I've been getting some questions on this subject from people who are a bit new to cycling, so I thought I'd put all the answers in one place, rather than reply individually.
Those of you who already know all about it, sorry! Come back tomorrow! Mind you, you could read on anyway, you might learn something new.. or I might make a mistake and have to be corrected? You know you all love telling me when I am wrong!
OK, Drugs In Cycling. Contador. What's the score?
Contador's hearing has now taken place, it took most of last week, and we can expect to hear the results by the end of December, or possibly not until the new year. So don't hold your breath. There has been so much written about it that I can hardly bear to go over it again - so in a nutshell, Conti tested positive for a banned substance, Clenbuterol, partway through the Tour last year. He said he has never taken drugs, and that it can only have come from him eating contaminated meat. Unfortunately, he was the only member of the team that ate the meat and was tested, so he can't prove it.
There have been other instances of athletes, in cycling and in other sports, showing positive for this drug and claiming it was from eating contaminated meat. All of those athletes had their appeals rejected, and had to accept their bans. Contador has the money and the political support to fight his case, and although legally this is the right thing to do, it hasn't won him any friends.
There is a school of thought that says he should have accepted the ban: his view was very much " I didn't do it, and I'm not going to be labelled as a drug cheat for the rest of my life"
Firstly, I would reassure you all that cycling is one of the least drug-tainted sports there is. No other sport has the level of testing that cycling does. It always makes the headlines when someone is caught for drugs, but that's not the true picture.
So, lots of info, so I'll divide it up into headings.
1)Why does everyone hate Contador?
2) What drugs are we talking about?
3) Is Doping not the same as doing drugs?
Errr, not easy to answer that lot neatly. But I will try.
Firstly, the abbreviations.
UCI = Union Cycliste Internationale. International Cycling Union, the blokes that run cycling. Based in Switzerland, therefore assumed to be neutral.
WADA World Anti Doping Agency. Nothing to do with the Wombat Anti-Defamatory Association, as was suggested a while ago when I was having trouble with the internet and it looked as though it were due to Wombats in the Wiring. It turned out to be Wallabies disguised as Wombats, hence the involvement of the second WADA.
PED = Performance Enhancing Drug.
Right, you are now ready to Read On:
1) Contador.
At last year's Tour, his doping control tests showed that his system contained Clenbuterol on four of the days after a rest day. Tiny, tiny amounts of it; but it's on the banned list. He said "not guilty, must have been in that contaminated meat wot I ate." This defence has been tried before, and has failed. WADA and the UCI say "athletes are responsible for what they ingest." Not knowing that you were accidentally eating something on the banned list is not a defence. Athletes have been banned for this, many times.
So, other athletes have tested positive for this same chemical, and have been banned, but Contador wasn't. He was initially given a one-year ban - half the normal length - but a few weeks later the Spanish authorities overturned it, and told him to race again. UCI and WADA appealed.
This does just seem a bit unfair. Other athletes have had to swallow their pride, accept their bans, and get on with it. Of course it's immensely hurtful to be accused of taking drugs, of course it's going to be "on your record" for the rest of your career, but it happens. Contador, however, had a lot of money and the support of the Spanish president, and his legal team found a loophole, claiming that he did not have to be banned if he could prove it was the result of accidental ingestion.
I leave you to imagine how crushingly hurtful this must have been to all the other athletes who had innocently taken medicine or had indeed accidentally ingested a banned substance.... there is a lot of feeling that he was only let off because he had important backing.
There is also the lingering possibility that he could have been doping......
....we'll come on to doping in a minute.
2) Drugs. Cycling as a sport says "you can train as hard as you like, but no PEDs."
This ruling is enforced by the UCI, who are the blokes who run cycling, and WADA which is the World Anti-Drug Association. As you already know.
Anyway - drugs. The list, which is ever-increasing, includes all the stuff you would expect, but it also includes a huge range of other drugs/chemicals that might not help the athlete in themselves, but would cover up their use of PEDs. I'm not a chemist, so you'll have to accept that somewhat simplified explanation.
