Western Mail

Froome needs to explain findings

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CHRIS Froome’s defence against a doping ban will hinge on his ability to prove there is a scientific reason for the spike in his Salbutamol readings at La Vuelta.

The 32-year-old rider has been asked to explain why a urine sample he gave during September’s race in Spain contained twice the permitted concentrat­ion of the widely-used asthma drug.

If he fails to provide a satisfacto­ry answer, cycling’s governing body the UCI is likely to proceed with an anti-doping rule violation case which could strip him of his Vuelta victory and see him miss a large chunk of next season.

Speaking to Press Associatio­n Sport, Professor Chris Cooper said Froome “would have to be really stupid” to try to cheat with Salbutamol as it has no performanc­e-enhancing effects when taken via an inhaler and he would have known he was being tested every day.

The Team Sky leader has made no secret of his use of Salbutamol throughout his career and he even notes it on his doping control forms.

Under World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) rules, athletes with asthma can take up to 16 normal doses of the drug (100 micrograms) via an inhaler every 24 hours but no more than eight in a 12-hour window.

This translates to an allowed concentrat­ion of Salbutamol in a urine sample of 1,000 nanograms per millilitre. Froome was tested 21 times during La Vuelta but on September 7, after the 18th stage, his sample was double the permitted amount.

Mr Cooper, who runs the University of Essex’s Centre for Sports and Exercise Science, said Froome and Team Sky are likely to have requested all of his other samples to find out if he was close to the limit on those days, too, as he has admitted that he upped his dosage, on his doctor’s advice, to treat his worsening symptoms.

As everyone excretes and metabolise­s the drug in a slightly different way, Froome may be able to prove that the adverse finding is a result of his physiology and the unusual circumstan­ces of riding a three-week bike race. To do this, he is likely to be tested in a laboratory.

“I’m sure Team Sky have been trying to do this already but it’s not easy to replicate La Vuelta,” explained Mr Cooper.

“Sure, you can replicate some of the variables - dehydratio­n, for example - to get you in the ball park

“But it’s not going to be the same.”

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