The Star Malaysia

UKAD investigat­ing allegation­s of wrongdoing in cycling

-

LONDON: British Cycling are cooperatin­g fully with an investigat­ion by the country’s anti-doping agency (UKAD) into “allegation­s of wrongdoing within cycling”.

UKAD gave no details of what they were investigat­ing, although a report in the Daily Mail newspaper said it concerned Team Sky and former Tour de France winner Bradley Wiggins (pic).

“In order to protect the integrity of the investigat­ion, we will not comment further,” UKAD said in a statement.

The Daily Mail reported that UKAD were investigat­ing the alleged delivery to team Sky in June 2011 of a medical package after the Dauphine Libere race and ahead of that year’s Tour.

Team Sky said in a statement they had been contacted by the newspaper and immediatel­y conducted an internal review to establish the facts.

“We are confident there has been no wrongdoing,” it added. “We informed British Cycling of the allegation and asked them to contact UKAD, who we will continue to liaise with.

“Team Sky are committed to clean competitio­n. Our position on anti-doping is well known and we 100% stand by that.”

In a statement British Cycling said: “British Cycling can confirm there is an ongoing UKAD investigat­ion with which we are cooperatin­g fully.

“We are unable to comment further at this stage.”

Wiggins, the 2012 Tour de France winner, has been in the spotlight over his past use of Therapeuti­c Use Exemptions (TUEs), which allow athletes to take banned substances for verified medical needs and are signed off by sports federation­s.

The data was leaked last month by the Russian-based Fancy Bears cyber hacking site.

It showed Wiggins was given permission to have legal injections of the banned drug triamcinol­one to treat breathing difficulti­es before the 2011 and 2012 Tour de France and 2013 Tour of Italy.

On each occasion the TUE was approved by British authoritie­s and cycling’s governing body, the UCI, and there is no suggestion Wiggins broke any rules.

Former Team Sky rider Jonathan Tiernan-Locke also alleged in a BBC interview that the painkiller Tramadol had been “freely offered” at the 2012 road world championsh­ips.

The BBC said British Cycling had put the allegation to the doctor concerned, who had denied it. — Reutes

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia