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UCI reportedly considering giving Chris Froome a provisional ban

News comes as Giro d’Italia organisers call for guarantee that results of race be allowed to stand irrespective of any sanction

The UCI is reportedly considering giving four-time Tour de France champion a provisional ban following his adverse analytical finding at last year’s Vuelta for twice the permitted level of the anti-asthma drug, salbutamol.

The news comes after Giro d’Italia race director Mauro Vegni urged this week that the UCI should guarantee that should the 32-year-old be permitted to start the race, the result will be allowed to stand irrespective of any subsequent sanction he may receive.

Vegni told the Italian news agency, ANSA, that Giro d’Italia organisers RCS Sport wanted to avoid a repeat of Alberto Contador being disqualified as winner of the 2011 race when, the following year, the Court of Arbitration for Sport gave him a mainly backdated two-year ban as a result of his positive test for clenbuterol at the 2010 Tour de France.

According to the Press Association, the UCI may impose a provisional suspension on Froome, who is gathering evidence in an attempt to provide an explanation as to why his readings for the anti-asthma drug, should the case continue to drag on with no resolution in sight.

Several leading riders as well as UCI president David Lappartient have called on the Team Sky rider to suspend himself while the case is ongoing.

World cycling’s governing body has never imposed a provisional suspension in the past in a case involving salbutamol, nor any other specified substance that is permitted to be used up to a certain threshold.

As things stand at the moment, Froome is the subject of an adverse analytical finding rather than an anti-doping rule violation, which would have triggered an automatic provisional suspension.

However, UCI anti-doping rules do permit the UCI to provisionally suspend a rider who is the subject of an adverse analytical finding, and the Press Association reports that the governing body is continuing to monitor the case.

Earlier this week, Italian newspaper il Corriere della Sera suggested that Froome had decided to agree to a ban of between five and six months and being stripped of his Vuelta title, a claim firmly denied by the Team Sky rider.

> “Completely untrue” – Chris Froome dismisses report that he has accepted salbutamol ban

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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32 comments

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davel | 6 years ago
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Yeah, in case my post came across as more snide than Sneyd (sorry!) - was meant as tongue-in-cheek so apologies all-round.

Knock-on, no advantage. Or something.

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barbarus | 6 years ago
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Sorry, I was being facetious, apologies all. Meant as a joke but they don't always work on the internet. Can I have my cat back from your pigeons now?
Yours, 10 years junior coach and father of 2 players

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alansmurphy | 6 years ago
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Can Valbrona be Scum Half-wit?

 

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andyp replied to alansmurphy | 6 years ago
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alansmurphy wrote:

Can Valbrona be Scum Half-wit?

 

 

Under-qualified. A whole half?

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Martyn_K | 6 years ago
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For a moment there i thought i had stumbled in to a rugby forum................................................

 

We should stop here. Have a scrummage and hope that cycling related conversion pops out at the feet of the number 8.

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davel replied to Martyn_K | 6 years ago
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Martyn_K wrote:

For a moment there i thought i had stumbled in to a rugby forum................................................

 

We should stop here. Have a scrummage and hope that cycling related conversion pops out at the feet of the number 8.

or, in the interests of balance, the loose forward  1

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barbarus | 6 years ago
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@behindthebikesheds
Only you could bring this round to your loyalty to an inferior code of rugby.
If this week's cat 3 news from France proves anything then it proves that people cheat, in all levels of sport and in all disciplines. And that includes rugby league. Just ask Kudangirana.

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BehindTheBikesheds replied to barbarus | 6 years ago
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barbarus wrote:

@behindthebikesheds Only you could bring this round to your loyalty to an inferior code of rugby. If this week's cat 3 news from France proves anything then it proves that people cheat, in all levels of sport and in all disciplines. And that includes rugby league. Just ask Kudangirana.

Only you could bring this round to outing yourself as someone who doesn't understand the gaping difference in quality between the sports and that onion has been playing catchup for over a 100 years and still never quite getting there. Is RU watched more, has more money, has better marketing/better leaders and great athletes, yes it does.

I never said athletes in RL don't cheat, my point is that sports with a lot of influence get off a lot more lightly than those that don't. This is the case with RU compared to league as is union, soccer, tennis compared to cycling.

