial of, "I would never," I hope he at least feels bad for every rider on his team Cannondale-Garmin in Utah, Colorado and Spain, in coming weeks who will have to answer questions about doping because of him. I hope the team stands by each current racer on its squad, for they are not to be blamed for Danielson's decisions, or for this flimsy clean team marketing ploy.

Truth #7: The individual is at fault. But ...

Team management of Cannondale-Garmin changed in recent years. Much of the determination to do things differently - and take the clean road - came from the strong will of Jonathan Vaughters, a man guilty of doping himself, who has made a nice living off of the sport and spent many hours in recent years earning a MBA. Hands on management is everything, especially in cycling, where new sponsors come on board and begin to stress business norms and expectations. Sure teams are pressed to have results, but I believe the decision to dope is the individual's responsibility, yet also a sign of poor management.

Jerseys and stage wins.  Photo by Karen Rakestraw of Pedal Dancer®

Truth #8: Deceit is the worst of human traits.

The higher you stand the further you fall. I never wish any badness to befall anyone. Yet, deceiving others is crap, plain and simple. I feel bad for every fan who believed, every racer robbed of a stage win, every rider not signed to the team because of Tom Danielson's salary, every child who looked into Danielson's eyes and believed him, even for that one autograph or one second on TV. Tom Danielson cheated, in the past, and in the present.

Truth #9: Never base truth or your moral compass on business managers, journalists or social media. 
  • Business Managers - must sell product, market and repair public image
  • Journalists - must create copy (of any sort) and retain readers in order to continue collecting a salary
  • Social Media - is a balance of popularity seeking individuals and a gauge of disgust, only for those who already follow set individuals.
Within three hours of this morning's news in America, journalists hadalready advanced through the 5-steps of doping journalism. Meanwhile fans were trying to figure out why "people" were or were not so upset about this latest doping report. Expected news of the guilty party withdrawing from the Tour of Utah left journalists concerned with readership for the race after day one, and a few exasperated fans throwing up their hands in defeat and disgust.

How to report on doping 101:
  1. Report doping test as fact
  2. Copy quotes from press conference, manager, rider
  3. State B-sample not complete, A-sample not damning evidence
  4. Detract readers to different positive fluffy story of return to glory or found kitten
  5. Three hours later, return to normal stories of who says they will win some race in the future

Truth #10: Yes, I follow cycling, no, I don't like Lance Armstrong ... or Tom Danielson.

The health of professional cycling stood deep in the grave after Lance Armstrong started digging. Then Armstrong handed shovels to George Hincapie, Tyler Hamilton, Christian VandeVelde, Dave Zabriskie, Tom Danielson, Chris Horner, Jonathan Vaughters, and so many more. Those of us who had watched the sport for years, remarked how deep the hole had become, but we stayed fans. Meanwhile cycling became a joke sport to many casual followers in the broader community. Cycling became a fantastic sport to do, but an embarrassing one to follow as a fan.

Truth #11: Things will not change.

No, this is not the straw that broke the camel's back. This is just one doping report of many. The Cannondale-Garmin team will go on, Vaughters will likely make a public statement of apology and how they plan to have tighter controls. Sponsors will stay, press conferences will be handled with the correct terminology, Sample Bs will be completed and a life ban will be in place so that Tom Danielson will never race again. Danielson's cycling lodge in Arizona will continue, he will be an admired guest at cycling event rides. Who knows, he might become team staff, an announcer, a journalist. He "love's cycling" so I am sure somebody will pay Tommy D for his years of dedication to the sport.

Nothing will change. Except someone else will get Tom Danielson's team salary and someone else will win that stage that this cheater would have won if his A Sample had not stopped him short. The best news is that I will not have to write his name while reporting on the upcoming USA Pro Challenge. Thank you for that USADA!

Tommy D and Vaughters spent a lot of time together over the years.

Truth #12: This is a perfect opportunity for new team kit and colors!

- - - -
August 4th, and Jonathan Vaughters (Cannondale-Garmin, Slipstream Sports CEO), speaks:
I had to read that three times because I could not believe these were his first, and only, words on the matter. Of course he does not plan to fire himself, he thinks it would not be fair to the "few good people" who love him. Lessons of the day: MBA school, leadership training - not worth the money. Doping pays!

Sport is not a character builder but a character revealer.

26 August 2013

USA Pro Challenge 2013 - Results Stage 7

Denver Colorado - Race Results

Today's results from the tour in Colorado.

