Esimerkkinä vaikka:
v. 2000: "(Steffen) Kjaergaard feels the Dutch confessions, and comments from Pedersen and others as a burden: "If I'm doing well people start asking questions about doping and the problems around it. On the other hand it's in many ways positive for me that it's brought into the light now, which will favor clean cyclists. I belong to a generation of professional cyclists that will have to take this shit and we undoubtedly will have to live with it for years to come."
http://autobus.cyclingnews.com/resul...jan6news.shtml

ja v. 2012: "Another former US Postal teammate of disgraced Lance Armstrong, Steffen Kjaergaard, yesterday admitted to using the banned blood booster EPO when racing the Tour de France alongside the American.Kjaergaard said he started doping on his own initiative in 1998 when with the Danish Chicky World team, going on to meet Belgian doctor George Mouton for "advice" to "avoid the risk of being caught".
The Norwegian then joined the US Postal team and raced alongside Armstrong in the 2000 and 2001 Tours. He said doping at the time was endemic and the team arranged all."

http://www.smh.com.au/sport/cycling/...023-283xk.html

Samassa Cyclingnews.comin linkissä vuodelta 2000 on muuten kommentti, joka sopii hyvin CIRC-raportin yhteyteen: "
Verbruggen takes a dim view

Hein Verbruggen, president of the UCI has criticised Rooks and co. for their recent confessions, especially as they were made years after the fact. Verbruggen believed that they would have a negative impact on aspiring cyclists, and commented that this "cannot bring any good and it makes those riding clean feel guilty. They are giving the impression that doping practices were structured in their teams.
"A rider is the first one responsible of his doping. They could have said: no to doping. About these three riders, another Dutch rider told me that if they were ethical they would return the prizes they won thanks to doping".
He does hold optimism that the current hematocrit "controls" are working, and that the attitude is changing within the peloton. However, there is still a long way to go, as evidenced by the current trials in Italy. "