More drugs : Gaumont



limerickman

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Jan 5, 2004
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here is more information about that paragon of virtue,
Phillipe Gaumont : Cofidis : as reported on Eurosport today :

Quote :
Gaumont had to take drugs!

Former Cofidis rider Philippe Gaumont says he would have been kicked out of his team if he had refused to take performance enhancing drugs. "If you did not take drugs, you were just fired after a year," Gaumont, who is under investigation in an alleged doping scandal involving Cofidis, told Monday's Le Monde newspaper.

Gaumont, a 1992 Olympic bronze medallist in the 100-km team competition, has been accused of drug taking twice in the past. He tested positive for the banned steroid nandrolone in 1997 and for amphetamines in 1999.

He said he did not take anything in the first six months with his first team, Castorama, whom he joined in 1994. "In June, 1994, a team doctor gave me a shot of Kenacort and it went on from there," he added.

Kenacort is a corticosteroid, a banned substance which reduces fatigue and swelling.

Gaumont said he was amazed by the quantity of drugs he had to take before time trials. "An intravenous injection of Fonzylane to dilate the veins and let the blood spread well. Some injectable caffeine. A pill of Theostat so that I could breathe easily and some analgesic to stop pain," he said.

Gaumont said random tests were ineffective.

"The tests occur during training and races. Every rider knows that intravenous erythropoietin (EPO) stays for three days in the urine. So you just have to act consequently and stop the treatment three days before the test.

"And the effect of EPO is still effective 10 days after you take it." EPO stimulates the production of oxygen-carrying red blood cells.

The rider said he had never been told about the risks of taking banned substances. "The only risks I was told about were the risks of being caught," he explained. "I take full responsibility for my mistakes, but it is the whole system leading us to doping that has to be judged."

end quote :

Where does this statement leave the likes of David Millar & Co ?
Gaumont is implying that he was going to be fired if he did not take drugs, by Cofidis.
Is he suggesting that the rest of Cofidis are doping ?
 
Originally posted by limerickman
here is more information about that paragon of virtue,
Phillipe Gaumont : Cofidis : as reported on Eurosport today :

Quote :
Gaumont had to take drugs!



Where did you get this?
 
"If you did not take drugs, you were just fired after a year"
Whether Gaumont is implying a regime of team doping is unclear. He talks of the pressure on riders to achieve results and if drugs=results then teams condone them by proxy.

I am of the personal opinion that there are a sizeable number of undetected riders using drugs but the testimony of those caught can be unreliable. I think Gaumont is throwing a certain degree of mud here.
 
Originally posted by dot
Where did you get this?

http://eurosport.com/home/pages/V3/L0/S18/sport_Lng0_Spo18.shtml
This link should bring you to the Gaumont story.

There are other links www.velonews.com, www.cyclingnews.com and www.procycling.com
Each of these sites cover the Gaumont story too.

It should be remembered that Gaumont is no stranger to being charged with drug offences.
Gaumont was found to be guilty of steroid abuse in 1997.
The UCI imposed a short ban on him for that offence.
Recently Gaumont was found to be centrally involved in a drug trafficking case (January 2004) while cycling with Cofidis.

There are two issues which are of concern in this matter.
The UCI imposed a short ban on Gaumont in 1997 after his first conviction.
A perception was thus created that, even though a cyclist is found to be cheating,
the corresponding sentence and re-admission to the sport, was not sufficiently punitive.
Indeed one could argue that the effectiveness of the UCI’s punishment, in July 1997, did not dissuade Gaumont from cheating once again in 2004 !
This level of recidivism is alarming.

Secondly, how can any cyclist who finished below Gaumont in any race between 1997-2004 be certain that Gaumont’s performances were not drug enhanced ?

Gaumont now alleges that his team put a template in place whereby team members were
forced to take drugs !
Perhaps Gaumont is spreading malicious allegations because he himself has been uncovered ?
Perhaps Gaumont needs to issue such excuses in order to justify, to himself, that the
taking of drugs was standard practice ?

It is now essential in my opinion that the UCI thoroughly investigate the claims made by Gaumont.
If following a thorough investigation, Gaumont's claims are found to be true, the UCI will be compelled to alter and increase the
frequency of their testing procedures.
If following a thorough investiagtion, Gaumont's claims are found to be false, well then one can conclude that this instance of cheating was random.
Either way, there does need to be an investigation because this
'halfway house' is neither tolerable nor conclusive.

Finally, i would suggest that Cofidis cyclists, management and team sponsor would surely be pushing, and pushing hard for
Gaumont's claims to be investigated - if only to exonerate those cyclists and management.
 
Somewhat related, from CyclingNews.com:

Manzano wants revenge

Spanish professional Jesus Manzano, who has been left without a team after Kelme chose not to renew his contract this season, has angrily stated that he is prepared to go public with evidence of doping within the Kelme team. Manzano rode for the team from 2000 to 2003.
...
Manzano says he will offer solid proof of doping within the team, as he explains it, going a step beyond Philippe Gaumont's recent revelations in the French press of cyclists' ability to take drugs and avoid detection. The Spaniard also claims that he was run down from the drugs he was taking, to the point where he was forced to get off a train in the Valencia region of Spain because he was "half dead".
...
Speaking on the revelations he plans to make, Manzano admitted that it was a question of payback for the team that left him without a job this year.

Sigh.
 
Originally posted by Mouse Potato
Somewhat related, from CyclingNews.com:



Sigh.

Evidence - if more evidence was ever needed - that drug abuse in the professional ranks is endemic.

When our friends like Verbruggen going to do the right thing ?
 

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