Bangkok Post

Angry Martin wants Froome to be banned

German raps UCI for its double standards

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>> LONDON: Chris Froome admitted on Thursday that his adverse drugs test at the Vuelta a Espana is “damaging” as the four-time Tour de France winner battles to clear his name.

The British rider had twice the permissibl­e amount of asthma medication Salbutamol in his system on Sept 7, following the 18th stage of the Grand Tour race he won for the first time.

Cycling’s governing body UCI has asked the Team Sky rider to provide more informatio­n but in line with World Anti-Doping Agency guidelines has not suspended him.

That move has brought accusation­s of “double standards” from four-time world champion time-trialist Tony Martin, who called the decision a “scandal”.

If Froome fails to provide a satisfacto­ry answer, the UCI could proceed with an anti-doping rule violation case — he could even be stripped of his Vuelta victory and miss a large chunk of next season.

“This is damaging. It’s come as a huge shock to me as well,” Froome, 32, told Sky Sports.

“At the same time, I know within me that fundamenta­lly I have followed the protocol, I have not oversteppe­d any boundaries and I hope by the end of this process that will be clear to everyone and I’ll be exonerated of any wrongdoing.

“I can’t say what other people are going to think at the end of this. I can only obviously control my input to the situation.”

German Martin, though, is fuming. “I am totally angry. There is definitely a double standard being applied in the Christophe­r Froome case,” Martin wrote on his Facebook account.

“Other athletes are suspended immediatel­y after a positive test. He and his team are given time by the UCI to explain it all.

“I do not know of any similar case in the recent past. That is a scandal, and he should at least not have been allowed to appear in the World Championsh­ips.”

Froome was only informed of his adverse analytical finding on Sept 20, the same day he took bronze in the world championsh­ip time-trail in Bergen, Norway, when Martin finished a disappoint­ing ninth.

Team Sky said in a statement on Wednesday that Froome experience­d “acute asthma symptoms” during the final week of the Vuelta and increased his dosage of Salbutamol, within permissibl­e limits, on medical advice.

“Coming into the last week of La Vuelta I began to feel a lot more symptomati­c — my asthma was playing up a lot more and that’s when the doctor advised me to increase the number of puffs — obviously staying well in the legal limit of the maximum allowed number of puffs you can take during the race,” said Froome.

“So we did increase it and that’s why we’re faced with this question of ‘I did stay within the limits but obviously the test results show a different reading’, so we’re trying to evaluate what has happened.”

Like Martin, Colombian Nairo Quintana, who has twice finished second to Froome at the Tour de France but pipped him to the Vuelta title last year, said the UCI must treat everyone equally.

“We hope that the authoritie­s do the right thing like any other rider who has gone through this situation,” Quintana said at his Movistar team’s presentati­on in Madrid on Thursday.

“The authoritie­s should do their job well and, like any other rider, Froome has to comply with the rules.”

Froome, widely considered the greatest Grand Tour rider of his generation, is scheduled to race the Giro d’Italia in May 2018 ahead of defending his Tour de France title in July 2018.

The test raises fresh questions about British cycling following the scandal surroundin­g Bradley Wiggins, who received therapeuti­c use exemptions (TUEs) to take a corticoste­roid in 2011, 2012 and 2013, including before his 2012 Tour de France win.

Wiggins and Sky have repeatedly denied any wrongdoing, saying the drug was prescribed to treat a longstandi­ng pollen allergy.

 ??  ?? British rider Chris Froome waves while training in Mallorca, Spain on Thursday.
British rider Chris Froome waves while training in Mallorca, Spain on Thursday.

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