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Jonathan Tiernan-Locke unhappy at being given Category 2 licence

Banned rider looking to return to racing in Devon next month

Jonathan Tiernan-Locke is calling on British Cycling to give him at least a Category 1 licence as he prepares to return to racing following the expiry of his two-year ban for doping.

The former Team Sky rider, aged 31, has reportedly been given a Category 2 licence and plans to race at Mid-Devon Cycling Club’s Primavera Meeting on 28 February, reports the Torquay Herald Express.

He told the newspaper: "I know these things can be discretionary, and I haven't been allowed to ride for two years.

"But I held an Elite licence every year I raced since 2003, so I think BC [British Cycling] might give me at least a 1st Cat one now.

"It would be a bit petty if they make me start as a 2nd Cat, and I would be concerned if they stick to it because that might make it more difficult for me to get into National races, especially early in the season,” he added.

"Some organisers prioritise entries according to category, which might put me down the order.

"But BC have to discuss it at a 'discretionary panel' meeting first and hopefully they'll change it then.

"If I was a 3rd Cat rider, and had a race turned on its head by an ex-pro, I think I'd be complaining," he added.

Tiernan-Locke said in October that despite receiving offers from domestic teams, he had decided to race as an individual on his return to the sport after his ban.

> Tiernan-Locke plans to race for himself when ban ends

He was banned for two years in July 2014 as a result of irregularities in his biological passport, found to be consistent with using banned substances, following his move from Endura Racing to Team Sky ahead of the 2013 season.

> Tiernan-Locke blames 33-unit booze binge for doping ban

 He claimed the suspicious blood values resulted from a drinking binge in Bristol to celebrate his contract with Team Sky in the week between his winning the 2012 Tour of Britain and being Great Britain’s protected rider at the UCI Road World Championships.

UK Anti-Doping’s disciplinary panel rejected that defence, while the rider chose not to exercise his right to appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

In July last year, Tiernan-Locke also received a 17-month driving ban after police found him to be two and a half times over the legal limit for alcohol when they stopped him in Plymouth early in the morning of 24 April.

> New ban for Tiernan-Locke - for drink-driving
 

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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21 comments

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Simon Ker | 8 years ago
0 likes

Just got a start sheet through for the Primavera Road Race. JTL is riding for http://saintpiran.cc 

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Skylark | 8 years ago
1 like

Ayy... restart the machine at Cat 4.

 

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Redvee | 8 years ago
0 likes

How long till the DVLA gives him a Cat AM driving licence?

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Charles_Hunter | 8 years ago
0 likes

There must be precidence for this surely? BC should just do what they have always done in such cases?

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HalfWheeler | 8 years ago
1 like

Racing is a privalege not a god given right. That he's planning to come back shows an almost shameless chutzpah. He should be grateful he's been given a racing licence and, essentially, a second chance at all rather than whining about the category of the licence.

One things for sure, he'll be the most marked man in SW races for a long time. Would you let him disappear up the road? No chance.

 

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CXR94Di2 | 8 years ago
0 likes

Whether petty or not, if he still has the ability, can't see him staying in cat 2 for very long.

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twinklydave | 8 years ago
1 like

pedalpowerDC wrote:

It seems like all the commenters who say "make him earn it" aren't going to be getting destroyed by JTL in a race field. If they were, they ought to be saying "what the eff is this former pro doing in anything other than an elite field?"

It's humanly possible that I could compete against him over the course of the year (unlkely, but possible). That's not what I'd be thinking at all.  

Like I said above, if you've lost your licence due to doping, prove to everyone that you ARE an elite - just like everyone else who is a 2nd cat now and who will make it as far as elite is going to. Plenty of E/1/2 races out there if you're claiming it's unfair on the lower categories. 

If you turn up, lap the field and win everything in sight, it won't take long for you to show your true talent - and the quiet humility of doing it (in style!) could only serve to impress those who might still doubt your character...

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pedalpowerDC replied to twinklydave | 8 years ago
0 likes

twinklydave wrote:

pedalpowerDC wrote:

It seems like all the commenters who say "make him earn it" aren't going to be getting destroyed by JTL in a race field. If they were, they ought to be saying "what the eff is this former pro doing in anything other than an elite field?"

It's humanly possible that I could compete against him over the course of the year (unlkely, but possible). That's not what I'd be thinking at all.  

Like I said above, if you've lost your licence due to doping, prove to everyone that you ARE an elite - just like everyone else who is a 2nd cat now and who will make it as far as elite is going to. Plenty of E/1/2 races out there if you're claiming it's unfair on the lower categories. 

If you turn up, lap the field and win everything in sight, it won't take long for you to show your true talent - and the quiet humility of doing it (in style!) could only serve to impress those who might still doubt your character...

 

If he is in fact NOT an elite level rider, don't you think his suffering will be greater if he himself gets shredded in elite fields rather than beating up on lower category racers (which he will do if he races 2/3 or 2 fields)? You've got to remember that doping only adds to an already talented ability set. It's not like he allegedly doped his way to winning the All-Shire TT Championships. He allegedly doped his way to winning Tour de Med, Tour of Britain, and others.

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Jimmy Ray Will | 8 years ago
3 likes

I think he is looked on very negatively by BC because he hasn't taken his punishment like a good little bad boy, hes complained, moaned  and belittled BC and the UCI. 