Denver County Building
Downtown Denver
The pond fountain where Frankie Andreu would later take a swim in the clean fresh water.
Stage 7 Results:

1. Peter Sagan (SVK) of Cannondale Pro Cycling
2. Ryan Anderson (CAN) of Optum Presented by Kelly Benefit Strategies
3. Alessandro Bazzana (ITA) of UnitedHealthcare Pro Cycling Team

This is what it feels like when a Peter Sagan #51 sprint comes roaring by (add loud sound and wind).  Photo © by Karen at Pedal Dancer®
This is one fast bike racer, who also really enjoyed being in Colorado.
Final General Classification Standings: 

USA  1  VAN GARDEREN, Tejay (BMC RACING)  22:38:48
SUI  2  FRANK, Mathias (BMC RACING)         + 1:30
USA  3  DANIELSON, Thomas (GARMIN SHARP)    + 1:42
COL  4  ACEVEDO COLLE, Javier Alexis (JAMIS)+ 2:10
AUS  5  MORTON, Lachlan David (GARMIN SHARP)+ 2:34
CRC  6  OBANDO BRENES, Gregory (CHAMPION SYSTEM)+ 3:25
USA  7  CRADDOCK, Lawson (BONTRAGER CYCLING)+ 3:42
NZL  8  BENNETT, George (RADIOSHACK LEOPARD)+ 3:58
AUS  9  SUTHERLAND, Rory (SAXO-TINKOFF)     + 4:11
IRL  10 DEIGNAN, Philip (UNITEDHEALTHCARE)  + 4:12
 
Tejay van Garderen wins USA Pro Challenge 2013
It's the baby on the podium picture
FINAL Classification Jerseys:

Yellow (overall) - Tejay van Garderen (USA) of BMC Racing Team
Green (sprint) - Peter Sagan (SVK) of Cannondale Pro Cycling
Red (climber) - Matt Cooke (USA) of Jamis-Hagens Berman p/b Sutter Home
Blue (young) - Lachlan David Morton (AUS) of Team Garmin-Sharp
Orange (courageous) - Ben King (USA) of RadioShack Leopard Trek

Matt Cooke, Peter Sagan, Tejay van Garderen, Lachland Morton, Ben King.  Photo ©by Ryan Wallace for Pedal Dancer®
Of the 128 riders that started the race, 108 finished. Chris Froome withdrew during Stage 7 and did not complete the USA Pro Challenge in 2013.

Please see additional excellent photos by Ryan Wallace for Pedal Dancer®
Please see even more photos by Chuck Parsons for Pedal Dancer®
Please also read my other posts from today: 
Photos from Denver  All Photos below © By Karen Rakestraw at Pedal Dancer®  please click any image to enlarge

Fans at the festival area in Civic Center Park
Denver, preparing for Stage 7  - Start and Finish line
VIP tent swag including radios to listen in on the race commentators. Nice touch.
Beer cozy
Riders found an injured Chris Baldwin in the VIP tent and stopped to say hello to their friend.
Morning rider autographs with perfectly place prop kids
Signature Kid, someday he'll grow into that jersey.
UCI Official
Basketball Great Bill Walton has been in Colorado all week riding his bike at all of the stages of the tour.
Timmy Duggan's 90-year old Grandmother and his Father were at the final stage. They got to ride in the first Medical Vehicle on course. I bet that was a wild ride through the city. 
Tom Danielson, probably again explaining how he wants more mountains in the stage race
Ben King, great presence both on and off the bike
Craig Lewis and his ever-present fan club
This is Luis Enrique Lemus' (Team Jelly Belly), Mexico National Champion Road, custom painted Focus road bike.
Go Colombia!
I was able to ride in Media car #1 (sponsored by IconLasik) around the course today - so fun! And very worthwhile to make sure the pre-race advice I offer on where to watch the race was helpful to fans.
The great city of Denver on a very hot day
Fans lining the route making it look like Times Square in New York City.
Just another day at a bike event in Denver
Riders race past our Art Museum downtown
Corner after dirty corner, 8 laps long
The finish line and the line of team cars and photo motos - 3 laps to go
2 laps
Jonathan Vuaghters showed up watching Tour Tracker on his device. Nice to see him, this was the first time I had seen him all week.
Lucas Euser and Ben King being caught by the peloton at 1 lap.  Photo © by Karen at Pedal Dancer®
The handshake. Bike racers get along so well. Photo © by Karen at Pedal Dancer®
Lucas Euser with Ben King (who would win most Aggressive Rider for the day).  Photo © by Karen at Pedal Dancer®
Sagan on the front racing down Broadway to the finish line.
Sarah inside her final Broom Wagon passage of the tour
Christian Vande Velde exits the stage. This was his last race in the USA, he will be retiring at the end of the season.
And that is a wrap for the 2013 USA Pro Challenge in Colorado.

