БОЛЕЕМ! 19-го сентября 2016 года
Здесь будем болеть сегодня, 19-го сентября 2016 года.
Турниры сегодня:
Онлайн счет:
http://scores.itftennis.com/?alias=itf&layoutid=72&versionid=1&language=en
http://www.drakulastream.eu/tennis
http://www.ustream.tv/channel/watch-wta-auckland-live-stream-asb-classic-tennis
http://www.livestream.com/asbclassiclive
http://www.lshunter.tv/tennis-live-streaming-video.html
http://www.oleoletv.com/broadcast/1/
http://www.allsport-live.ru/index.php?type=4
Китайские стримы:
http://live.video.sina.com.cn/room/tennis
http://live.video.sina.com.cn/room/sports2
Стрим кортов академии Боллетьери:
http://live.imgacademies.com/Tennis.aspx
Показывают 15 кортов
Стримы БУДУТ сегодня.
Roland Garros TV courts (besides the main ones): 4-5-8-10-11-14-16-17
US Open 11 ТВ кортов - центральный, Армстронг, Грандстэнд, 4, 5, 6, 7, 10, 11, 13, 17
Время Московское:
Онлайн счет:http://www.protennislive.com/lshd/main.swf?lang=en&ref=http://www.wtatennis.com
УИМБЛДОН:
онлайн счет:
http://www.wimbledon.com/en_GB/scores/index.html
RG:
онлайн счет:
http://www.rolandgarros.com/en_FR/scores/index.html
AO:
http://www.ausopen.com/en_AU/scores/index.html
US OPEN:
http://www.usopen.org/en_US/scores/index.html?promo=subnav
http://www.protennislive.com/lshd/main.swf?lang=en&ref=www.wtatennis.com
Есть Онлайн счет для турниров ИТФ:
http://scores.itftennis.com/?alias=itf&layoutid=72&versionid=1&language=en
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Именно в этом и одна из самых больших проблем у ВАДА и у спортсменов, которые применяли допинг через TUE.
Большинство спортсменов никогда не говорили и даже не намекали, что применяли допинг легальным способом. Наоборот они всегда утверждали, что никогда не применяли! ВАДА тоже никогда не публиковала имена спортсменов, никогда не говорила "во время соревнований есть спортсмены, которые применяют допинг легально". И теперь, когда хакеры доказывают, что они применяли, у этих спортсменов проблема доверия!
Поэтому сейчас в Англии многие против вело команды Скай, поэтому Скай потерял доверие, поэтому публика недовольна и критикует спортсменов. Но в конечном счете вина у ВАДА, проблема в системе TUE, а не в том, что спортсмены использовали ее.
Если Вы читали внимательно слова хакеров, они написали, что их группа международная.
В этом моменте лучшее прикрытие для этих хакеров - чтобы все думали они россияне. А сейчас ситуация такова, что очень легко подумать хакеры русские. Пусть ищут их в России, а в это время они спокойно будут работать в других странах.
Хакеры умные ребята, и хитрые...
Иначе сидели бы в тюрьме!
Вы, кажется, не читаете внимательно хакерскую инфо.
Они вошли в систему АДАМС ВАДА, которая была подготовлена для ОИ в Рио. То есть у них вероятно не было доступа до данных спортсменов, которые не участвовали на ОИ. Или если было, то для небольшого количества спортсменов. Иными словами я думаю у хакеров нет данных Марии. Иначе они опубликовали бы их.
Верно, никто не обязан раскрывать факт, что легально применял допинг.
Но никто не обязан утверждать, что никогда не применял допинг тоже.
Почему тогда Серена, Рафа и много другие, много раз утверждали - я никогда не применял ничего такого, когда прекрасно знали, что принимали?
Они врали, хотели скрыть правду, и теперь, когда правду узнал весь мир, им конечно трудно!
А Мария сама говорила о разрешениях (TUEs), и когда ей разрешили, и когда ей не разрешили. Она говорила правду, а Серена, Рафа и другие - нет.
А это по любым стандартам - очень большая разница.
:):):)
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Совершенно наоборот. Читайте и слушайте хоть английские СМИ.
Они не дураки публиковать данные, которые не интересны никому.
Кажется, Вы не понимаете - цель хакеров изменить эту систему. Это могут сделать только западные страны, это от России не зависит.
Логично они публикуют то, что имеет эффект на западе.
Но мне ещё Кешик каждый день море удовольствия доставляет - прям допинг!!!)))
Wada blames Russians for leaked medical records but false clues make it tough to find hackers
London: Medical data from some of the world’s leading athletes has been posted to the web and the World Anti-Doping Agency says Russians are to blame. Even the hackers seem to agree, adopting the name "Fancy Bears" — a moniker long associated with the Kremlin’s electronic espionage operations.