Some drugs are completely banned - zero tolerance - and some are allowed in certain, specified quantities.
At one point, caffeine was on the banned list, but as it appears in tea, coffee, cola drinks and a ton of other stuff, they had to agree to allow a certain amount of it!
This is why athletes can't just grab some cough medicine when they feel a bit poorly, or take a few tablets if they have a headache, as we do: they have to be extremely careful about everything they eat/drink/swallow, in case it contains any banned substances.
Every cycling team has a team doctor, and they would probably do most of the work in training their cyclists not to take any over-the-counter medicines, or to take any herbal supplements or health foods without checking with the doctor first. Because you never know what they might contain.
This leads to a rather specialised research war: the cyclists try to find new additives or supplements that can help them perform better, but are not on the banned list. WADA investigate every new item, to assess how harmful it is and then, if appropriate, to ban it.
Quite often there is a "craze" for a new product, everyone takes it for a while, then the UCI or WADA decide it's not a good thing, and it goes on the banned list.
This is for the benefit of the cyclists, actually: it's well documented that some athletes will kill themselves with drugs if they think it will give them just one more season, just one more win.....
3) Doping. Blood Doping.
No, this is not quite the same as taking drugs. It works like this:
During a long stage race, your blood has to work hard to deliver oxygen, and remove wastes. (This is the simplified version, ok? I did Biology to A level but I don't want to bore anyone...) The longer you force your blood to work hard without taking a rest, the less well it performs. In the normal world, we call this "getting tired" and we stop for a while. But when you are pedalling every day for 2 weeks or more, you can't just stop.
So, a few weeks earlier, when you were fully rested, fully fit, bright-eyed and bushy tailed, you take out some of your own blood and store it carefully. Your body makes up the loss with no problem.
Later, at the race, you are feeling exhausted, so you inject the "bouncy" blood back into yourself.
Now, you might well be thinking that this sounds like an insanely dangerous thing to do. Well, yes, it is.
The trouble is, regarding injecting blood into yourself, that when you are an exhausted cyclist, it IS a good idea, because suddenly your blood is fresh and oxygenated, and you can whizz away the next day with a spring in your pedals. (The name "Landis" comes to mind...)
And it's a particularly "good" idea for cyclists, who have to undergo doping control, as there are no drugs: it's your own blood, so it doesn't show up on any tests.
(side issue: they never say whether you have to take out the same amount as you are about to put in... images of Ricco with bulging eyes and balloon-taut skin due to the amount of extra blood....)
As I understand it, the only chance WADA has to spot this sort of thing is the Biological Passport which records haemocrit levels in the blood: if they suddenly spike, that would indicate that someone has been fiddling with their blood. But it's not a foolproof system, yet.
And of course that leads us back to Contador: the suggestion was that, as his clenbuterol levels were so ridiculously low, he could not have been taking the drug at that time: but he could have been taking it earlier, during training, and he could have withdrawn some of his blood at that point, injecting it during the TdF for that "super boost" during the race.
The fact that the first reading occurred during/immediately after a rest day was considered to be a bit of a pointer as well.
The supposition is that the injected blood still had traces of clenbuterol in it.
As a general point, yes, who would be so stupid as to do something with so many risks: not just "being caught" but infection etc: and you can't remove, store, and inject blood without at least a couple of sidekicks. It's not like taking a tablet, that you can just slip into your mouth when no-one is looking. (*throws hands up in despair*) Other people MUST know about it - even if you could hide it from roommates and team members, you can't just disappear for an hour or so during a Tour, without someone noticing.