I will be posting more pictures and telling stories that I have not yet shared. So please check back soon.

Please come back and visit Colorado again!

Read more about our fantastic bike events, road races, cyclocross races, and recommended rides for cyclists at this link: COLORADO CYCLING A resource page created by Pedal Dancer®. Thank you fans! 

11 August 2012

Recommended Reading: Jonathan Vaughters

How to Get Doping Out of Sports By Jonathan Vaughters in The New York Times Sunday Review, The Opinion Pages
"Almost every athlete I’ve met who has doped will say they did it only because they wanted a level playing field." ..."We put so much emotion into marketing and idolizing athletes, let’s put that same zeal into giving them what they really want: the ability to live their dreams without compromising their morals." - Jonathan Vaughters.
I am not shocked by reading Jonathan Vaughters opinion in The New York Times, but I sure appreciate the honesty and not only admitting there is a problem, but taking action to do something about it. I am somewhat curious about the timing, why now, perhaps he chose to step up in public before others made him do so, but it will likely make sense looking back as more news hits the headlines. 
Jonathan signing an autograph at the Team Presentation in November  Photo by Karen at PedalDancer.com
I saw Jonathan in April in Brugge on the morning of the 2012 Tour of Flanders, he was deep in converstaion about race strategy. Every time I see him at races it is so evident that he loves this sport and his new role in it.
Jonathan Vaughters  Photo by Karen at PedalDancer.com
This is how Jonathan lives his life now. In the midst of some of the biggest most knowledgeable staff and fans of cycling in the world. Here he is in Belgium outside his Garmin team bus before the start of the Tour of Flanders.
Jonathan (middle left) looking into the camera at t'Zand, Brugge, Belgium  Photo by Karen at PedalDancer.com
He works tirelessly coordinating and planning
Jonathan setting up at a stage start at the 2012 Tour of California  Photo by Karen at PedalDancer.com
Jonathan Vaughters, Chief Executive of Slipstream Sports (Garmin-Sharp-Barracuda)  Photo by Karen at PedalDancer.com
This is usually how the fans see Jonathan - heading down the road... probably talking on his race radio.
Jonathan behind the wheel of his team car   Photo by Karen at PedalDancer.com
Related post : There are some things I don't like By Pedal Dancer, July 28, 2012. 

I went on a bike ride and really started thinking about Jonathan's opinion, whatever happens in coming months by statements made by American cyclists about actions taken in the past, we still have the future to be concerned with.  

I would like to say as a follow up to the post I wrote 2 weeks ago (link above) the excuse of a level playing field mentioned by Jonathan Vaughters in his opinion, basically translates to "I did it because everyone else did." Which is an excuse most of us should have learned doesn't fly by grade school. Shame on you if you find yourself reciting the Vaughters plea of a "level playing field". Cheaters are not concerned with equality and fairness, they are concerned with self. I see the problem as a lack of punishment versus reward. Would Jonathan Vaughters be where is is today if he had chosen not to dope? 

Do you think the 2-year ban Alexandre Vinokourov received really deterred him or taught him a lesson? His team was waiting for him, maybe the supply lines were still in place, maybe he came back a changed man, I don't know, but he came right back into the sport as if nothing had happened and just took home a gold medal in the Olympics. Ka-ching. If Vaughters had not doped, he never would have made it on those first teams, onto the US Postal team, or had the opportunity to be an executive at Slipstream Sports. Taking drugs seemed a small price to pay for a lifetime of being able to be active in the sport. 

If a young athlete can get on a team, can get to a Grand Tour, can make a name for themselves, they have the opportunity to receive endorsements, become management, or at least open a bike shop in their home town and remain in the sport they love so much. If they do not dope, they might not progress. They face finding an outlet in a local bike club or riding with their friends, and must find another way to support their families. At this point in the sport, doping still has high rewards for a young rider, even though the testing is much tighter. Still what is a 2-year ban to a young man who has his entire life ahead of him. Unless he is facing a possible life ban for doping. 

This heavy-handed punishment comes with risk, what if the athlete is not personally guilty, what if they are innocent and are banned for life? Mistakes happen. Unfortunately so many riders have lied in the past, I'm not sure who to believe. There are some riders who have tugged on my heart-strings, I didn't like seeing Alberto Contador found guilty, or Frank Schleck. But when athletes like Tyler Hamilton are still out there making income off of cycling even after he denied it, accused others, got others into doping, finally admitted to it and had his awards stripped from him. The point is we never would have heard of Tyler Hamilton if he hadn't doped, he never would have been given the opportunities he was afforded.

