Professional Cycling – escaping the crisis

Editorial

This week the cycling world again has been plunged into controversy after doping statements made by Floyd Landis. This is a further chapter in a saga that started with doping allegations in the Festina Tour of 1998. The allegations made by Floyd Landis this week raise issues that many people believe go to the heart of world cycling – its ability to deal with doping that appears to be embedded in the sport.

It is submitted that cycling can only come out of its crisis by dealing with the issues it faces in an open, transparent and impartial manner. Nothing less will work.

Landis’ allegations have yet to be fully investigated. However they are not the only such allegations of doping and abuse of power within the administration of the anti-doping system by the International Cycling Union (UCI). These allegations evidence a growing concern that the rules are not administered in a fair and transparent manner.
The UCI, Lance Armstrong and his team manager Johan Bruyneel have all responded to the allegations of Landis by denial. The UCI stated:

“The UCI regrets that Mr Landis has publicly accused individuals without allowing sufficient time for the relevant US authorities to investigate.
An impartial investigation is a fundamental right, as Mr Landis will understand having contested, for two years, the evidence of his breach of the Anti-Doping Rules in 2006.”

With this statement the UCI has opened the door to what has been a hoary chestnut in the past – that an impartial investigation is a fundamental right.
There is no doubt about that.
In this respect the comments of the World Anti Doping Agency chief John Fahey should be welcomed as Mr. Fahey has vowed there should be a complete investigation into the claims made by Landis and others regarding the administration of justice by the UCI.
But the solution does not simply lie in an impartial investigation to determine the veracity of the Landis allegations. What is required is an overhaul of the current system to prevent similar allegations in future.

One of the fundamental problems with the current anti-doping system is that the current system is not sufficiently transparent and the key roles are not sufficiently independent. The UCI acts as administrator, investigator, prosecutor and judge. It matches the anonymous samples against the names of riders, decides who will be prosecuted and whether they are guilty. In addition, important cases are resolved in closed hearings, hidden from public scrutiny. This situation is fraught with problems, rendering the UCI vulnerable to allegations of improper and unfair conduct.

Allegations such as those concerning the Russian rider Vladimir Gusev where it is alleged that the UCI acted at the direction of Bruyneel reflect serious mistrust in the integrity of the organisation and its processes. In the end proper, impartial and transparent processes will protect not only the riders but also the UCI.

The administration of justice in cycling as in every walk of life must occur in public to avoid perceptions of unfairness and cronyism.

What cycling desperately needs is an independent honest broker to finally bring these matters to resolution. Neither the national federations nor the international union are in a position to do this alone. In addition, serious open discussion is required to create a new ethical cycling culture. Otherwise we will only continue to hear more of the same from this beautiful sport.

Australia has a place to play in cycling’s rejuvenation. A few years ago the Spanish Secretary for Sport, Jaime Lissavetsky, proposed a grand round table meeting to deal with cycling’s own cancer. In September to coincide with the World Cycling Championships Deakin will hold the New Pathways for Professional Cycling Conference. We offer this as an opportunity for the cycling world to come together to share ideas about the shape of the sport and its administration in the future and to prepare the ground for meaningful and continuing dialogue. 

6 Comments

West Coast Reader

True that, but there’s more to it.

Some call for amnesty but you know the French, Italians and Spanish are having none of it, they’ve paid the price and now they’re sitting back eating some popcorn enjoying the USA show and won’t let it slide one bit.

The UCI, well after all that’s gone on we’ve all seen how fair and impartial they are haven’t we. They have to go down as well. When the three GT’s wanted to separate from the ProTour the UCI started to show its weakness (money). It will take the big governing bodies (I forget their acronyms but ASO France, the Italian one and Spanish) to do it again and dump the UCI and hopefully form something new and lets hope proper. The USA branch well isn’t as powerful and might take a hit in the coming months as well. You mentioned Australia but I think that’s a stretch that has its own issues if not now to come.

All in all, there needs to be some house cleaning if not purging before we ever get anywhere with this.

Victor Internal Routing

sylvia schenk is back in the news…

http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/schenk-uci-needs-more-transparency

http://velonews.competitor.com/2005/09/news/former-german-cycling-president-blasts-ucis-handling-of-armstrong-case_8889

“There is obviously a strong relationship with Armstrong,” Schenk added. “The UCI took a lot of money from Armstrong – to my knowledge 500,000 dollars – and now there is speculation that there are financial connections to Armstrong, as well as the American market. I do not know what sort of connections Verbruggen has.”

http://velocitynation.com/content/interviews/2009/sylvia-schenk

Louis Kevlar

wow, the nytimes have been all over this.

this article is high quality work.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/26/sports/cycling/26micro.html

they even contacted ferrari.

““Small injections we previously thought didn’t have a biological impact do work,” Ashenden said.

Based on anecdotal evidence, Ashenden said he thought that cyclists were microdosing EPO only during the spring and fall, when races generally last one or two days, and through the off-season. Police activity, he said, makes it too risky for athletes and teams to travel with vials of EPO during three-week events like the Tour de France.

Ashenden said he thought that transfusions of blood frozen during the off-season at special laboratories remained the doping method of choice during long races.

Not everyone accepts the researchers’ conclusions. Among them is Michele Ferrari, the controversial Italian sports medicine doctor whose clients have included Armstrong.

“It’s a bit like playing Russian roulette,” Ferrari said in an e-mail exchange. “There is absolutely no microdose that can be taken without the risk of getting detected by out of competition controls within a 12-hour window.”

Although she has not seen the new research, Rossi of the cycling federation said she was not surprised to learn that cyclists might have found a way to use EPO again without detection.

“I know perfectly well that they are organizing themselves,” she said. “We are obliged to publish what we are doing while they can study it and work underground.””

Lorenzo Rivnut

I’d just like to see them follow their own rules. Tests are supposed to be anonymous and a positive cannot be declared until the B sample also comes back positive. It seems that we are always hearing rumors of someone testing positive before this happens. That just leads to people not trusting the authorities in charge of keeping results private until there is a true positive.

Something is wrong, and leads to favoritism, when one person has so much influence over a large organization like the UCI.

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