I suppose you could have a convenient "girlfriend".... that you slip off to see every day or two... (*shakes head*)
As Figgy said in a comment during an earlier discussion of this topic, this whole culture of "winning by cheating" is beyond us, but I guess we have to assume that if you are not quite a top-class athlete, and you have trained and trained but still can't quite win races, you feel so desperate to win that you WILL do what it takes, and you WILL stand there on that podium, smiling and accepting the accolades, not caring that you cheated to get them.
It's possible that such a second-rate person (both in athletic terms and morally, ha ha) might reason that other competitors have better kit, better team support, better nutritionists, access to wind tunnels, individual coaching etc whereas they just pound around the roads to get fit... so if their competitors can take benefit from their advantages, then they (the bad guy) can take advantage of a simple blood exchange. After all, it IS his own blood, it's not like he was taking drugs or anything..... I am sure they find ways to justify it to themselves.
And there's the contractual problems as well: if you are good cyclist but not a brilliant one, your team might be saying to you that if you don't win something, you'll be fired. Or you won't be allowed to ride the big races. And if all you can do is cycle, then the thought of being sacked - well, people do do desperate things when they see a black future ahead of them.
So, the answers are: Everyone "hates" Contador because he either cheated, or he used money and influence to get himself declared innocent where other athletes, similarly innocent, have had to take the punishment.
Drugs are bad.
Doping is particularly bad.
There, I hope that cleared up a few points.
Well said!
ReplyDeleteI'm guessing we won't know the final results for Alberto until mid January. I expect to be disappointed....money and power buys so much. But - I wouldn't want to be riding near him - I expect some in the peloton will take matters in hand on their own.
BE
Oh! What an idea - do you think they'll "poke" him? *giggles*
ReplyDeleteI was making "poke" motions during the Giro, and at just that exact second, Karpets and Conti had that little, er, misunderstanding, and Conti fell off. LLB gave me a very accusing glance, I can tell you!
Seriously, though, I have lost track of what my own opinion is. And we haven't had a word from Andy on the subject, I guess he is (sensibly) staying out of it until the decision is made.
Most of me can't imagine that the UCI will penalise Contador now, after all this time: if they do, it will be a political decision, based on "you are not pushing us around" rather than on a scientific "ok, you did/didn't do it" basis.
But there is a small part of me that thinks he deserves to be "done": after all, the rules are "an athlete is responsible for what he eats" and so many other athletes have had to swallow their (unjust) bans.
Ho hum.
I guess we will find out, in due course...
Coug
Precisely - in terms of other's having to suck it up when busted and just do their time...in the US, the term "entitlement" has become a big, big word. It's far more than 4 letter's - but is spit out as if it were a 4 letter word. There are so many inequities in cycling already in terms of team $ and rider support...I hope legal and presidential(Spanish &^%*&) support do not overrule fair play.
ReplyDeleteRealistically, the whole situation could change if Jan Ullrich spills his guts - and it's sounding like he might...this could most certainly play a part in the Novisky Hunt for Lance Armstrong.
McQuaid has insinuated that there are potentially more "busts" to come from 2011 as well. Interesting since "they" (UCI&WADA) made big stuff of the "clean levels" of testing for this year. Are the team Dr's just getting smarter and more tech savy?
BigMat's team Dr just got nailed...
My son assures me that the day will come when I will be totally shocked at who actually dopes (then again he's bitter since that's why he left the sport to begin with and it broke his heart and he's not healed yet).
I prefer to remain an optimist.......at least it feels better..for awhile anyway. And, I'm not an ostritch - no head in the sand here -
Oh - additional news flash - did you know that Taylor Phinney's new roommate (he got his own place in Boulder last month, moving out from Mom & Dad's)is Evelyn Stevens? She's a rider as well and was mentored by Connie.
Gee, he could have lived here with me! That would have been "a bit of alright, eh?".
BE
Coug, that was a fantastic post. I actually learned something new--I like your way of putting boosting an RBC count as an injection of "bouncy" blood! I only took Biology to Grade 12 (our equivalent of an A-level would have been Grade 13, or the now phased out OAC = Ontario Academic Levels).
