The Guardian Australia

Nairo Quintana denies wrongdoing over alleged doping at Tour de France

- PA Media

Nairo Quintana has denied any wrongdoing and said no illegal substances were found during a search of his hotel room by authoritie­s during the Tour de France.

The Colombian, a former winner of the Giro d’Italia and Vuelta a España, issued a statement late on Tuesday night after the public prosecutor’s office in Marseille opened a preliminar­y investigat­ion into suspected doping practices.

On Monday, Quintana’s ArkeaSamsi­c team confirmed their hotel rooms had been searched by police following stage 17 of the Tour in Méribel. In his own statement Quintana said he had voluntaril­y been questioned, had not been accused of wrongdoing by the authoritie­s and that the substances seized were “perfectly legal” vitamin supplement­s.

“The French gendarmeri­e carried out an operation in the hotel where my team was staying on Wednesday 16 September, in Méribel, after the Tour de France stage ended,” Quintana said. “That day the authoritie­s entered my room and seized vitamin supplement­s that were perfectly legal, although perhaps unfamiliar to the French authoritie­s.

“This is the main reason why it takes time for everything that happened to be fully clarified. To avoid any doubt, I would like to confirm that no doping substances were ever found.”

A statement from Arkea-Samsic released on Monday said the investigat­ion was not focused “directly” on the team and involved “a very limited number of riders, as well as their close entourage, not employed by the team”.

In his statement, Quintana said he did not work with any assistants or staff who were not team members. “I would also like to clear up a misunderst­anding: neither during the recent Tour, nor during any other previous race, I have never consulted assistants or staff who were not part of the team. I do not have, and have never had, anything to hide.”

The 30-year-old added that he had answered questions from the public prosecutor’s office “with a clear conscience”. “It must be stressed that I have not been the subject of any accusation by the authoritie­s. I will be ready to answer any questions from the prosecutor, as I did on Monday and [Tuesday].”

Quintana, who has finished on the podium in three previous Tours, suffered a crash on stage 13 of this year’s race and then cracked on the Grand Colombier two days later, fading to finish 17th. It was his lowest finish in

a Grand Tour since the 2012 Vuelta.

“I, Nairo Quintana, have been a clean cyclist throughout my sporting life and I have an impeccable biological passport,” he said. “I want to make it clear to the public, to my fans and to the followers of cycling that never in all my career – junior, under-23 and profession­al – have I used illegal substances that improve my sporting performanc­e and that betray the principles of sport.”

According to reports in France, two individual­s have been taken into custody in relation to the investigat­ion. On Monday, the UCI said it had been in contact with authoritie­s. “The UCI welcomes and supports the action of all parties involved and will take the appropriat­e measures once it has taken note of the informatio­n obtained by the French legal authoritie­s,” read a statement.

Arkea-Samsic said if wrongdoing was discovered the team would “immediatel­y dissociate itself from such acts and take without delay the necessary measures”.

 ??  ?? Nairo Quintana during the penultimat­e stage of this year’s Tour de France. He finished 17th overall. Photograph: Christophe Petit-Tesson/EPA
Nairo Quintana during the penultimat­e stage of this year’s Tour de France. He finished 17th overall. Photograph: Christophe Petit-Tesson/EPA

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