According to unconfirmed reports, Leonardo Piepoli – who had seemingly admitted and then denied doping – has tested positive at the 2008 TdF to CERA. No surprise there, really. More surprising, perhaps – although many would have found it easy to believe at the time, when he seemed to be riding out of his skin – is Stefan Schumacher, positive in the same way. Funny how those unbelievable results turn out to be so – umm, unbelievable?
The German who rides for Holczer’s soon to be defunct Gerolsteiner team won both of the time trials in this year’s Tour, taking the yellow jersey after his win on stage four and holding it for two days before crashing during the sprint into Super Besse on stage six. His second win came on stage 20 where he beat world champion Fabian Cancellara.
I trust we can rely on at least some of our ‘unbelievable’ riders. Those that are consistently amazing, like Cancellara for example, draw less suspicion for their performances. Let’s hope that trust is repaid. (Alternatively, if it’s not working anyway – let’s just ditch this ‘detection and punishment’ model completely and be fair to everyone.)
According to unconfirmed reports, Leonardo Piepoli – who had seemingly admitted and then denied doping – has tested positive at the 2008 TdF to CERA. No surprise there, really. More surprising, perhaps – although many would have found it easy to believe at the time, when he seemed to be riding out of his skin – is Stefan Schumacher, positive in the same way. Funny how those unbelievable results turn out to be so – umm, unbelievable?
The German who rides for Holczer’s soon to be defunct Gerolsteiner team won both of the time trials in this year’s Tour, taking the yellow jersey after his win on stage four and holding it for two days before crashing during the sprint into Super Besse on stage six. His second win came on stage 20 where he beat world champion Fabian Cancellara.
I trust we can rely on at least some of our ‘unbelievable’ riders. Those that are consistently amazing, like Cancellara for example, draw less suspicion for their performances. Let’s hope that trust is repaid. (Alternatively, if it’s not working anyway – let’s just ditch this ‘detection and punishment’ model completely and be fair to everyone.)
- Young rising star with much to gain, brilliant climber and self-confessed Pantani fan: Ricco tests positive, yet denies all. Gets sacked, backtracks and admits to EPO use. Denies doping before Le Tour but let’s re-check his Giro blood samples just in case…
- Piepoli, climber with long and distinguished career: what could he achieve by doping? To extend his career? A last-ditch superannuation payment? He’s Ricco’s roommate and is reported to have confessed, is sacked by team to show that it means business, but denies all. From CN: “The 36-year-old Piepoli, who had not tested positive but, as the room-mate of Ricco during the Tour, was sacked by his team for violating the code of ethics “denied everything” after being questioned by CONI”
- Gusev, another rider facing retirement after a good career is caught out by internal team tests and dismissed. He refutes this “guilt” and threatens a lawsuit, raising speculation that the team (Astana) timed this sacking with Le Tour to get in the ‘good books’ with ASO – as proof they are cracking down on cheats and punishing them. But doesn’t Gusev’s sacking actually taint Astana, “proving” that cheats lurk within? Why would they bring this to light during Le Tour?
- Bossoni and Carini test positive in June at the Italian national championships: “Two Italian cyclists tested positive for EPO in June, the Italian National Olympic Committee (CONI) announced Thursday. The first, Giovanni Carini (Pagnoncelli NGC Perrel), tested positive after winning the Elite without contract category at the Italian National Championships in Boltiere. The second, Paolo Bossoni (Lampre) the following day after the elite men’s road race”
- Sacked Euskaltel rider Pena has been cleared: “Aketza Pena was declared not guilty of doping by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) on Thursday, according to a statement by the rider reported in Marca. The Spaniard tested positive for nandrolone at the 2007 Giro del Trentino, and was suspended from his Euskaltel-Euskadi. He had received a two-year suspension by the Spanish Cycling Federation (RFEC) in August, 2007. His contract with Euskaltel-Euskadi was not renewed and he abandoned his cycling career”. Ouch.