But as cybersecurity experts pore over the hackers’ digital trail, they’re up against a familiar problem. The evidence has been packed with possible red herrings — including registry data pointing to France, Korean characters in the hackers’ code and a server based in California.
"Anybody can say they are anyone and it’s hard to disprove," said Jeffrey Carr, the chief executive of consulting firm Taia Global and something of a professional skeptic when it comes to claims of state-backed hacking.
A screenshot of the Fancy Bears website. APA screenshot of the Fancy Bears website. AP
Many others in the cybersecurity industry see the Wada hack as a straightforward act of Russian revenge, but solid evidence is hard to find.
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Even the meaning of the name "Fancy Bears" is unclear. California-based threat intelligence firm CrowdStrike has long applied that nickname to an allegedly Russian state-backed group, but the hackers’ adoption isn’t necessarily a brazen acknowledgement of CrowdStrike’s research. It might be an attempt to hold it up to ridicule. Which interpretation the group favors hasn’t been made clear. Repeated messages to email addresses associated with Fancy Bears have gone unreturned.
Fancy Bears’ website doesn’t necessarily provide any more insight. Some its artistry appears to have been lifted from a Russian clip art page. But tech podcaster Vince Tocce also found Korean script in the site’s code — characters which vanished shortly after he made his discovery public . In a telephone interview, he said that showed how difficult it was to take anything for granted.
Some pieces of Fancy Bears’ infrastructure were almost certainly structured to sow confusion.
The site, for example, appears to be hosted in California but was registered at an address in the town of Pomponne, east of Paris, under the name "Jean Guillalime."
A man residing at that address, Jean-Francois Guillaume, told The Associated Press the registry information was bogus and that he was mystified as to why the hackers had picked on him.
"I have absolutely nothing to do with this," he said, adding that he ran a consulting shop and a flower business and wasn’t particularly interested in sports. "I don’t know any Russians," he said.
http://www.firstpost.com/sports/wada-blames-russians-for-leaked-medical-records-but-false-clues-make-it-tough-to-find-hackers-3008752.html
WADA president Craig Reedie told CNN Thursday:
"Next week we’re looking at whether the code can be changed to cover institutionalized corruption. We are looking at whether we should have more powers when we declare people non-compliant.
http://www.championat.com/other/news-2583156-hakery-opublikovali-4-ju-chast-iz-bazy-dannyh-vada-v-spiske-est-nadal-i-fara.html
by: Kamakshi Tandon September 18, 2016
The men’s final had approximately 1.4 million less viewers this year. (AP Photo)
Ratings were down for the finals of the US Open with both the men’s and women’s events seeing a drop from last year.
The men’s final between Stan Wawrinka and Novak Djokovic drew 1.7 million viewers (on ESPN), compared to approximately 2.3 million a year ago for the final between Djokovic and Roger Federer.
The women’s final between Angelique Kerber and Karoline Pliskova earned 1.5 million viewers (on ESPN), down from 1.6 million in 2015 for Flavia Pennetta and Roberta Vinci and down also from approximately 4.3 million (on CBS) two years ago for the final between Serena Williams and Caroline Wozniacki.
http://www.tennis.com/pro-game/2016/09/us-open-ratings-decline-especially-men/61184/
Questions surround Tour de France winner and British Olympic champion’s use of medical certificates for banned substances
Just last month Bradley Wiggins, the first British man to win the Tour de France, was basking in the glory of becoming the country’s most decorated Olympian at another glittering Games for Team GB’s cyclists.
Now he faces a fight for his reputation as some of his hitherto most loyal supporters echo questions around his record on performance-enhancing drugs arising from a Russian-led hacking effort into the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) database.
The questions surround the use of medical certificates to allow athletes to take otherwise banned substances for pre-existing conditions, and they are not particularly new. But the specificity and ferocity with which they are being asked in the wake of the Russian leak is new.
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But under the headline It looks bad, Brad, a disappointed Walsh concluded this week in the Sunday Times: “The team that wanted to be seen as whiter than white had been dealing in shades of grey. What they did was legal, but it wasn’t right.”
Walsh also suggests that a 2012 injection of triamcinolone, ahead of Wiggins’s historic Tour victory, was given as a preventive measure rather than to treat existing symptoms.
There is no suggestion Wiggins did anything to break anti-doping regulations. But those shades of grey are likely to be pored over even more closely in the coming days and weeks as the Fancy Bears release even more confidential medical records hacked from the Wada database during the Rio Olympics.
The problem for Wiggins, for Brailsford, for Team Sky and even for British Cycling as a whole is that, having insisted so publicly and so vehemently they would be whiter than white, anything less starts to look like hypocrisy.
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It must be repeated that there is no evidence that Wiggins or Sky did anything that was not within the rules. And, also, that the rationale behind TUEs is obvious in terms of allowing athletes with pre-existing medical conditions to compete.