Now many take that as the bitter ramblings of a shameless cheat, however I believe it to be the bitter ramblings of someone that genuinely does not feel they were guilty of the crime they were convicted of.

Now I don't know if that is a Landis situation, where Landis is adamant that whilst pumped full of EPO, transfusions and other enhancing medicines, he had not taken any of the synthetic testosterone he was convicted of.... or he just didn't do it. 

anyway... the end result is that the cycling world and the powers that be are treating him as the uber cheat, when in reality he is just another positive like any other convicted doper. 

Giving him a 2nd cat licence does a disservice to those lower cat riders that essentially fund the sport, and if done as a way to keep him out of higher cat racing, is an unfair way to further extend his ban.

 

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mrmo replied to Jimmy Ray Will | 8 years ago
1 like

Jimmy Ray Will wrote:

Now I don't know if that is a Landis situation, where Landis is adamant that whilst pumped full of EPO, transfusions and other enhancing medicines, he had not taken any of the synthetic testosterone he was convicted of.... or he just didn't do it. 

 

as an aside, was in a bar in Switzerland a couple of years ago and overheard a pro chatting about his DS and mentioning that he had taken ALOT of drugs, and the funny part, the drug he actually got done for was one he had never touched! 

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Awavey replied to Jimmy Ray Will | 8 years ago
1 like
Jimmy Ray Will wrote:

Giving him a 2nd cat licence does a disservice to those lower cat riders that essentially fund the sport, and if done as a way to keep him out of higher cat racing, is an unfair way to further extend his ban.

 

but is it not a disservice to those same lower cat riders who spend all year trying to get enough qualifying points to move up a level as an achievement, to just promote JTL back into the Elite cat based on what performances from 2012 ? because even if you believe he wasnt guilty, he wasnt terribly good at Sky in 2013 was he.

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farrell | 8 years ago
3 likes

I think its ok for British Cycling to not give him an elite licence after a doping ban, however, they now need to do the same for every pro that gets caught doping.

 

You can't just single out one ex-pro and drop them down the ranks on a whim.

 

This looks like BC are either singling him out for his personality or they are singling him out because he's not with a big team.

 

Either way, it's a bit off.

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pedalpowerDC | 8 years ago
0 likes

It seems like all the commenters who say "make him earn it" aren't going to be getting destroyed by JTL in a race field. If they were, they ought to be saying "what the eff is this former pro doing in anything other than an elite field?"

It's more of a disservice to the other racers in his field than to him. I've raced against sanctioned former dopers, and while that in itself is annoying, it would be even more annoying if the dopers were racing in beginner or intermediate fields, particularly if they were recently pros!

How many unhappy 2s and 3s are going to finish a race complaining that they got destroyed by some former pro who shouldn't even be in their field? 

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Ghisallo replied to pedalpowerDC | 8 years ago
1 like

pedalpowerDC wrote:

It seems like all the commenters who say "make him earn it" aren't going to be getting destroyed by JTL in a race field. If they were, they ought to be saying "what the eff is this former pro doing in anything other than an elite field?"

Hey! Stop being reasonable! We're all about signaling our anti-doping cred here. Party pooper!

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twinklydave | 8 years ago
4 likes

BC don't know how long he was doping for, so can't know how far back to put him in order for him start again from where he gave up his morals*.

He should be grateful they've given him a 2nd cat license and not just said "start again from scratch"  with all the 4th cats  1

 

*Contentious, moi?  3

 

 

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Jimmy Ray Will | 8 years ago
1 like

Oh... as a SW based rider, I can imagine most of the 234 cat guys down here would far rather he wasn't eligible to enter their races, BC are doing them no favours at all.

And do you know what, I think it is all a bit petty from both sides. BC should just give him a 1 or Elite licence, he's going striagh back there anyway, but at the same time, Jon is being a bit petty worrying about his licence category. He'll earn his 1 or elite soon enough.

Jon's biggest problem won't be the cat of his licence, it'll be the fact that most national A fields are automaticlly filled by the UK UCI teams and Elite registered squads. They get first dibs on places and there aren't many, if any, slots available beyond these squads.

It wouldn't matter if he was an Elite, there isn't room for any independents no matter their cat.

However, to finish, I for one look forward to seeing Jon back at the races, he was an awesome talent as a junior where I am sure he was clean, so I'm sure he'll be kicking bottoms again on his return. 

 

 

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JoeyL | 8 years ago
2 likes

Bumba clat

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Carton | 8 years ago
1 like

A little petty, sure, but sock that. Make him earn it.

Do feel for the guys who show up to Cat. 2 race with a shot to win and run into to JTL on the start line. At least in his case they won't feel so bad about hoping for a mechanical.

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atlaz | 8 years ago
3 likes

Give him an elite license and "randomly" select him for doping controls at every single event he rides given I'd imagine doping controls might be a bit more rare further down the ladder.

Actually BC or the UCI should do that in general. For 1-2 years after the end of a doping ban, you're a season-pass holder to the controle dopage tent.

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Gus T | 8 years ago
6 likes

Elite licence whilst doping, so he's now got to prove that he is an elite rider whist clean, seems reasonable to me. Earn the Elite licence don't cheat your way back to it.

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davel | 8 years ago
6 likes

He's lucky that BC discretion is even on the cards. They should tell the little shit to lump it.

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