Source: European, The Contact: ("Shorter letters are preferred") Website: http://www.the-european.com/ Pubdate: Wed, 29 Jul 1998 Author: Jeremy Whittle TOUR MUST EXORCISE DRUGS OR BE DAMNED WITH the arrests following the discovery of steroids in the luggage of the Dutch team, TVM, and the admission by three of the "Festina nine" that they took the banned drug EPO, speculation increased that the remaining stages of this year's Tour de France would be cancelled. Angry scenes between riders and race organisers and an organised go slow by the 'peleton' on the Tarascon-Le Cap d'Agle stage of the race showed the growing sense of anger and frustration. The Societe du Tour de France and cycling's governing body, the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI), are paying the price for failing to address the growth of the doping culture that now appears to be inextricably linked with the professional circuit. Few in the Tour de France convoy would directly blame the riders themselves for the recent turn of events. Many of them, paid only modest salaries, suffer relentlessly throughout the long and gruelling season and are expected to forgo any personal ambition and chance of success for the sake of the sponsors' exposure. Despite these sacrifices, it is only the sport's biggest names who are guaranteed a sponsorship contract for the following year. With the competition for backers intensified by a hostile economic climate, many riders are prepared to risk their long-term health in order to guarantee their livelihood. At the heart of the current scandal lies the cosy and complacent relationship between the UCI, the Tour organisation and the pervasive doping culture that has been tacitly endorsed by the sport itself. For all its modernising qualities and awareness of marketing, the Tour orgaisation, fronted by race director and former professional Jean-Marie Leblanc, an eloquent and intelligent man, has been lagging behind events and the public mood as the French police forced the pace of change. "Jean-Marie Leblanc - hypocrite!" reads one roadside banner as the Tour headed east from the Pyrenees towards the Alps. Another placard was more direct. "The Tour of Doping", it said bluntly as Tour stars Jan Ullrich and Marco Pantani rode past. With the Tour itself now exposed to public derision and with so many former riders willing to tell their stories of drug abuse, the tired arguments of Hein Verbruggen, UCI president, that only one per cent of all dope tests are positive, have been thrown out with the used syringes. Cycling may finally be coming to terms with the truth. Verbruggen, who until now has appeared happy to blame all claims of drug use on embittered or failed riders seeking publicity or revenge, has finally acknowledged that traditional testing methods have failed. He can no longer deny that the sport is in crisis. "Cycling is a tough, very professional sport," said Verbruggen after the Tour stage to Pau, "and I'm willing to admit that there are a lot more drugs taken than we currently know about through the one per cent of positive tests that are recorded. But I don't believe, as some doctors have suggested, that 99 per cent of professional cyclists are doped." Verbruggen said that if he thought that such an overwhelming majority of riders were chemically enhanced, he would give up his job. "I would not want to be president of such an organisation," he said. "The problem is that we don't know whether it's 10 per cent of riders, 20 percent of riders or 40 per cent of riders using drugs because we don't have tests to detect many of these substances. It is terrible, it is cheating, but it is reality." Doping is widely believed to have become endemic in professional cycling in the 30 years since the amphetamine-related death of the British rider, Tom Simpson, during the 1967 Tour. But in a sport in which retired riders take up administrative and management roles, the conspiracy of silence and tacit consent surrounding the use of doping has become an open secret. EPO, the blood booster linked to both the Festina and TVM teams, is only one of several prohibited but undetectable performance-enhancing products that are said to be in wide use in this year's Tour. Lille police, currently questioning the Festina team, said that nobody is above the law. Yet for a sporting institution that is now as much a part of French cultural life as Bastille Day, the tidal wave of police investigation has come as a crippling shock. The Tour hierarchy blessed with the tradition of an event that fires the imaginations of spectators and fans around the world, must now take action to save a race increasingly mired in controversy and scandal. - --- Checked-by: "Rich O'Grady"