Spyns 2011 Tour de France: Contador Suspected of Doping


Will Contador lose his yellow jersey? Spyns former clients saw his awesome power during last July's Tour de France trip but was it all natural? Reigning Tour de France champion Alberto Contador has called for anti-doping rules to be revised after his positive test for a banned substance. Well that's certain a new tack.

The three-time Tour de France winner blames contaminated food for his positive test. Authorities provisionally banned him after clenbuterol was found in his urine sample. "The system is in doubt and should be changed," he told Reuters news agency. "There has to be a limit set... so that quantities as tiny as those found in my body .. do not count as a positive." Contador, who won cycling's most prestigious event in 2007, 2009 and 2010, has totally rejected rumours of a possible blood transfusion during the Tour.

"If they want to test every sample I've given in the Tour, as many different laboratories as they want, or if they want to freeze it for three or five years until other future tests are scientifically validated and then check it, they can do it," he continued. "I have nothing to hide." The 27-year-old Team Saxo Bank rider stated the allegations had left him feeling very depressed. "I feel like I'm at rock bottom. I feel really let down. I'm fighting against these accusations 24 hours of each day," he admitted. "Right now I'm in a place I never imagined I would be, and it's not good."

An accredited laboratory in Germany found a "very small concentration" of clenbuterol in Contador's urine sample provided during the Tour on 21 July. The amount of the muscle-building and fat-burning drug was 40 times less than the benchmark figure of two nanograms which the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) sets as the minimum level it must detect to prove doping.

The sport's governing body, the International Cycling Union (UCI), said further investigation was needed before any conclusions could be drawn in the case. Contador has argued that the minute traces of the banned substance found should not give rise to any automatic suspension.
"There should be [a minimum level]... the norms have to evolve, just as they have done for other substances like caffeine, where they changed the regulations because they realised they weren't right," he said. "In the case of clenbuterol, positives should be positives because of the quantity found, with a specific limit, not because of the substance itself."

On Thursday, the UCI stated Contador was "formally and provisionally suspended as is prescribed by the World Anti-Doping Code" after both his A and B urine samples tested positive in a laboratory in Cologne. Clenbuterol is often used in asthma medicines and has some veterinary uses. Small outbreaks of clenbuterol poisoning - due to contaminated meat - have been reported in various countries.

On Thursday, the UCI suspended Tour of Spain runner up Ezequiel Mosquera and his Xacobeo team-mate David Garcia da Pena after a positive test for the banned substance hydroxyethyl starch, taken from both men during the Tour of Spain in September. Both men have denied knowingly taking the substance.

Anyone who watched Contador's break away from Andy Schleck after a mechanical failure in the 2010 Tour de France could easily label this bad karma. A longer suspension could guarantee a Schleck victory in the 2011 Tour de France. It remains to be seen if Contador will attend the ASO's unveiling of the 2011 Tour de France route in Paris on October 19.
Spyns is an active travel company based in Whister, BC (Canada) and Beaujolais France. Spyns offers active holidays to Europe including trips to the 2010 Tour de France. For more information about Spyns 2010 Tour de France tours, please visit http://www.tdf-tours.com, http://www.spyns.com or call 1.888.825.4720.