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davel replied to barbarus | 6 years ago
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barbarus wrote:

inferior

This is an excellent example of how someone outs themselves as knowing not a lot about rugby. Rather than being castigated for it, the poster should be thanked for saving their would-be debater the time of actually being drawn into a debate with them.

It's a signposted no-contest. It's a punt after the first tackle. It's releasing the ball forwards. It's textbook, and should be encouraged to spread to other topics. Well done, barbarus.

Yours, long-time player and coach of both codes, with sons now playing both.

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grumpyoldcyclist | 6 years ago
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All this talk of cycling and dopers. The sport in the the UK with the largest number of suspended participants due to failed drug tests is rugby. How come they never get any press time?

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Butty replied to grumpyoldcyclist | 6 years ago
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grumpyoldcyclist wrote:

All this talk of cycling and dopers. The sport in the the UK with the largest number of suspended participants due to failed drug tests is rugby. How come they never get any press time?

 

And the sport with the biggest amount of $$ in it never has a problem, despite players regularly keeling over on the pitch.

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maviczap replied to grumpyoldcyclist | 6 years ago
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grumpyoldcyclist wrote:

All this talk of cycling and dopers. The sport in the the UK with the largest number of suspended participants due to failed drug tests is rugby. How come they never get any press time?

Because the UK press love rugby and hate cycling, it's a national sport. Plus rugby never had a Lance Armstrong

 

 

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BehindTheBikesheds replied to maviczap | 6 years ago
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maviczap wrote:

grumpyoldcyclist wrote:

All this talk of cycling and dopers. The sport in the the UK with the largest number of suspended participants due to failed drug tests is rugby. How come they never get any press time?

Because the UK press love rugby and hate cycling, it's a national sport. Plus rugby never had a Lance Armstrong

Let's be clear, the 'rugby' doping is mostly in onion, the sport is virtually untouchable just like tennis and soccer because there is so much money invested in it and run by people with a lot of influence.

Cycling is actually far more popular than rugby of either code but RFU are quite able to supress a lot of the shit that goes on, the less popular (numerically) and not so influential RFL get targetted often in the media when even some tier two/three player is busted, when one of the best England players of last year was caught taking a bit of coke it was in the media on a big scale and was accordingly banned, yet cheating/doping in union is very much underplayed or simply brushed under the carpet.

cycling has been far more open about doping than most sports, you only have to look at the ridiculous situation in athletics were the Eastern bloc and the Americans were at it big time from as far back the late 60s, the women in particular in the sprint and strength events and even female gymnasts were forced into getting pregnant at 13/14 as it was seen as a way to give an advantage without actual doping. This situation still isn't sorted as they've allowed the records to stand in the womens which stretch back as far as the early 80s when doping was at its peak.

By comparison the armstrong doping scandal and others is a drop in the fucking ocean but has had far more fallout from it

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merlin v12 | 6 years ago
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If Froome takes the ban would he then be sacked by Team Sky as they supposedly have a no drugs policy or do nothing as salbutamol is not considered by them as being a drug?

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Jimnm | 6 years ago
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Am I correct in saying that blood doping thickens the blood, which in turn causes breathing difficulties, hence the use of inhalers to relieve said symptoms .

 Just a thought! 

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oldstrath replied to Jimnm | 6 years ago
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Jimnm wrote:

Am I correct in saying that blood doping thickens the blood, which in turn causes breathing difficulties, hence the use of inhalers to relieve said symptoms .

 Just a thought! 

Don't think it does, and unlikely salbutamol would remive them if it did.

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Jimnm replied to oldstrath | 6 years ago
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oldstrath wrote:

Jimnm wrote:

Am I correct in

saying that blood doping thickens the blood, which in turn causes breathing difficulties, hence the use of inhalers to relieve said symptoms .

 Just a thought! 

Don't think it does, and unlikely salbutamol would remive them if it did.

Risks of Blood Doping

By increasing the number of red blood cells, blood doping causes the blood to thicken. This thickening forces the heart to work harder than normal to pump blood throughout the body. As a result, blood doping raises the risk of:

blood clot
heart attack
stroke

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herohirst replied to oldstrath | 6 years ago
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oldstrath wrote:

Jimnm wrote:

Am I correct in saying that blood doping thickens the blood, which in turn causes breathing difficulties, hence the use of inhalers to relieve said symptoms .

