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JAUSIERS, France, July 22 (Reuters) - French anti-doping
chief Pierre Bordry has not ruled out further positive tests in
the Tour de France but said he believed cycling would be cleaner
after the race finish in Paris.
By Francois Thomazeau
“I believe cycling will be a cleaner sport after this Tour
than it was at the start. We’re cleaning the sport, we’re almost
there but I can’t rule out that there is some dirt left,” he
said before the start of the 16th stage in Cuneo.
Three riders—Spaniards Manuel Beltran and Moises Duenas
and Italian climber Riccardo Ricco, winner of two mountain
stages—have failed dope tests for banned blood-booster EPO
since the start in Brest earlier this month.
Bordry said on Tuesday that Ricco had tried to avoid the
test which he tested positive after the fourth stage.
“The targeted tests we’re making are based on the parameters
of riders we hold and other information we obtain from various
sources,” Bordry added. “They’re not random tests.
“In the case of Ricco, it is true that we have tested him
many times and the repetition of efforts paid off.”
The French anti-doping agency (AFLD) had conducted blood
tests before the start of the Tour, which revealed a number of
odd parameters, then daily urine tests after stages and
unannounced blood, urine and capillary tests in team hotels
before and after stages.
“A number of rider profiles seem to indicate that they have
stopped doping practices for fear of being caught,” Bordry said.
He added that targeted testing was as much a deterrent as a
means of repression.
Asked why Tour leader Frank Schleck of Luxembourg was twice
controlled in his team’s hotel in Cuneo on Sunday and Monday
evening, Bordry said such moves were often tactical,
“A rider who’s been tested one day does not necessarily
expect to be tested again the next day,” he said.
Patrice Clerc, president of Tour organisers ASO (Amaury
Sport Organisation), said Bordry’s message was reassuring and
that he hoped for the Tour would not be tarnished by more doping
cases.
“The message that we’re gradually cleaning the sport is
getting through but another positive test affecting a leading
rider could ruin our efforts and lead people to believe that
this is a lost war,” he told Reuters.
(Editing by Justin Palmer)
(yahoosports.com)
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