Froome to ride out asthma drug row on Spain's Ruta del Sol
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[February 12, 2018]
LONDON (Reuters) - Chris Froome
will start his 2018 season as favorite for Spain's Ruta del Sol on
Wednesday, defying calls from senior figures in world cycling to
withdraw from racing over the adverse drug test result he returned
last September.
The four-times Tour de France winner had twice the permissible
amount of the asthma medication Salbutamol in his system after stage
18 of the Tour of Spain - a race he went on to win - but the Team
Sky rider, who says he has done nothing wrong, did not receive a
provisional suspension.
International Cycling Union president David Lappartient and rival
riders Romain Bardet and Vincenzo Nibali have all said the British
cyclist should cease racing until his case is resolved.
And pressure on Froome increased last weekend when Jonathan
Vaughters, manager of the EF Education First - Drapac p/b Cannondale
team, suggested the presence of the previous Ruta del Sol winner at
the five-day event and other upcoming races will be “damaging to
cycling”.
"The honorable thing would be to recuse yourself from racing until
it's resolved," Vaughters told reporters at the Colombia Oro y Paz
stage race last week.
But Froome and Team Sky remain intent on the 32-year-old riding out
the controversy with a full racing program, including May's Tour of
Italy and July's Tour de France.
Lappartient said last month that it could be “at least a year”
before a ruling is reached.
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eam Sky rider Christopher Froome of Britain reacts before a training
session in Port Alcudia on the Spanish Balearic island of Mallorca,
December 16, 2017. REUTERS/Enrique Calvo
“On balance I think it’s the right thing to do; for Chris to
continue, and us to work in the background to support him and
demonstrate there's been no wrongdoing,” Team Sky principal Dave
Brailsford told reporters in Colombia last week.
Team Sky’s stance will be vindicated if they can convince the UCI
there was no wrongdoing on Froome’s part, but the risk of widespread
damage to cycling should they fail is high.
Italian riders Alessandro Petacchi and Diego Ulissi received 12 and
nine-month bans respectively for excess Salbutamol levels. Should
Froome receive a similar, backdated ban, his results from last
year's Tour of Spain through to at least this year's Tour of Italy
would be scrapped.
(Reporting by Matt Westby; editing by Alexander Smith)
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