ReplyDeleteAh, Bertie. I still haven't forgotten Port de Balès. I don't know... I tend to believe that "action is character". What you do, says a lot about you, and the whole "I didn't notice the guy in the CANARY YELLOW jersey was having a mechanical, so it thus bears no relation to my timely attack" never sat well with me.
Political clout. Didn't the Spanish Prime Minister twist some arms / whisper in a few ears to get the doping charges against Bertie dropped?
Question 1: Shouldn't the Spanish Prime Minister be sorting Spain's debt crisis?
Question 2: If he's claiming that the traces of Clenbuterol came from consuming contaminated beef, did any of his other teammates test positive for it too? Just curious. Although it would be interesting if the answer is no, as it implies he has better suppers than his domestiques. Yes, those little glimpses into people's diets/lives interest me more than the brouhaha over doping.
Bertie was "apparently" the only person who consumed the questionable meat AND was tested. Didn't sound like other's ate it - but wouldn't have mattered if they weren't also tested at the same time.
ReplyDeleteI also believe "action is character" and his lies during/after the 2010 TdF just finished me off in terms of him. You just didn't notice your primary rival as you whipped past him??? Gimme a break. His shorts should have burst into flames. He gave me the creeps before that - but again - that just polished it off for me. Then when he was crying??? Guilt much you jerk!! OK. I'll stop now. I want to see him suspended. Period.
BE
Great explanation. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteI'm really up in the air over this. I know "athletes are responsible ...", but I think there should be a difference between deliberate ingestion and a mistake. The difficulty comes in determining which is which, how do you prove intention in a food case?
If it is determined Conti accidently ingested clenbuteral, I would like to see a 1-year suspension, dating from the date of the failed test. That would wipe out his TdF and Giro victories.
Others have been suspended longer, but lost less, some lost more: their whole career. Is that fair? Does "fair" even enter into it? Maybe the "letter of the law" needs to be applied in all cases. That is a kind of fairness - in a one-size-fits-all way. I never thought I'd be sympathetic to the UCI, but I guess I can see sometimes they are damned if they do and damned if they don't.
emjay
Thought this article was interesting and am sharing:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.bicycling.com/news/pro-cycling/contador-case-cyclings-integrity-line
BE
Great post Coug!
ReplyDeleteI'm not a Contador fan - at all - but I honestly don't know what to believe. I read the same article, BE and it confirmed my belief that he should be sanctioned but the UCI's handling of the case from the start has been disgraceful. You can't try to bury a positive result, basically tell the athlete that "we'll keep this between us so don't say anything to anyone" and then slam him when it's made public. Well, I guess you can because that is allegedly what the UCI did. Part of me wonders if CAS will find a deficiency with the way the UCI managed the process. If you were CAS, wouldn't you question the UCI? I'd love to see a real leader bring some integrity and class to that organization.
And then what is the affect on Andy? Part of me hopes that Contador is not sanctioned only because Andy and his family would never have to look back on that Tour knowing that he was the winner but denied the opportunity to ride in yellow to Paris. Or maybe it is me that doesn't want to have to look back on the 2010 TdF knowing that we could have been cheering and toasting Andy's ride to Paris in yellow. Never mind, we'll get to do that yet!
Speaking of which, is it too early to start the count down to the 2012 Tour? :)
Kat
213 days to go.....
ReplyDeleteWell done everyone, lovely selection of posts, between us we have covered every single point about this wretched affair.
In summary:
1) It's not fair.
2) UCI is damned either way.
3) Conti is labelled "drug cheat" either way.
4) Money and power should not change the rules.
5) The UCI were stupid to try to hide it.
6) Contador was WRONG to do Chaingate.
7) Andy says he doesn't want a backdated win.
and finally: despite Contador's behaviour, on balance I don't want him "done" because it will - as they say - bring the sport into disrepute.
But I don't want people to say he was only cleared due to money/politics, as that will also bring the sport into disrepute!
