I broke no rules: Froome
FOUR-TIME Tour de France winner Chris Froome says he has not broken any rules after returning an “adverse” drugs test result during his victory at this year’s Vuelta a Espana.
Froome had twice the permissible amount of asthma medication Salbutamol in his system during the Grand Tour race, which he won in September, the UCI and his team revealed yesterday.
“I understand this comes as a big shock to people,” Froome told the BBC.
“I certainly haven’t broken any rules here.”
Cycling’s governing body UCI said an anti-doping test on September 7 showed more than the allowable level of Salbutamol, which can be taken without needing a therapeutic use exemption (TUE).
Froome, 32, said he simply upped his dosage on the advice of the team doctor after his asthma symptoms worsened.
“I have been a professional cyclist now, treating my symptoms and racing with asthma, for 10 years,” Froome said. “I know what those rules are, I know what those limits are and I have never been over those limits.”
The UCI has asked Froome to provide more information, but in line with World AntiDoping Agency guidelines has not suspended him.
“I have got a very clear routine when I use my inhaler and how many times,” Froome said. “I have given all that information to the UCI to help get to the bottom of it.”
He said the UCI was “absolutely right” to scrutinise the test results.
Team Sky said, “During the final week of the Vuelta, Chris experienced acute asthma symptoms.
“On the advice of the Team Sky doctor, he used an increased dosage of Salbutamol (still within the permissible doses) in the run-up to the 7 September urine test.”
Sky said Froome had declared his use of the medication.
“The notification of the test finding does not mean that any rule has been broken,” it said.
The British rider, who also won Olympic time-trial bronze medals in 2012 and 2016, was notified of the test on September 20, the day he finished third in the world time-trial championship in Bergen, Norway.
He has not competed since, but recently announced his intention to try to win two of cycling’s three biggest races, the Tour de France and the Giro d’Italia, in 2018.