 Just a thought! 

Don't think it does, and unlikely salbutamol would remive them if it did.

 

A good question which raises 2 points (blood doping & asthma drugs) but which are actually unrelated.

In the days of massive EPO abuse, it was taken as it promotes the body to produce red blood cells (and so carry more oxygen) but it only, therefore, increases the number of RBCs in a steady volume of blood. More RBCs in a person's "8pints" of blood means less physical space for the aqueous component of the blood, so yes, blood viscosity increases. This wont make breathing harder. The lungs are an oxygen exchange mebrane and the blood will still simply flow through the capillaries in them even if it is a bit thinnner or thicker - the organ which WILL feel some stress is the heart as this has to work harder if it is charged with pumping thicker blood down the same pipes.

If someone is blood doping they might extract a pint (I presume!) to a drip bag, the body then senses the loss & makes another pint to bring the volume back up to a point of stasis (Red Blood Cells only live for 30 days anyway so your body is constantly replacing a certain proportion of them) & the cheater then cheats by reintroducing the reviously extracted pint. Again they end up with more RBC but this time by now having 9 pints of blood, albeit at the same RBC concentration as before. Blood pressure will (clearly) increase as the blood volume has increased so again the heart will have to work harder (until the body gradually clears down the excess pint) but again it will simply flow through the blood vessels in the lung tissue where the only thing that happens is that inhaled air transfers some of it's oxyen into the de-oxygenated RBCs contained in the incoming blood, and breathing air in and out should feel no more or less difficult 

Salbutamol and it's analogues are vaso-dilators; medications which act to "open up" the airways in the lungs & is a crucial intervention for asthmatics where inflamation of the airway linings restricts the volume of inhaled air, preventing the usual volume of oxygen reaching the part of the lungs where the membranes (between the airspace of the lung & the blood in the blood vessels beside those "lung walls") are thin enough for inhaled gas to diffuse across the mebrane and into the blood. Basically, the harder you work your body, the more it's oxygen demand increases & the harder the lungs have to work to bring in oxygen (and the heart, to pump that oxygenated blood around so it can be used). People we commonly think of as "asthmatic" can have such an inflamation at relatively sedate levels of activty; we've all seen the poor soul who has to get their inhaler out for a puff just from climbing the stairs. Many people aren't asthmatic to that degree but will show some symptoms when their bodies are under duress. Most of us can remeber at least one occasion where we did some hard activity at full effort until we simply had to stop. Afterward you stop you can feel you heart pounding at full bore and your lungs have that slight rasping sensation until your breathing rate recovers? That rasping is the very beginning point of performance related asthmatic inflamation and it is no (medical) surprise that among endurance athletes, who dont display asthma symptoms at low metabolic rates, extended bouts of extreme effort can induce some degree of asthmatic inhibition. 

Just some basic physiology for you. Blood viscisity shouldn't hinder the lung's ability in inflate/deflate; it's simply the degree of asthmatic tendency which does that and dictates at which level of lung activity a shot from the inhaler becomes necessary to stave off a full on "cant breathe" asthmatic attack.

Doesnt help with the moral dilemma of should an athlete be allowed to use it to compete at the same level as a non sufferer - that's a different matter. 

One last conjecture; I would add that an excess of salbutamol has too many downsides to be considered performance enhancing. Speak to any asthmatic who, in a moment of scared desperation, has had too many puffs of their inhaler and they'll tell you it takes you "over the edge" and instantly makes you feel awful & disorientated.

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madcarew replied to Jimnm | 6 years ago
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Jimnm wrote:

Am I correct in saying that blood doping thickens the blood, which in turn causes breathing difficulties, hence the use of inhalers to relieve said symptoms .

 Just a thought! 

In a word, no. If that was the case, then blood doping would be ineffective, as the whole point of it is to increase oxygen transport. It (may) thicken the blood, but doesn't  induce asthmatic type symptoms. However though, Jorge Jackshe tweeted "remember what was in the blood bag" (he would know). Salbutamol is only regulated in competitions so if Chris had done a blood withdrawal for later use after a particularly heavy use of salbutamol....

