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Peter Sagan tests positive for COVID-19 for second time in less than a year

Three-time world champion and his brother are now self-isolating

Peter Sagan, who has just joined Team TotalEnergies after five seasons at Bora-Hansgrohe, has tested positive for COVID-19 for the second time. In less than a year.

The three-time world champion revealed in a post on Twitter that he and brother Juraj, who has also switched to the French WorldTeam, are now self-isolating.

He wrote: “My brother Juraj and I took Covid-19 tests which, unfortunately, came out positive. We have symptoms related to the virus and we are following the corresponding guidance set by the relevant authorities. I’ll keep you posted.”

Sagan, who previously tested positive for COVID-19 in February last year during a training camp on Gran Canaria, had been due to make his Team Total Energies debut later this month at the Vuelta a San Juan.

>  Peter Sagan tests positive for Covid-19 during Gran Canaria training camp

Irrespective of the disruption to his preparations for the new season caused by his positive test, however, his first start for his new team will be delayed in any event, with organisers of the Argentine race deciding this week to exclude foreign teams due to the Omicron variant.

In November, the 31 year old was fined €5,000 by a court in Monaco after infringing a COVID-19 curfew last April as well as injuring a police officer as he struggled with them, apparently afraid he would be “forced to be vaccinated.”

> Peter Sagan fined for breaking Monaco COVID-19 curfew and injuring police officer

He admitted in court that he was drunk when police stopped him and his brother at around 0030 hours on 25 April.

He was reported to have “struggled like a mad person” as police tried to take him into custody, with one officer sustaining an injury to their hand.

However, Sagan’s lawyers said that he had resisted arrest because he was afraid that he would be “forced to be vaccinated.”

The Slovakian rider spent the night in custody and said afterwards that he could not remember what had happened.

He also issued an apology, blaming the incident on having drunk too much, something he said he was not used to.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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Captain Badger replied to wycombewheeler | 2 years ago
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wycombewheeler wrote:

Yes catching the virus is more risky, but that's in the past now. That was last February

In my last post I said that is a fair point

 

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wycombewheeler replied to Captain Badger | 2 years ago
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Captain Badger wrote:
wycombewheeler wrote:

Yes catching the virus is more risky, but that's in the past now. That was last February

In my last post I said that is a fair point

 

yes but then you continued to say that vaccination was controlled and low risk compared to catching the virus, which I didn't argue against. What I said was I expect he is in a similar position to the vaccinated already.

People who have never had it would be crazy not to take the free vaccine, risks from vaccines are tiny compared to risks from the virus. 

But people who have already recovered are only in a marginally worse position that someone with two doses of vaccine (By Rendal's figures). No one would be pushing a vaccine that offered a 10-20% reduction in risk, which seems to be the difference between the vaccinated and the recovered.

Everyone will come into contact with the virus, even if everyone was vaccinated, there would still be enough people capable of transmitting it. 

the ONS survey found 1 in 15 people had it at new year. Are the ONS survey volunteers more or less likely to be anti vaxx than the general population? I would say less as all the nut jobs will not engage with any measures. Therefore, despite being vaccinated and even boostered large numbers are catching it. The majority are probably not even aware they have it. 

So my view is that individuals who have recovered are not significant in the risks faced by the general population, because the virus is so prevalent even among the vaccinated, that people are almost certain to be exposed at some point and the reduction in risk from previous infection is close to the reduction from 2 doses of vaccine.

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Captain Badger replied to wycombewheeler | 2 years ago
1 like
wycombewheeler wrote:

.....

yes but then you continued to say that vaccination was controlled and low risk compared to catching the virus, which I didn't argue against. What I said was I expect he is in a similar position to the vaccinated already.

People who have never had it would be crazy not to take the free vaccine, risks from vaccines are tiny compared to risks from the virus. 

But people who have already recovered are only in a marginally worse position that someone with two doses of vaccine (By Rendal's figures). No one would be pushing a vaccine that offered a 10-20% reduction in risk, which seems to be the difference between the vaccinated and the recovered.

Everyone will come into contact with the virus, even if everyone was vaccinated, there would still be enough people capable of transmitting it. 

the ONS survey found 1 in 15 people had it at new year. Are the ONS survey volunteers more or less likely to be anti vaxx than the general population? I would say less as all the nut jobs will not engage with any measures. Therefore, despite being vaccinated and even boostered large numbers are catching it. The majority are probably not even aware they have it. 

So my view is that individuals who have recovered are not significant in the risks faced by the general population, because the virus is so prevalent even among the vaccinated, that people are almost certain to be exposed at some point and the reduction in risk from previous infection is close to the reduction from 2 doses of vaccine.

Fair enough

My view is to follow the medical advice, which is take the course and boosters as appropriate, rather than try to extrapolate out of context data on whether a dose of covid = a jab.

Oh, and don't get pissed in Monaco and assault  a police officer cos you've come to the zany conclusion that they're trying to "force vaccinate" you

PS I know you don't do that, but y'never know someone might....

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Secret_squirrel replied to wycombewheeler | 2 years ago
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wycombewheeler wrote:

With the high transmissibility of the omicron variant I thnk ithe number of people who will escape it completely is vanishingly small, also anyone who wanted the vaccine could have had it. So what is the detriment to others?

1.  You think completely wrongly.  The vast majority of people with the booster wont get omicron.

2.  The detriment to others is if you had Covid a year/six months/3 months ago you are increasingly likely to catch Omicron and pass it on than someone who's been recently vaccinated - either 2nd dose or booster.

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Rich_cb replied to Secret_squirrel | 2 years ago
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We don't know that they won't get Omicron.

Given how little protection 2 vaccinations give against Omicron I'd suspect that within a few months there will be little or no residual protection from a booster.

I think Wycombewheeler is right, we're all going to get Omicron at some point regardless of vaccination status.

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wycombewheeler replied to Secret_squirrel | 2 years ago
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Secret_squirrel wrote:
wycombewheeler wrote:

With the high transmissibility of the omicron variant I thnk ithe number of people who will escape it completely is vanishingly small, also anyone who wanted the vaccine could have had it. So what is the detriment to others?

1.  You think completely wrongly.  The vast majority of people with the booster wont get omicron.

2.  The detriment to others is if you had Covid a year/six months/3 months ago you are increasingly likely to catch Omicron and pass it on than someone who's been recently vaccinated - either 2nd dose or booster.

so we are now saying boosters every 3 months? because anything longer than that is too high a risk? despite everyone being vaccinated. and risk of serious illness resulting being low.

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mdavidford replied to wycombewheeler | 2 years ago
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At some point, we'll probably get updated vaccines that target Omicron, or whatever variants have replaced it at that point, which will re-extend the effective period. The problem there is that you have to somehow reach a transition point where you're not still just throwing all your efforts into producing as much vaccine as possible (remember that large parts of the world still only have vaccination rates of a few % at the moment, so there's a long way to go to widespread coverage) and can divert some into keeping up with variants as they emerge.

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