The UCI has completed its review
of USADA’s ‘Reasoned Decision’ and appendices in the case against Lance
Armstrong.
The UCI considered the main issues
of jurisdiction, the statute of limitation the evidence gathered by USADA and
the sanction imposed upon Mr. Armstrong.
The UCI confirms that it will not
appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport and that it will recognise the
sanction that USADA has imposed.
The USADA decision explains how
riders on the USPS Team showed no inclination to share the full extent of
what they knew until they were subpoenaed or called by federal investigators
and that their only reason for telling the truth is because the law required
them to do so.
These riders have confronted their
past and told their stories. Their accounts of their past provide a shocking
insight into the USPS Team where the expression to ‘win at all costs’ was
redefined in terms of deceit, intimidation, coercion and evasion.
Their testimony confirms that the
anti-doping infrastructure that existed at that time was, by itself,
insufficient and inadequate to detect the practices taking place within the
team. The UCI has always been the first international sporting federation to
embrace new developments in the fight against doping and it regrets that the
anti-doping infrastructure that exists today was not available at that time
so as to render such evasion impossible.
Many of the USPS Team riders have
already acknowledged that the culture of cycling has now changed and that
young riders today are no longer confronted with the same choices to use
performance enhancing drugs. They are right to do so.
The UCI has recognized the problem
of doping within the sport and taken significant steps to confront the
problem and to clean up cycling. Today’s riders are subject to the most
innovative and effective anti-doping procedures and regulations in sport.
Cycling has been a pioneer in the fight against doping in sport under the
leadership of the UCI and this role has been recognised by WADA.
Today’s young riders do not deserve to be branded or
tarnished by the past or to pay the price for the Armstrong era. Cycling has
a future and those who will define that future can be found among the young
generation of riders who have chosen to prove that you can compete and win
clean.
Riders who were caught doping continue to do the sport a disservice by
protesting that the UCI refused to engage with them. The reality is that
these riders never contemplated such action until they were found positive by
the UCI, and even then they refused to confess and co-operate with the UCI.
Those riders who made the choice
to stop using performance enhancing drugs, and to share their stories to
enable the new generation of riders to learn from the mistakes that were made
in the past, can continue to support clean cycling.
The role that training and
education has to play in discouraging doping at all levels is well recognised
by the UCI. The UCI will engage with any rider that is willing to work with
them in the fight against doping and interested in establishing what lessons
can be learned and applied to its ‘True Champion or Cheat?” programme which
is obligatory for all riders subject to anti-doping tests.
This is not the first time cycling
has reached a crossroads or that it has had to begin anew and to engage in
the painful process of confronting its past. It will do so again with renewed
vigor and purpose and its stakeholders and fans can be assured that it will
find a new path forward.
That process extends beyond the
UCI and the anti-doping agencies including WADA, USADA, AFLD and CONI must
contribute to it by also examining how many times they tested Lance Armstrong
and by providing their own explanation for why he never tested positive in
the tests that they respectively conducted.
The UCI tested Tyler Hamilton 40
times and found him positive. It tested Floyd Landis 46 times and found him
positive as the winner of the Tour de France. The list of riders that it has
found positive does not end there.
The UCI has tested Lance Armstrong
218 times. If Lance Armstrong was able to beat the system then the
responsibility for addressing that rests not only with the UCI but also with
WADA and all of the other anti-doping agencies who accepted the results.
The UCI supports WADA’s decision
to create a working group to examine ‘The Ineffectiveness of the Fight
Against Doping in Sport’ and proposes that it commence its work by examining
the effectiveness of the system in place to detect the use of performance
enhancing substances in cycling.
The UCI is committed to reviewing
the environment upon which the sport operates in order to ensure that
something like this never happens again. It has convened a special meeting of
its Management Committee on Friday, October 26th to begin the process of
examining the existing structures and introducing changes to safeguard the
future of cycling.
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