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Alyallen

Joined: 29 Mar 2004 Location: The 4th Greatest Place on Earth = Jeonju!!!
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Posted: Thu Jul 26, 2007 12:34 am Post subject: Tour De France in Turmoil |
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Sports integrity further down the tubes. Between doping, steroid, point shaving, dog fighting and bribery, might this decade be the decade of Sports dishonesty? I can't wait for the Olympics now
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Tour leader Rasmussen taken out of Tour de France by Rabobank team
By JEROME PUGMIRE, Associated Press Writer
July 26, 2007
GOURETTE, France (AP) -- Tour de France leader Michael Rasmussen was sent home after winning Wednesday's stage, sending cycling's biggest race staggering toward the finish.
Sunday's ride through the heart of Paris likely will prove to be unforgettable.
For all the wrong reasons.
Just a day after star Alexandre Vinokourov tested positive for a banned blood transfusion, the Tour also lost the man who most believed would be wearing the yellow jersey down the Champs-Elysses.
"Michael Rasmussen has been sent home for violating (the team's) internal rules," Rabobank spokesman Jacob Bergsma told The Associated Press by phone.
Rasmussen's expulsion, which Bergsma said was ordered by the Dutch team's sponsor, was linked to "incorrect" information the rider gave to the team's sports director over his whereabouts last month. Rasmussen missed random drug tests May 8 and June 28, saying he was in Mexico. However, a former rider, Davide Cassani, told Denmark's Danmarks Radio on Wednesday that he had seen Rasmussen in Italy in mid-June.
Only once before has the race leader been expelled. In 1978, Belgian rider Michel Pollentier, trying to evade doping controls after winning a stage in the Alps, was caught with an intricate tube-and-container system that contained urine that was not his, said Tour historian Jean-Paul Brouchon.
Tom Lund, chairman of the Danish Cycling Union, said Rabobank "did they right thing, because it is a situation that no serious team cannot live with."
Bergsma said the Rabobank team, which suspended Rasmussen, had not decided yet whether its other riders would take the start Thursday in Pau. Its next best rider was Michael Boogerd of the Netherlands, 16th and about 28 minutes behind leader Alberto Contador.
Rasmussen, the leader since July 15, could not be reached for comment by the AP late Wednesday.
"I have no idea what I should do or where I will go," he told Dutch newspaper Algemeen Dagblad. "This is an enormous blow for me, and also for all the guys from the Rabo team. They're devastated."
Just hours before he was sent packing, however, the 33-year-old told the AP he was being victimized.
"Of course I'm clean," Rasmussen said, after a doping test following Wednesday's stage win. "Like I said, I've been tested 17 times now in less than two weeks. Both the peloton and the public, they're just taking their frustration out on me now. I mean, all I can say is that by now I had my test number 17 on this Tour, and all of those have come back negative. I don't feel I can do any more than that."
With Rasmussen out, Contador of the Discovery Channel team moved into the lead. Australian Cadel Evans, who rides for Predictor-Lotto, moved up to second, with U.S. rider Levi Leipheimer, also with Discovery, now third.
"It's in no way a celebration on our end. It's the third piece of bad news," said Discovery Channel spokesman P.J. Rabice. "It reflects badly on our sport."
Tour organizers said Tuesday they would have stopped Rasmussen from participating in the race had they known about the missed tests.
"We cannot say that Rasmussen cheated, but his flippancy and his lies on his whereabouts had become unbearable," Tour director Christian Prudhomme said.
The leader of cycling's governing body applauded the decision.
"The team decided to pull him out. That's their prerogative," International Cycling Union president Pat McQuaid said. "It's a zero-tolerance policy, and it's a lesson for the future."
After the Tour's upbeat start in London, when millions of spectators lined streets to watch, bad news -- nearly all of it related to doping -- quickly dominated.
German rider Patrick Sinkewitz crashed into a spectator then was revealed to have failed a drug test in training before the Tour, and Vinokourov was sent home after testing positive for a banned blood transfusion. On Wednesday, as Rasmussen was riding toward his stage 16 win, the Cofidis squad confirmed its Italian rider Cristian Moreni failed a doping test, prompting the withdrawal of the entire squad.
Police detained Moreni after he finished the stage and searched the hotel where his Cofidis team was staying. Results from the raid weren't expected until Thursday. France has tough laws against trafficking in doping products.
Cofidis manager Eric Boyer said Moreni "accepted his wrongdoing" and waived his right for a follow-up test to confirm the results of the first, which was positive for the male hormone testosterone.
Although Rasmussen has not tested positive, some fellow cyclists had openly voiced skepticism of his results. Fans booed Rasmussen at the start of Wednesday's stage, and mostly French teams staged a protest to express disgust at the doping scandals that have left cycling's credibility in tatters.
As the starter's flag came down, dozens of riders stood still as Rasmussen, sprinter Tom Boonen and several others began riding away. Some riders were forced to lift up their bicycles to get around their protesting colleagues, who eventually rejoined the race after causing a 13-minute delay. But the message was sent.
"We're fed up," AG2R rider Ludovic Turpin of France told Eurosport television.
Associated Press Writers Jamey Keaten and Jean-Luc Courthial in Gourette, France, John Leicester in Paris and Jan Olsen in Copenhagen contributed to this report. |
http://sports.yahoo.com/sc/news?slug=ap-tourdefrance&prov=ap&type=lgns |
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Gatsby
Joined: 09 Feb 2007
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Posted: Thu Jul 26, 2007 2:23 am Post subject: |
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Say it's not so.
Funny how race officials were always hounding Lance Armstrong, possibly because he was an American, even though he was always squeaky clean.
Well, they wanted to find signs of doping, and they got it.
Almost makes you think they should have two races: one where anything goes, for the bionicbods, and the other for real riders on three-speeds.
The Tour de France is a great race, and I hope it recovers. Maybe they should ask Lance to come out of retirement. |
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Ya-ta Boy
Joined: 16 Jan 2003 Location: Established in 1994
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Posted: Thu Jul 26, 2007 7:12 am Post subject: |
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| Almost makes you think they should have two races |
I agree. |
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Hollywoodaction
Joined: 02 Jul 2004
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Alyallen

