'Victimized' Vinokourov Denies Doping Charge
Cycling: Tour de France: Alexandr Vinokourov claims he is innocent of blood doping, but will still quit the race.
Alexandr Vinokourov has protested his innocence after he tested positive for blood doping, although he will not attempt to regain his place in the Tour de France. Vinokourov's team Astana withdrew from the Tour following the pre-race favourite's positive test.
The Kazakh rider, who won Saturday's stage 13 time-trial and Monday's stage 15, reportedly had two different kinds of blood globules, which indicates he received a blood transfusion from someone of a compatible group.
But today he insisted he has done nothing wrong. "It's a mistake. I never doped, that's not the way I see my profession," he said. "I think it's a mistake in part due to my crash. I have spoken to the team doctors who had a hypothesis that there was an enormous amount of blood in my thighs, which could have led to my positive test."
Vinokourov also claimed he and his team have been victimized. "It's been going on for months and today they're managing to demolish me. The setting-up of our team made a lot of people jealous and now we're paying the price. It's a shame to leave the Tour this way, but I don't want to waste time in proving my innocence."
Astana's decision also rules Germany's Andreas Klöden and Vinokourov's compatriot Andrei Kashechkin - who were lying fifth and eighth overall - out of the race. "The anti-doping control on Alexandr Vinokourov, that had been done on July 21 after the time-trial in Albi, has been positively controlled," read an Astana statement. "According to the ethical code of the Astana cycling team, Alexandr Vinokourov has been suspended with immediate effect. The rider asked nevertheless for a B analysis.
"Informed by the Astana management, the organizers of the Tour de France invited the team to withdraw - which was immediately accepted."
The latest development deepens the state of crisis in which the sport finds itself, with Tour leader Michael Rasmussen also embroiled in a fresh doping row. Rasmussen is accused of failing to inform drug testers of his whereabouts on four separate occasions.
Failure to do so three times constitutes a positive test under International Cycling Union (UCI) rules and should bring about a two-year suspension. The row has further tarnished a sport still reeling from last year's winner, Floyd Landis, testing positive for excessive levels of testosterone, a result he is currently contesting.
The Tour director Christian Prudhomme has urged riders to stay clean for the good of the sport, but recognizes this will need a "revolution". "The start in London was a formidable occasion to re-conquer," he said. "It has failed. The riders have to understand that they are playing a game of Russian roulette if they are doping. Vinokourov has cheated and the only possible answer was: leave. I started this job believing that we could change this system but it's not enough: there has to be a revolution."
The Kazakh rider, who won Saturday's stage 13 time-trial and Monday's stage 15, reportedly had two different kinds of blood globules, which indicates he received a blood transfusion from someone of a compatible group.
But today he insisted he has done nothing wrong. "It's a mistake. I never doped, that's not the way I see my profession," he said. "I think it's a mistake in part due to my crash. I have spoken to the team doctors who had a hypothesis that there was an enormous amount of blood in my thighs, which could have led to my positive test."
Vinokourov also claimed he and his team have been victimized. "It's been going on for months and today they're managing to demolish me. The setting-up of our team made a lot of people jealous and now we're paying the price. It's a shame to leave the Tour this way, but I don't want to waste time in proving my innocence."
Astana's decision also rules Germany's Andreas Klöden and Vinokourov's compatriot Andrei Kashechkin - who were lying fifth and eighth overall - out of the race. "The anti-doping control on Alexandr Vinokourov, that had been done on July 21 after the time-trial in Albi, has been positively controlled," read an Astana statement. "According to the ethical code of the Astana cycling team, Alexandr Vinokourov has been suspended with immediate effect. The rider asked nevertheless for a B analysis.
"Informed by the Astana management, the organizers of the Tour de France invited the team to withdraw - which was immediately accepted."
The latest development deepens the state of crisis in which the sport finds itself, with Tour leader Michael Rasmussen also embroiled in a fresh doping row. Rasmussen is accused of failing to inform drug testers of his whereabouts on four separate occasions.
Failure to do so three times constitutes a positive test under International Cycling Union (UCI) rules and should bring about a two-year suspension. The row has further tarnished a sport still reeling from last year's winner, Floyd Landis, testing positive for excessive levels of testosterone, a result he is currently contesting.
The Tour director Christian Prudhomme has urged riders to stay clean for the good of the sport, but recognizes this will need a "revolution". "The start in London was a formidable occasion to re-conquer," he said. "It has failed. The riders have to understand that they are playing a game of Russian roulette if they are doping. Vinokourov has cheated and the only possible answer was: leave. I started this job believing that we could change this system but it's not enough: there has to be a revolution."

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