Jump to content

pie-eater

SnowJapan Member
  • Content Count

    12927
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by pie-eater

  1.  Quote:
    Rogers Head: this 2ch2 site is pretty popular with high school students as you can see with all the info and areas for them to write on - found some really nasty things said about teachers on there.

    http://bbs.2ch2.net/jisatu2/
    More than a bit shocking that. I can't read it all but showed a Japanese friend that they seemed pretty surprised at that sort of thing going on.
  2. Does anyone here read any Japanese magazines? A friend of mine showed me some - dvd ones, a car mag and one called Friday. It looked like a gossip mag, with a "sealed up" bit in the middle that had some skebe pics of OLs in states of undress and their favourite positions and the like as well as blood type \:\)

     

    It sure looked like it was aimed at men, but he said it was a popular mag with women too.

  3. No WMDs?

    Surely no.

    They were just hidden well, surely.

     

    http://politics.guardian.co.uk/labour/story/0,9061,1301434,00.html

     

    Tony Blair will be confronted with a fresh challenge over Iraq within the next two weeks when the long-awaited final report of the Iraq Survey Group concludes there were no weapons of mass destruction in the country at the time of the US-UK invasion.

     

    The Guardian has learned that the team of weapons inspectors sent in by Washington and London at the end of the war to comb Iraq will find that though the threat of Saddam Hussein was real, there were no stockpiles.

  4. Dope champ!

     

    Tour de France: 'I became world champion on dope,' Millar tells French police

    By Alasdair Fotheringham in Villard-de-Lans

    21 July 2004

     

     

    The British cyclist David Millar has confessed to French police about his regular use of the banned drug erythropoietin (EPO), admitting he had "become world champion on dope".

     

    The French newspaper L'Equipe yesterday published extensive extracts of the statements the Scottish rider made to the police when he was taken into custody at the beginning of this month. They revealed that Millar had made crucial use of EPO - a drug which raises the level of red blood cell production, increasing the body's oxygen-carrying capacity - in 2001 and 2003 as part of his preparation for those years' key autumn events.

     

    It was the discovery by French police of two syringes containing EPO, which Millar had used in the run-up to last year's world championship, that led to his period in custody and subsequent confession.

     

    "I had taken the syringes back home as an aide-mémoire, a way of reminding myself that I had become world champion on dope," Millar told police. "You take drugs because you are trapped by yourself, by glory, by money. I believe that those two syringes were the witnesses of how ashamed I felt to have used drugs. I wasn't proud of doing it, I wasn't happy. I was the prisoner of the person I had become."

     

    Millar had begun using EPO, he claimed, because of the pressure to produce results following a near-disastrous Tour de France in 2001 when he crashed in the prologue. "I knew I wasn't at a good level, but that I had a chance to get a good result by taking risks," he said. "I ended up hitting the barriers, and I went through 10 days of atrocious suffering physically and psychologically before abandoning."

     

    That proved the turning point, Millar claimed, and he decided to start taking illegal drugs. It was during that Tour, and seeing that he was going so badly, that another rider in the peloton - an individual whom Millar named in his statement - told him that he should prepare really well for the Tour of Spain. Millar said: "I understood what he meant."

     

    The Scot made a trip to Italy with the same person to try to stage a comeback, "buying EPO from different suppliers. I would wait in the car for him and then pay 400 francs for each syringe I took."

     

    Millar blamed his decision to use EPO on the pressure of achieving in the sport, particularly after being made Cofidis team leader in 1999.

     

    He said: "In 1999 I was very tired and I did not feel like cycling anymore. I started partying all the time during the summer and that's when I broke my heel and was forced out for four months until the start of 2000.

     

    "I had a lot of problems resuming training and I was not happy in my professional life.

     

    "There was also the pressure from Cofidis. I felt as the leader I knew I had to participate in the Tour de France. I resumed training, won the prologue (at the Poitiers Futuroscope) and I had three great weeks.

     

    "I took EPO because I knew that the Cofidis team was going to Spain for La Vuelta on the condition that I would do it and get a result. I could feel the pressure.