- Does anyone believe any of this? Whole teams (like Astana) are denied access to Le Tour because of past “activites”, despite new management. Athletes are sacked without a positive test, and others test positive and are sacked yet later are cleared. Is it all a publicity-driven shambles? Are we jumping to too many conclusions, too quickly?
- Young rising star with much to gain, brilliant climber and self-confessed Pantani fan: Ricco tests positive, yet denies all. Gets sacked, backtracks and admits to EPO use. Denies doping before Le Tour but let’s re-check his Giro blood samples just in case…
- Piepoli, climber with long and distinguished career: what could he achieve by doping? To extend his career? A last-ditch superannuation payment? He’s Ricco’s roommate and is reported to have confessed, is sacked by team to show that it means business, but denies all. From CN: “The 36-year-old Piepoli, who had not tested positive but, as the room-mate of Ricco during the Tour, was sacked by his team for violating the code of ethics “denied everything” after being questioned by CONI”
- Gusev, another rider facing retirement after a good career is caught out by internal team tests and dismissed. He refutes this “guilt” and threatens a lawsuit, raising speculation that the team (Astana) timed this sacking with Le Tour to get in the ‘good books’ with ASO – as proof they are cracking down on cheats and punishing them. But doesn’t Gusev’s sacking actually taint Astana, “proving” that cheats lurk within? Why would they bring this to light during Le Tour?
- Bossoni and Carini test positive in June at the Italian national championships: “Two Italian cyclists tested positive for EPO in June, the Italian National Olympic Committee (CONI) announced Thursday. The first, Giovanni Carini (Pagnoncelli NGC Perrel), tested positive after winning the Elite without contract category at the Italian National Championships in Boltiere. The second, Paolo Bossoni (Lampre) the following day after the elite men’s road race”
- Sacked Euskaltel rider Pena has been cleared: “Aketza Pena was declared not guilty of doping by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) on Thursday, according to a statement by the rider reported in Marca. The Spaniard tested positive for nandrolone at the 2007 Giro del Trentino, and was suspended from his Euskaltel-Euskadi. He had received a two-year suspension by the Spanish Cycling Federation (RFEC) in August, 2007. His contract with Euskaltel-Euskadi was not renewed and he abandoned his cycling career”. Ouch.
- Does anyone believe any of this? Whole teams (like Astana) are denied access to Le Tour because of past “activites”, despite new management. Athletes are sacked without a positive test, and others test positive and are sacked yet later are cleared. Is it all a publicity-driven shambles? Are we jumping to too many conclusions, too quickly?
It’s just talk, but there was talk about Ricco too, before he fell off the doping cliff. Via CN, El Pais reported that Italian Leonardo Piepoli, the winner of stage 10, confessed to his directeur sportif Joxean Fernandez Matxin to using EPO. After his team-mate Riccardo Riccò was taken away by police after testing positive for EPO, Piepoli reportedly said to Matxin, “I have done the same as Riccardo.” No positive doping control has been announced yet for Piepoli, but the team’s manager, Mauro Gianetti, pulled the entire squad out of the race. Riccò was indicted on the same charges as Duenas in a court in Foix, but denied using EPO.
No, not Piepoli, please!
Slight irony in that blood-doper, Tour star and denier Tyler Hamilton‘s continuing comeback is reported on in the same page of CN: Rock Racing’s Tyler Hamilton looks set to take the overall victory in the Tour of Qinghai Lake in China tomorrow after he successfully defended his lead in the second to last stage through the high Mountains on the Tibetan Plateau.
