The Scotsman explores the 3 doping cases (actually 4) by linking them to Spain, home of Operational Puerto's infamy a fews Tours back.
What links all three doping cases – four if you include Piepoli, though
he has not tested positive – is Spain. Beltran and Duenas are Spanish;
Piepoli and Ricco ride for a Spanish team.
It was Spain, too,
where Operacion Puerto, the blood doping investigation that came to
public attention in 2006, was centred. It concerned a blood doping ring
based in Madrid, with bags of blood recovered from a flat, reportedly
belonging to around 200 athletes. The doctor at the centre of the ring,
Eufemiano Fuentes, was linked to footballers, tennis players and
athletes (his wife is Cristina Perez, the Spanish 400 metres hurdles
record holder), as well as around fifty cyclists.
Previously, he
had been chief club doctor at Las Palmas, but he left his position when
syringes containing EPO were discovered in the team's dressing room.
Duenas possessed quite the doping arsenal:
Though Ivan Basso and Jan Ullrich were high profile casualties of
Operacion Puerto, rumours have continued about other top riders, some
of them riding this year's Tour. Indeed, most agree that unless it is
re-opened, Operacion Puerto will continue to be a malignant shadow,
stalking the sport.
David Millar, who lives in Girona, and
last year rode for Saunier Duval, has described Spain as "the wild
west" as far as doping is concerned. Pat McQuaid, the International
Cycling Union (UCI) president, has also suggested that the doping
culture remains most deeply ingrained in Spain.
And the links to Operation Puerto:
Duenas appeared before a French court in Tarbes on Thursday, where he
was charged with the "use and possession of plants and poisonous
substances." The prosecutor, Gerard Aldige, described the stash of
products recovered from the Spaniard's hotel room as a "small
pharmacy," containing "syringes, needles and blood bags (and] a
multitude of other products, in liquid and sachet form."
According to Velo News, the Spanish doctor involved in Jesus Losa:
Spanish rider Moises Duenas, kicked out of the Tour de France, has blamed a Spanish doctor for his positive test for the blood booster erythropoietin (EPO), the daily El Pais reported on Saturday.
Duenas, who was charged with "use and possession of poisonous
substances" before a court at Tarbes, southwestern France on Thursday,
had claimed that the products were sold to him by Spanish doctor Jesus
Losa.
But the former Euskaltel-Euskadi team doctor denied "ever providing
Duenas with prohibited products" and was ready to testify as such.
El Pais said that Losa's name came up several years ago in
connection with Scottish rider David Millar and the Cofidis doping
affair, but he was never questioned.
Barloworld rider Duenas is one of three cyclists to fail a drugs
test during this year's Tour de France along with compatriot Manuel
Beltran of Liquigas and Italy's Riccardo Riccò of Saunier-Duval.
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