Those opportunities are enormous, I think they should go to athletes who deserve to make their name in cycling. There are plenty of young men and women who have dreams just like Jonathan Vaughters did who deserve a fair chance in a fair field. Not a "level field."

15 December 2011

It takes a village to put on a bike race


Host City announcement party for the USA Pro Cycling Challenge

Two nights ago I was fortunate to attend the announcement event for the USA Pro Cycling Challenge UCI Pro Tour 2.HC race in Colorado planned for August 20-26, 2012. It was an interesting evening. In a relaxed atmosphere, I didn't feel like asking questions, or even taking many pictures. How could I with so much mind-candy inches away from me; a huge cycling fan.

The room was filled with individuals who have an interest in, or who have contributed to, the USA Pro Cycling Challenge, each of us with our unique niche. Immediately upon arrival I felt the warm welcome from the USA Pro Cycling Challenge staff. I walked to the bar to grab a cool drink and started a conversation with Dan Grunig from Bicycle Colorado, who introduced me to Jacob Smith the Mayor of Golden. I turned around and had a great conversation with Shawn Hines manger of sponsorship at New Belgium Brewery. I turned left and began a conversation with David Stone of Post Modern who made the promotional videos for the evening's host city announcements.

I introduced myself to Jonathan Vaughters (Team Manager Garmin-Cervelo), whom I have seen all over the world but had never met before, and was treated to one of his funny off-colored jokes (he was of course impeccably dressed). I spoke with legendary cyclist Davis Phinney, said hi to his wife Connie Carpenter-Phinney, talked to Jeremy Duerkson head of marketing at Training Peaks software. I met Steve Johnson the man behind USA Cycling and his wife Chris. I noticed several members of the press in the room including Neal Rogers of VeloNews and John Henderson of the Denver Post. The meet and greets went on and on through the night. It was great fun.&

A few nights ago my Mother asked me the question, "how do these routes keep getting leaked?" (the routes of the USPCC, the Tour de France, and the Giro d'Italia were all leaked for 2012). I explained that there are so many people in every city involved in permits, roads, budgeting, local government, police, businesses, bid processes, etc., that the routes can be figured out pretty easily. I explained, "If one small town newspaper reports a story, you can go to a map and guess which town is a hundred miles away and be pretty close by connecting the dots."

The point is that it takes a village to put on a bike race, in this case it took 12 villages, plus all the people at the party the other night, lots of sponsors, thousands of volunteers, and many many more.
The Host Cities of the 2012 USA Pro Cycling Challenge are: Durango, Telluride, Montrose, Gunnison, Crested Butte, Aspen, Beaver Creek, Breckenridge, Colorado Springs, Golden, Boulder, and Denver.&an>

A common theme in conversations was how big the race was last year for it's first year, and how it really caught on with the fans turning out in huge numbers. After being at the Tour of California since it's inception, I was expecting the USA Pro Cycling Challenge to take baby steps and grow slowly, instead it took one giant boot step forward and smashed it's way into a UCI upgrade after year 1 with over 1 million spectators and 25 million people watching on TV from 161 countries around the world.

Forget the quaintness of years gone by. The online world of instant news and easy access to cycling year round has changed this sport forever. Fans no longer have to wait until July every year for their 3 weeks of bike racing, we can watch races live in Europe on any device, we can watch YouTube anytime we want, we can read blogs or tweets to see what riders are doing in real time. We are exposed to so much, that fans now come to races with instant knowledge, recognizing both American and European riders with ease. Knowledge and accessibility builds fans. Plus it's free to spectators - what could be better for fans.

With the numbers of individuals working year round to make the USA Pro Cycling Challenge even better for next year, and the fans claiming to attend even more stages in 2012 - this race could be much bigger than 12 villages very soon. After years of traveling to France to see the Tour de France, and to California to see the Amgen Tour of California, I feel very fortunate to be living in Colorado, to climb Independence Pass to see the best cyclists in the world race by, and to be one of a million fans to do so.>

USA Pro Cycling Challenge Host City announcement event in Denver, CO
Shawn Hunter, CEO of the USA Pro Cycling Challenge and MC for the evening
Cycling Legends sharing stories at the event:
Connie Carpenter-Phinney, Davis Phinney, Chris Carmichael, Dale Stetina, Ron Kiefel

This is David Stone's (Post Modern) promotional video of the Host Cities for the 2012 USA Pro Cycling Challenge:
Mayor John Hickenlooper also announced a Colorado Cycling Holiday to correspond with annual race dates, recognizing the week (August 20-26, 2012) as an "honorary holiday." Sorry, you still have to go to school. 

More information about the race at: USA PRO CYCLING CHALLENGE or on the official website at USA Pro Cycling Challenge website