The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Froome faces suspension after failed doping test

- The Associated Press

Chris Froome failed a doping test during the Spanish Vuelta in September and is facing a suspension from cycling ahead of his attempt to win a record-equaling fifth Tour de France title next year.

Froome won his fourth Tour title this year and followed it with a victory at the Vuelta. But Team Sky said Wednesday that Froome, who has not been suspended, had a concentrat­ion of asthma drug salbutamol two times higher than the World Anti-Doping Agency’s permitted levels.

“Analysis indicated the presence of salbutamol at a concentrat­ion of 2,000 nanograms per milliliter (ng/ml), compared with the WADA threshold of 1,000 ng/ ml,” Team Sky said.

Team Sky said it has been informed by the Internatio­nal Cycling Union that the urine test was taken on Sept. 7, during the three-week Spanish Vuelta.

Froome said the UCI has asked him to provide informatio­n about the failed test, which was taken after Stage 18.

Froome’s use of asthma medication has been well documented, and the Kenyan-born rider has often been spotted using inhalers in the peloton. He has repeatedly faced questions on whether he is a clean rider, especially during the Tour de France, and has always denied wrongdoing.

“I can understand a lot of people’s reactions, especially given the history of the sport. This is not a positive test,” Froome said in an interview aired by British broadcaste­rs on Wednesday.

Salbutamol is a drug that helps expand lung capacity and can be used as a performanc­eenhancing drug to increase endurance. Commonly marketed as Ventolin, salbutamol is classified as a beta-2 agonist and WADA allows it to be taken through inhalation only, in limited amounts.

Sky said Froome had to take an increased dosage of salbutamol without exceeding the permissibl­e dose after he “experience­d acute asthma symptoms” during the final week of the Vuelta.

“I have been a profession­al cyclist now, treating my symptoms and racing with asthma, for 10 years,” Froome said in the interview. “I know what those rules are, I know what those limits are and I have never been over those limits.”

If found guilty of doping, the 32-year-old Froome could lose his Vuelta title and be suspended for a long period. Sprinter Alessandro Petacchi was suspended for one year for testing positive for salbutamol during the 2007 Giro d’Italia.

College football

HOLTZ SUING THE DAILY BEAST » Hall of Fame college football coach Lou Holtz is suing The Daily Beast over an article that claimed he called immigrants “deadbeats” at last year’s Republican National Convention in Cleveland.

The federal lawsuit filed Wednesday in Orlando, where Holtz lives, claims an article published by the news website on July 19, 2016, defamed Holtz, causing him to lose paid speaking opportunit­ies and suffer personal humiliatio­n. He’s seeking damages of more than $75,000.

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