     

    "As I was not happy in my personal life I had based everything on my sporting career. I felt people only saw me as a cyclist.

     

    "After taking EPO for the 2001 Vuelta I was not well. I was a cheater. I had crossed the line and I did not feel good about it. I drugged myself up because my job was to be well ranked. There were the magazines in England, the sports papers, the television, who were expecting my good results, and I did not want to be criticised."

     

    Britain's most successful male cyclist of his generation, Millar took a silver medal in the World Championships time trial event, held in October, in 2001, and a gold in 2003. He also won the prologue and a stage of the Tour of Spain in September 2001. The statements, which for the first time give specific dates for the Cofidis professional's drug consumption, are set to cost Millar his world titles. According to the regulations of cycling's governing body, the UCI, the 27-year-old Scot's statements to police can be treated as a positive dope test if confirmed as accurate.

     

    "Normally, one cannot use declarations of a penal instruction which are confidential", a UCI member said yesterday.

     

    "But if Millar recognises what he has said, either publicly or before a disciplinary committee, then it's not necessary to wait for the end of the penal procedure."

     

    Millar is on the point of becoming team-less as well as medal-less. A Cofidis official has said that a letter confirming his expulsion from the squad is in the post to the Scot.

     

    Millar's sister and agent, Fran, confirmed the veracity of the declarations published in L'Equipe. "What it says is a word-for-word account of what David told police," she said. Miller has also admitted taking EPO on his personal website. Her statement will further increase the likelihood of the UCI awarding the 2003 World Championships time trial event to the Australian Michael Rogers, second behind Millar last year.

     

    Millar then regularised his supply of EPO by, he claimed, working with the Spanish doctor Jesus Losa, the team medic for leading Tour squad Euskaltel-Euskadi. Following Millar's detention, Losa did not come to France with his squad and he was then suspended by Euskaltel after a limited form of Millar's declarations was leaked to the press three weeks ago.

     

    The latest version of Millar's statements will increase the pressure on Losa with Millar alleging bluntly: "I put my life and career in his hands, and I paid him 12,000 euros a year. It was me that asked Losa to give me EPO, I took two doses in May and August of 2003." Losa is not available for comment.

     

    Part of the attraction, to judge from Millar's confession, was undoubtedly financial: "I was earning 250,000 euros a year as a fixed salary, and that year I would make 800,000."

     

    Yesterday Millar had a face-to-face confrontation with former Cofidis rider Phillipe Gaumont in Paris as part of the ongoing investigation into the Scot's team. Gaumont had already accused Millar of doping during the 2003 Tour in his own declarations to French police, something the Scot has categorically denied up until now. In the meeting, neither side changed their version.

     

    Millar is not due to have another meeting with the French authorities though he remains under formal investigation for the possession of banned substances, which is a criminal offence in France.

     

    Millar also faces a disciplinary hearing with the British Cycling Federation in Manchester, where he will be given a penalty of anything up to a life suspension.

     

    Dave Brailsford, a British Cycling official, said: "A decision will be made in due course after the hearing has taken place in the very near future, probably within the next 10 days." Whatever happens the sporting career of a rider who in late June was considered major Olympic contender and well en route to take the yellow jersey in the early part of the Tour de France appears to be over. In just five weeks, his world has collapsed completely.

  5.  Quote:
    but we looked decent
    You did see a different game, mate. Sure you weren't under the influence or wearing some special glasses or summat? ;\)

    As for their quotes - if there are any underlying problems, they're hardly likely to bring out that discontent into the public are they now?

    Anyhow, I want them to play well. And hope we do get better with each game and things do get better.
  6. Check it out

     

    Spray, or Vaporisateur bottle fragrances last longer as the fragrance isn't as exposed to the air. Provided that you store your fragrances in a cool, dry place then you should get 2-3 years out of them (Some fragrances can last for many more years.). Of course, this depends on how long the fragrance has been sitting on the shelf in the store before you bought it!

     

    I wonder how long LOVE-SCENT.COM stuff works for lol.gif lol.gif

×
×
  • Create New...