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fenix replied to Jimnm | 6 years ago
1 like
Jimnm wrote:

Am I correct in saying that blood doping thickens the blood, which in turn causes breathing difficulties, hence the use of inhalers to relieve said symptoms .

 Just a thought! 

no...

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Grahamd | 6 years ago
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This does make some sense, the UCI issue a ban and show they’re taking some action. Froome then has a successful appeal as a ban would be unprecedented before concluding an investigation. The rules then get changed, and whichever way the investigation goes each party can claim they were correct.

 

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check12 | 6 years ago
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Best thing that could happen to him, so he can then race this year rather than being suspended for most of it. Good behind the scenes lobbying by sky to correct their earlier mistake of not doing vol suspension at the start. 

Chapeau  3

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Russell Orgazoid | 6 years ago
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The most tested man on the planet blah blah.

Heard it all before.

Cycling and doping go hand in hand..History proves it.

Let them dope as much as they like. At least that is genuinely open and transparent.

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BehindTheBikesheds replied to Russell Orgazoid | 6 years ago
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Plasterer's Radio wrote:

The most tested man on the planet blah blah.

Heard it all before.

Cycling and doping go hand in hand..History proves it.

Let them dope as much as they like. At least that is genuinely open and transparent.

Yes let's just let athletes do whatever to win, where does it stop, changing your DNA, getting young girls pregnant so they are stronger, how about doing whatever so women look like men (biologically too) and can perform almost the same as men?
How about instead of the feed zone we have a blood transfusion pit stop, in fact keep a stash of cooled blood in the tubes to recycle into the body on the go and a massive hit of cocaine for the sprints.
Yeah, just let them all take it and do whatever...fucking retarded comment, sadly not the only one who thinks that way!

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davel replied to Russell Orgazoid | 6 years ago
1 like
Plasterer's Radio wrote:

The most tested man on the planet blah blah.

Heard it all before.

Cycling and doping go hand in hand..History proves it.

Let them dope as much as they like. At least that is genuinely open and transparent.

This argument uses the assumption that it stops with the doping. Where exactly is the new line drawn? They're not taking drugs for the fun of the drugs. They're doping to get an illicit advantage or balance perceived cheating by others. Whichever way you cut that, it's cheating.

Open drugs up, 'let them take what they want', and do you think it'll stop there?

Here's a couple of clues: Femke's motor and Tyler's third party blood. And that's we know of, with the line where it currently is. Push it back a bit by allowing 'drugs', and prepare to be amazed at the innovation displayed in the quest to unlevel the playing field.

The system needs fixing - quickly - and proper cross-sport and international standards and penalties agreed, inconsistencies regarding TUEs etc sorted. WADA and the UCI are shit at what they're supposed to be really good at and it feels like death by a thousand cuts at the moment. But I can't think of anything that'd kill professional road racing quicker than the audience thinking the peloton is scooting round on mopeds with other people's blood running through their veins.

Cheaters gonna cheat, yo. They don't need more of the reins than they already have.

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alansmurphy | 6 years ago
2 likes

"World cycling’s governing body has never imposed a provisional suspension in the past in a case involving salbutamol, nor any other specified substance that is permitted to be used up to a certain threshold.

As things stand at the moment, Froome is the subject of an adverse analytical finding rather than an anti-doping rule violation, which would have triggered an automatic provisional suspension."

Nothing to see here...

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dassie | 6 years ago
2 likes

Remind me what Chris Froome has been found guilty of.

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Leviathan | 6 years ago
5 likes

Oh do please just get on with it.

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don simon fbpe | 6 years ago
1 like

Quote:

As things stand at the moment, Froome is the subject of an adverse analytical finding rather than an anti-doping rule violation, which would have triggered an automatic provisional suspension.

Damage done, he's tainted and can't be considered a clean rider in my eyes.

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tarquin_foxglove replied to don simon fbpe | 6 years ago
2 likes

don simon wrote:

Damage done, he's tainted and can't be considered a clean rider in my eyes.

Really?  Up until this point he was Snow White in your eyes?  But now, pah! Doper.

Interesting.

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