So the overall conclusion has to be There Is No Easy Answer to this one: if there were, someone would already have suggested it.
Coug
Running hands through hair in despair.
Something else. About Speeding this time again. The latest news: OGL only got a fine of 350 Euro's and a 3 months ban on driving, but on probation. There are rumours that other people with the same offence came out worse....
ReplyDeleteAnd yes, no easy answer to TdF 2010. Now I'm only praying that TdF podium 2011 is as it is..
Barbara.
OGL's lucky he's got family, in the same business, that live close.
ReplyDeleteI really like him, but speeding is dangerous and stupid. There are rules on the road for a reason. Accidents happen and how horrible would that be? And I'm sure he's getting a ration from Frank as well as Steve...let alone Mum and Dad.
There are better ways to express frustration than putting the pedal to the metal. Andy, of all people, should know that. So - "being Andy" paid off for him this time in Lux? That's not "fair" either. He should get what any "Joe" off the street would get.
I am really sick of this "I am special and entitled" crap. It's a pandemic at this point.
BE
Yes, *sighs* it is wrong that anyone gets "special" treatment, even if it is someone we like.
ReplyDeleteOn the other hand, can you really say that you have never, ever, exceeded the speed limit? Even accidentally? Close to where I live, a limit has been reduced from 40mph to 30mph, and I can't tell you how many times I have realised half-way along the road that I have been going at the old limit.
And I am EXTREMELY sensible! And I normally driver hyper-mile style anyway! (that's to save fuel, if you haven't heard of it.)
As always, we don't know all the facts of the case: he was doing 101kph (about 63mph I think) in a 50kph zone. Late at night. That's all we really know. It occured back in (I think) Feb, so presumably he had his new Mercedes car. Is that relevant? We don't know.
Maybe he was rushing home, Cinderella-like, to be in the right place for UCI random dope checks? Maybe that bad Jakob had kept him out too late? (Leelu, I can see your face from here.) Maybe he was giddily happy about the new team, and had some fast music on, and was carried away with joie de vivre?
At least he hadn't been drinking - we would certainly have heard about that, if he had been!
I don't know what the "normal" fine or penalty would be for this transgression in Lux. As far as I know, in the UK if you were caught at double the speed limit, you'd lose your licence for a period - 3 months to a year seems to be about average for a youngish driver.
So a 3-month ban does not seem unreasonable, and having it "suspended", well, he's just lucky, I guess.
I bet he won't do that again, though!
Coug
For 6 years I ran a health center for a chiropractor - I also did the physical therapy on our patients - many of whom were there due to auto accidents...so I've seen, up close and personal how life changing an auto mishap can be. I know I'm probably over sensitive about it.
ReplyDeleteBE
Not at all - and without wanting to sound like a drama queen, I spent 6 months on crutches after a car knocked me off my bike, not to mention losing several friends to road accidents, both bike and cycle, (to me, bike = motorbike) so I have very little tolerance for bad driving.
ReplyDeleteAs I said, we don't know all the details: and having spent quite some time (pre Andyhab, of course) looking at Lux speed cameras, I have to say that their roads are pretty darned empty compared to the UK or anywhere else other than the outback, possibly. Or the very middle of the Czech republic. But that's another story... and this was apparently very late at night, so I think that Andy's bad driving, while not to be applauded, was perhaps not as reckless as it might sound.
Even though he is "someone" in Lux, I do think that if he had been, for example, in a crowded area, in a very built-up area, drunk, or being really stupid (Jakob and the bare bottom, for example, to pull an image out of the air) then he would have been more heavily penalised.
And for your general information and delight, the Howald Tunnel currently has just 11 cars on it. And this is rush hour! On the A13 at Mondorf, it's pitch black and I can count a total of 7 cars over 5 speed cameras. (*said in a BBC voice*: "the A13 is flowing freely in both directions") Here endeth the traffic report.
Coug