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Moviefan1234
06-30-2006, 10:04 AM
Source - http://sportsline.com/cycling/story/9533900

Favorites Ullrich, Basso told they can't race in Tour de France
June 30, 2006
CBS SportsLine.com wire reports



STRASBOURG, France -- Favorites Jan Ullrich, Ivan Basso and other cyclists were barred Friday from the Tour de France in the biggest doping scandal to hit cycling in years.

The decision to prevent Ullrich, Basso and others from racing threw the sport's premier race into upheaval the day before it begins.

Tour director Christian Prudhomme said the organizers' determination to fight doping was "total."

"The enemy is not cycling, the enemy is doping," he said.

Riders being excluded will not be replaced, meaning a smaller field than the 189 racers originally expected.

It's the biggest doping crisis to the hit the sport since the Festina scandal in 1998 nearly derailed the Tour. The Festina team was ejected from the race after customs officers found a large stash of banned drugs in a team car.

Basso, winner of the Giro d'Italia, and Ullrich -- the 1997 Tour winner and a five-time runner-up -- were among more than 50 cyclists said to have been implicated in a Spanish doping probe that has rocked the sport for weeks.


Ivan Basso was the runner-up to Lance Armstrong at last year's Tour de France. (AP)
Basso and Ullrich's teams said Friday that because their names had come up in the probe they were being withdrawn from the Tour. Ullrich's T-Mobile squad said it also suspended rider Oscar Sevilla and sporting director Rudi Pevenage because of their involvement.

Basso was returning to Italy, his team said.

The Spanish doping scandal erupted in May when police carried out arrests and raids, seizing drugs and frozen blood thought to have been prepared for banned, performance-enhancing transfusions.

Since then, the names of riders said to have had contacts with Eufemiano Fuentes, a doctor among those arrested, have leaked in Spanish media. Ullrich was among those named.

Then, after more leaks Thursday, Spanish authorities released details from the probe to Tour organizers and other cycling bodies, showing which riders were implicated in the investigation. It was on the basis of that official information that Tour teams decided to act.

T-Mobile received information implicating Ullrich, Sevilla and Pevenage from Tour organizers, including documents from the Spanish government, team spokesman Luuc Eisenga said.

"The only thing I can tell you is that the information is clear enough and didn't leave any doubt," he said.

Another T-Mobile spokesman, Stefan Wagner, told Germany's n-tv television that the team was acting on information indicating "that there was contact between the two riders and Rudi Pevenage and the Spanish doctor ... who is at the center of this doping story."

Asked whether T-Mobile would consider cutting ties with Ullrich completely, he replied "certainly ... we are now demanding evidence of his innocence."

"If this evidence can be provided, then we have a completely new situation," he said. "If it cannot be provided, nothing will change about this situation."

The extent of Basso's implication was not immediately clear. But his team said the suspicion hanging over him would have made his participation in the Tour difficult.

"It would be big chaos if those riders remain in the race," said the manager of Basso's team, Bjarne Riis. "We have to protect cycling."

Spanish racers Francisco Mancebo and Joseba Beloki were also among those named in media reports as being linked to the scandal. It was not immediately clear whether their teams were also barring them from the Tour.

Two Spanish cycling teams -- Astana-Wurth and Comunidad Valenciana -- have also been implicated. Comunidad Valenciana had its invitation to compete in the Tour rescinded, but the Court of Arbitration for Sport ruled Thursday that the Astana-Wurth team -- which includes favorite Alexandre Vinokourov -- could not be excluded from the race.

A list of riders excluded from the race by team:

Astana-Wurth: Michele Scarponi (ITA), Marcos Antonio Serrano (ESP), David Etxebarria (ESP), Joseba Beloki (ESP), Angel Vicioso (ESP), Isidro Nozal (ESP), Unai Osa (ESP), Jörg Jaksche (ALL), Giampaolo Caruso (ITA)
CSC: Ivan Basso (ITA)
Caisse d'Epargne-Iles Baleares: Constantino Zaballa (ESP)
Saunier Duval: Carlos Zarate (ESP)
AG2R: Francisco Mancebo (ESP)
T-Mobile: Jan Ullrich (GER), Oscar Sevilla (ESP)
Phonak: José Enrique Gutierrez (ESP), José Ignacio Gutierrez (ESP)

AP NEWS
The Associated Press News Service

Copyright 2005-2006, The Associated Press, All Rights Reserved


I am at a loss for words, this is baffling and stunning. I guess a proper comparison would be the NFL suspending Peyton Manning and Tom Brady for performance enhancing drugs. This perhaps may be one of the biggest if not the biggest scandal in the history of professional sports. It's too bad these athletes can't do it without needing help from drugs to win races a la Lance Armstrong.

Scorpio24
06-30-2006, 10:22 AM
Holy shit.


There are going to be literaly dozens of people around the world who's favourite sport as just been rocked.

The carnage.

Moviefan1234
06-30-2006, 11:37 AM
Originally posted by Scorpio24
Holy shit.


There are going to be literaly dozens of people around the world who's favourite sport as just been rocked.

The carnage.

Gee, sorry. Forgive me for being passionate about a sport I love.

Scorpio24
06-30-2006, 02:17 PM
Originally posted by Moviefan1234
Gee, sorry. Forgive me for being passionate about a sport I love.

Haha i'm sorry I just did it to wind you up a bit. I follow cycling every now and then myself. I just couldn't resist. Seriiously I apologise.

When I read this on the net though my 1st reaction was one of :rolleyes: . I didn't really feel it was shock. For years my missus has benn convinced there is mass drug use going on. She loves the sport and she loves to tell me that one day she will be proved right.

Well that day has arrived.

:( :o :D

Moviefan1234
07-01-2006, 07:54 AM
Originally posted by Scorpio24
Haha i'm sorry I just did it to wind you up a bit. I follow cycling every now and then myself. I just couldn't resist. Seriiously I apologise.

When I read this on the net though my 1st reaction was one of :rolleyes: . I didn't really feel it was shock. For years my missus has benn convinced there is mass drug use going on. She loves the sport and she loves to tell me that one day she will be proved right.

Well that day has arrived.

:( :o :D


It's ok, I was having a bad day yesterday anyway and failed to sense the sarcasm in your post. Cycling is just a sport that is very dear to my heart, and I hate to see something like this happen to it. Nothing like the missus being right about something, eh?

Scorpio24
07-05-2006, 05:56 AM
Originally posted by Moviefan1234
It's ok, I was having a bad day yesterday anyway and failed to sense the sarcasm in your post. Cycling is just a sport that is very dear to my heart, and I hate to see something like this happen to it. Nothing like the missus being right about something, eh?

No problem. I shouldn't have ragged on it. If it wasn't a sport I liked myself I would never have said it.

You're right though it is a shame. But like I said not so much a surprise to me. But then saying that only because the missus was constatnly telling me she was right.:rolleyes:

The most worrying thing about this for me is if the Sport's image can be saved. I know from experience that Athletics in this country is not taken seriously anymore because of the drug abuse that's rife in it. I don't think athletics is taken very seriously anywhere anymore.

When my missus was younger she used to run in front of hundreds and hundreds of people. And that was just in school.

Now no-one cares. I just hope Cycling isn't treated with the same distain because of this incident.