Rome News-Tribune

Doping is always part of the story at Tour

- By John Leicester Associated Press Sports Writer

DUESSELDOR­F, Germany — A scene from Godfather III about sums up where the Tour de France is with doping as the 2017 edition begins on Saturday.

In the movie, Al Pacino’s character Michael Corleone laments that his efforts to become a bona fide businessma­n are being undermined by his family’s underworld connection­s. “Just when I thought I was out, they pull me back in,” he wails.

Likewise, cycling’s showcase race seemed largely to have extricated itself from the swamp of widespread blood doping that characteri­zed Lance Armstrong’s era. The 12 riders banned or provisiona­lly suspended by cycling’s governing body, the UCI, in 2015 and 2016 for using blood-boosting agents like Armstrong were largely second-tier. Just one, France’s Lloyd Mondory, had previously raced in the Tour — in 2009 and 2010 when Armstrong was still competing.

But just four days before the 2017 edition gets rolling in Duesseldor­f, Germany, came a reality check.

The UCI announced that Andre Cardoso, a seasoned pro who was to have raced in support of 2007 and 2009 champion Alberto Contador in his quest for another Tour title, tested positive for EPO, a hormone banned because it stimulates the production of oxygencarr­ying blood cells.

EPO was also part of Armstrong’s doping armory when he cheated his way to seven Tour wins from 1999-2005. Those victories were subsequent­ly all stripped from the Texan, who has been banned for life, leaving the sport and the Tour laboring under corrosive clouds of suspicion.

Time and cycling’s sustained anti-doping efforts have helped to heal some of those wounds, and to win back fans in countries like Germany, where broadcaste­rs had turned their back on the Tour. But Cardoso’s positive test shows that the race isn’t out of the woods yet — and likely never will be.

“We keep saying that time is the healer of the sport and what people did 10 years ago to ruin the sport will be healed by time and the fact that nobody is doing it anymore,” Team Sky rider Luke Rowe told The Associated Press.

But Cardoso’s test, he added, “just puts a bad shadow on the sport again.”

Describing himself as angry and frustrated, Rowe said he’d like the Portuguese veteran of seven Tours of Italy and Spain to be banned for life, “especially if you are caught with something as obvious as that.”

“Guys like him should never be able to race a bike again,” said Rowe, who is racing with reigning champion Chris Froome for a third time at this Tour.

Cardoso said in a statement that he has never taken banned substances, having “seen firsthand through my career the awful effects that performanc­e-enhancing drugs have had on our sport.”

But if a follow-up test also comes back positive for the Trek-Segafredo team racer, the conclusion must be that cycling still hasn’t convinced all of its most experience­d athletes that cheating isn’t worth the risk. And that’s despite the thousands of yearly tests and the regular scrutiny of riders’ blood for tell-tale signs of doping.

For Brian Cookson, president of the sport’s ruling body, the UCI, Cardoso’s positive result shows that testing is working.

“I don’t think it demonstrat­es that there are many, many other riders doping,” he told the AP. “From time to time an athlete is foolish, and the chances are they are going to get caught.”

Cycling can rightly argue that it is one of the most scrutinize­d sports and far from alone in being affected by the doping scourge.

Its anti-doping unit says it conducted a whopping 15,000 tests last year — the bulk of them on male profession­al road racers. On top of that, 41 pro teams are being monitored by the blood passport program that cycling helped to pioneer, tracking riders’ blood values over time for any suspicious variations. Pro teams provide more than two-thirds of the costs.

“From being a pariah and an outcast, almost, because of our poor doping record, now I think the reverse is true,” Cookson said. “We have a very good reputation in the anti-doping world and the wider sports world.”

At the Tour, cycling’s anti-doping unit is planning an average of eight tests each day — always including the race leader and winner of each stage, plus six others. The best riders’ samples will be stored for 10 years, for possible retesting as detection methods improve. Anti-doping officials and French police have again agreed to share intelligen­ce, to help target tests. In exceptiona­l circumstan­ces, sample collectors can even visit riders in the middle of the night.

The anti-doping unit director, Francesca Rossi, told the AP that Cardoso’s positive test doesn’t signal a renewed EPO trend.

“I’m not worrying because it’s one positive for a long time. Statistica­lly, this is acceptable,” she said. “We are not anymore in the EPO era, for sure.”

Tripping up Cardoso before he took the start spared the Tour further embarrassm­ent. The 32-year-old said sample collectors visited him at home on June 18.

Irish rider Nicolas Roche, embarking on his eighth Tour, said he was surprised but also relieved that Cardoso was caught because “when someone tests positive once in a while it also means that the test works, which is in a way reassuring.”

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