Joined: 29 Mar 2004 Location: The 4th Greatest Place on Earth = Jeonju!!!
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Posted: Thu Jul 26, 2007 10:46 am Post subject: |
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| Ya-ta Boy wrote: |
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| Almost makes you think they should have two races |
I agree. |
As do I. I am really sick of professional athletes. Didn't a golfer come out and say that steroids were used in the PGA? It's like WTF? I'm waiting to hear about positive tests for ice curlers or synchronized swimmers....They need to make an example of someone. This is just getting way to out of hand.
I generally don't watch the Tour de France but I respect the non juiced up athletes who perform at a level that I couldn't even dare to dream of. I have to give credit to the French cyclists who had a protest even though it cut into their times at the tour. They see the writing on the wall. That selfish behavior effects them all and may be the death of their sport.... |
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nautilus

Joined: 26 Nov 2005 Location: Je jump, Tu jump, oui jump!
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Posted: Sun Jul 29, 2007 10:10 am Post subject: |
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not many people watched cycling before. The tour de france was all the sport had going for it.
But when every last yellow jersey later gets convicted of doping...then why even bother.... |
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Nowhere Man

Joined: 08 Feb 2004
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Posted: Sun Jul 29, 2007 10:41 am Post subject: ... |
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| In 1978, Belgian rider Michel Pollentier, trying to evade doping controls after winning a stage in the Alps, was caught with an intricate tube-and-container system that contained urine that was not his, said Tour historian Jean-Paul Brouchon. |
Wow. I'm surprised there were anti-doping rules that far back. |
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Alyallen

Joined: 29 Mar 2004 Location: The 4th Greatest Place on Earth = Jeonju!!!
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Posted: Sun Jul 29, 2007 2:23 pm Post subject: Re: ... |
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| Nowhere Man wrote: |
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| In 1978, Belgian rider Michel Pollentier, trying to evade doping controls after winning a stage in the Alps, was caught with an intricate tube-and-container system that contained urine that was not his, said Tour historian Jean-Paul Brouchon. |
Wow. I'm surprised there were anti-doping rules that far back. |
This would be why...
* The first recorded attempt to enhance performance occurred as early as the 8th century BC, when Ancient Greek Olympians ate sheep's *beep*; today we would recognize these as a source of testosterone.
* As early as the late 19th century professional cyclists were using substances like caffeine, cocaine and ether-coated sugar cubes to improve performance, reduce pain and delay fatigue.
* In the 1904 Olympics, Thomas Hicks (USA) won the marathon at St. Louis and collapsed. It took hours to revive him; he had taken brandy mixed with strychnine to help him win his gold medal.
* Nazi Germany athletes were rumored to use the first rudimentary testosterone preparations in the 1936 Summer Olympics.
* World Weightlifting Championships of 1954 was the first unconfirmed testosterone injections by Soviet Athletes doping attempt ending in the Soviets winning the gold medal in most weight classes and breaking several world records.
* In early 1960s Dr. John Ziegler (who was the US Team Coach in the 1954 Soviet-dominated World Weightlifting Championships) administered his weightlifters Dianabol tablets and the US dominated the 1962 World Championships.
* In 1965 Dutch swimmers used stimulants.
* During the 1967 Tour de France, Tom Simpson collapsed during the ascent of the Mont Ventoux. Despite mouth-to-mouth resuscitation and the administration of oxygen, plus a helicopter airlift to a nearby hospital, Simpson died. Two tubes of amphetamines and a further empty tube were found in the rear pocket of his racing jersey.
This and more from http://dopinge.com/drug%20scandals.html |
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