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  • It depends on how you view sport. I don't see sportspeople as role models for clean living. I never did, despite being a 'contender' in adolescent track and field, living a fairly ascetic lifestyle compared to my peers.

    Sport is entertainment, and it's a collective ritual. Let those who dope race with those who don't, some of whom will have been provided with 'gains' via other means. While dope exists, irrespective of legality - a desert of shifting sand in itself - some people will choose to do it. Not everyone who dopes will create historic moments, and not everyone who creates historic moments will dope.

    Peer pressure is moderated by education and realistic attitudes. I'm all for rules of gameplay in sport, amateur and professional - fuck, there need to be some boundaries - but as for personal/team decisions regarding preparation, that's their business, 'business' being the operative word. As an employee, you have the right to quit if you don't agree with the company's way of doing things.

    Just because certain unsavoury behaviours were prevalent in cycling teams of the past when doping was a clandestine activity doesn't mean it would be the same if the attitudinal landscape changed and doping was publicly condoned.

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