It’s just talk, but there was talk about Ricco too, before he fell off the doping cliff. Via CN, El Pais reported that Italian Leonardo Piepoli, the winner of stage 10, confessed to his directeur sportif Joxean Fernandez Matxin to using EPO. After his team-mate Riccardo Riccò was taken away by police after testing positive for EPO, Piepoli reportedly said to Matxin, “I have done the same as Riccardo.” No positive doping control has been announced yet for Piepoli, but the team’s manager, Mauro Gianetti, pulled the entire squad out of the race. Riccò was indicted on the same charges as Duenas in a court in Foix, but denied using EPO.
No, not Piepoli, please!
Slight irony in that blood-doper, Tour star and denier Tyler Hamilton‘s continuing comeback is reported on in the same page of CN: Rock Racing’s Tyler Hamilton looks set to take the overall victory in the Tour of Qinghai Lake in China tomorrow after he successfully defended his lead in the second to last stage through the high Mountains on the Tibetan Plateau.
Filed under Asthma, Piepoli by Rob.
Filed under Asthma, Piepoli by Rob.
Lots of people have asthma and exercise often is attributed as a trigger. So inhaling via a “puffer” is surely to be expected, especially just before a race. The main question is how much salbutamol is an acceptable, reasonable level for individuals with breathing difficulties. Other questions may include what value is there in a medical certificate anyway, and why does it often look like a third of the peleton have these breathing difficulties? Have you been at a start of a race and seen all of the puffers out? Does this inhalation actually work, asthmatic or not, or is it a placebo? And lastly, do we care?
Via CN: Piepoli heard by Monaco federation Piepoli. Italian climber Leonardo Piepoli will be heard by the cycling federation of Monaco tomorrow for his post-race ‘non-negative’ doping control following the Giro d’Italia stage to Monte Zoncolan, May 30, won by Saunier Duval teammate Gilberto Simoni. The 35 year-old who races with a license issued by Monaco, where he has lived since 1999, recorded a reading of 1800 nanograms per millilitre versus the limit of 1000. Following the announcement of the result on June 13 a Barcelona lab was unsuccessful in determining if the asthma drug that been inhaled as normal or injected. “The summons arrived on Saturday,” explained Piepoli to La Gazzetta dello Sport. The rider has a medical certificate which allows him to use Salbutamol above the 1000 limit. “Doping with Ventolin [a manufacturers name of Salbutamol - ed.] is impossible, there is a lot of scientific literature to demonstrate this. The certificate that I have does not have limits for use, and I have to say that I don’t remember if on the day of Zoncolan I used it more than other days, it would be deceitful to give an indication as such.”
Lots of people have asthma and exercise often is attributed as a trigger. So inhaling via a “puffer” is surely to be expected, especially just before a race. The main question is how much salbutamol is an acceptable, reasonable level for individuals with breathing difficulties. Other questions may include what value is there in a medical certificate anyway, and why does it often look like a third of the peleton have these breathing difficulties? Have you been at a start of a race and seen all of the puffers out? Does this inhalation actually work, asthmatic or not, or is it a placebo? And lastly, do we care?
Via CN: Piepoli heard by Monaco federation Piepoli. Italian climber Leonardo Piepoli will be heard by the cycling federation of Monaco tomorrow for his post-race ‘non-negative’ doping control following the Giro d’Italia stage to Monte Zoncolan, May 30, won by Saunier Duval teammate Gilberto Simoni. The 35 year-old who races with a license issued by Monaco, where he has lived since 1999, recorded a reading of 1800 nanograms per millilitre versus the limit of 1000. Following the announcement of the result on June 13 a Barcelona lab was unsuccessful in determining if the asthma drug that been inhaled as normal or injected. “The summons arrived on Saturday,” explained Piepoli to La Gazzetta dello Sport. The rider has a medical certificate which allows him to use Salbutamol above the 1000 limit. “Doping with Ventolin [a manufacturers name of Salbutamol - ed.] is impossible, there is a lot of scientific literature to demonstrate this. The certificate that I have does not have limits for use, and I have to say that I don’t remember if on the day of Zoncolan I used it more than other days, it would be deceitful to give an indication as such.”
|
|