“If the anti-doping community wishes to change the international standard [for allowing TUEs] then that could be done. But there are wide implications,” said Sir Craig Reedie, the Wada president, on Sunday.
Wada has repeatedly insisted that medical confidentiality dictates that TUE applications should remain private and points to the robustness and independence of the process. But on the other side of the argument, difficult questions over the use of TUEs to boost performance by unscrupulous coaches and doctors persist.
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The renewed speculation around Wiggins and other high-profile western athletes is exactly what the Russian hackers linked to the Fancy Bears leak wanted to achieve. Their aim is to set up a dynamic where the often legitimate use of TUEs muddies the waters to the extent that some start to equate it with the large-scale, state-sponsored cheating uncovered over the past year that almost resulted in Russia being banned from the Rio Games. That the two issues should not be conflated should not make either any less valid.
Jonathan Vaughters, a former American cyclist who now runs his own team, suggested a way forward that is being advocated increasingly loudly. “Want a good solution for TUEs? Make it compulsory to publicly disclose all TUEs,” he said. “Any athlete would think twice unless they really needed it.”
https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2016/sep/18/bradley-wiggins-world-anti-doping-agency-hackers-russian-leak
by Shane Stokes
September 18, 2016
Photography by Cor Vos
Commenting on the Team Sky TUE controversy, former professional Joerg Jaksche has said that injections of Triamcinolone acetonide were a standard grey area doping practice used by professional riders in the past.
The German rider was involved in the Operacion Puerto controversy and later admitted to blood doping during his career. He became a whistleblower about illegal practices in the sport. He told CyclingTips that he and others would acquire Therepeutic Use Exemptions (TUEs) to get a green light to use otherwise banned injections of cortisone for races such as the Tour de France.
“To be honest, we had the same excuse,” he told CyclingTips. “I personally did it, as well as a lot of cyclists that I know from my era. We always said we had the same thing, the same allergy, but it was actually just for performance-enhancing.
“I think a lot of people suddenly had allergies at the Tour. The UCI cannot really do something about it and WADA can’t really do something about it. Well, they could if they want. But I think Sky had a bit of a credibility benefit because they were Sky.”
Triamcinolone acetonide is a corticosteroid which was involved in Lance Armstrong’s positive test during the 1999 Tour de France. The Texan had taken the substance prior to the race and, after traces were detected in his system, he acquired a backdated TUE. This controversially allowed him to continue in the Tour, and to win the first of seven consecutive titles.
The same substance was in the news last Wednesday when Russian hackers released information that they had stolen from the World Anti Doping Agency [WADA]’s database. 2012 Tour de France winner Bradley Wiggins and Team Sky teammate Chris Froome were both named; Froome was shown to have used the corticosteroid prednisolone in May 2013 and again in April 2014.
Six TUE forms were leaked for Wiggins, with three originating in 2008 and running for 12 months. These allowed the use of the inhalers Salbutamol, Budesonide, Formoterol and Fluticasone, and covered his season with the Garmin-Slipstream team in 2009.
Three others permitted 40mg injections of the corticosteroid Triamcinolone acetonide and were while he was with Team Sky.
These were administered prior to the 2011 Tour de France, the 2012 Tour de France [which he won] and the 2013 Giro d’Italia.
Wiggins has said he did nothing wrong and that his usage of the substance was cleared by the appropriate authorities.
Jaksche spoke about his time racing and the use of Triamcinolone acetonide.
“It was always the same procedure [to get the drug]. You would apply for a TUE, telling WADA that you had hay fever. Your team doctor would tell them you were having certain problems like [watering] eyes, blah blah blah. You would get 50 mg injections before the Tour. It was an old and traditional way of doping.
“WADA would never really say, ‘why didn’t you apply last year for it?’ That’s important, because at the same time each year you should have the same problem. Plus or minus two weeks, nature should have the same pollen flying. Yet they would never ask that.
“So you would get your cortisone injection in order to be competitive at the Tour or to lose weight or whatever the motive was there.”
Asked what the benefits were, Jaksche said that there were clear boosts.
“The effect was extreme. Cortisone reduces inflammation in your body, number one. It is also a little bit pushy as it is a hormone. So it causes a certain hormone rush.
“On one hand you are at [race] weight and you are more willing to perform, and then on the other hand it is a strong pain killer and an inflammation killer. So your recovery is shorter and the pain you are going through is less.
“It makes you very skinny. It burns fat. If you do it at the beginning of the Tour, you are going to lose another one to two kilos in the first week. You are going to suffer less. You are going to be less tired as your recuperation is faster because of the anti-inflammatory effects. It is the old school of doping.”
http://cyclingtips.com/2016/09/jaksche-on-skys-tue-controversy-we-used-the-same-excuse-in-my-era/
редиска- нехороший человек...
нет чо-то путаю...а ЧМО!!! Надо у Денни спросить... Погоди чуток, Кешик, потерпи малыш...))))