The 2008 Tour de France may be done finding drug-cheats. At least AFP thinks so:
Austria's Bernhard Kohl will be the "seventh and last" positive doping case from this year's Tour de France, according to sports daily L'Equipe on Tuesday.
Kohl, the best climber at this year's race where he finished third overall, has become the fourth rider to test positive for CERA, a new generation of the banned blood booster EPO (erythropoietin).
Here is the tally for doping in 2008 Tour de France, of which 4 were CERA EPO:
In all seven riders tested positive at this year's race, which was won by Spaniard Carlos Sastre of the CSC team.
Italians Riccardo Ricco and Leonardo Piepoli and Germany's Stefan Schumacher all tested postive for CERA, which until recently was thought to be undetectable.
During the race Ricco, the winner of two climbing stages, was ejected along with his Saunier Duval team after urine samples belonging to the Italian revealed traces of CERA.
Ricco followed Spanish duo Manuel Beltran, of Liquigas, and Barloworld rider Moises Duenas in leaving the race, both of whom tested positive for EPO.
On the race's final day it was revealed that Dmitri Fofonov, a Kazakh who rides for Credit Agricole, tested positive for a banned stimulant. He has since been banned for three months.
Weeks ago it was confirmed that Ricco's teammate Piepoli, a climber who won the 10th stage to Hautacam in the Pyrenees, also tested positive for CERA.
Then last week Schumacher - Kohl's team and room-mate at Gerolsteiner - was also confirmed as having tested positive for CERA. The German won both time trials on the race.
On Monday Kohl was the latest rider to be snared for using EPO to oxygenate his blood cells, thus boosting his abilities to perform on the world's toughest bike race.
And this is it for CERA positives:
Although it had been reported recently that France's national anti-doping agency was set to reveal a deluge of positive tests, L'Equipe said Tuesday the Kohl positive case "is the seventh and last positive, according to our information".
The French anti-doping agency (AFLD) was in charge of this year's controls as the Tour was being held outwith the auspices of the International Cycling Union (UCI) because of a dispute, which has now been resolved.
The AFLD recently pioneered a new blood test for CERA, the latest generation of a drug which has been in use in endurance sports since the early 1990s.
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