Tour leader Vingegaard welcomes scepticism about performances
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[July 17, 2023]
By Julien Pretot
SAINT GERVAIS, France (Reuters) - Jonas Vingegaard and Tadej Pogacar
have made such a huge impression in the Tour de France that, in a
sport that was marred by doping scandals, doubts about their
performances have arisen but Denmark's defending champion welcomes
the skepticism.
Vingegaard and Slovenian Pogacar have been on their own planet,
winning the last three editions of the Tour and taking the top two
spots in 2021 and 2022, and this year their opponents have been left
dumbfounded.
"How do I see them? From afar in the climbs," France's Guillaume
Martin, who won the mountains classification at the 2020 Vuelta,
said.
While Vingegaard only has a 10-second gap over Slovenian Pogacar
after two weeks of racing, the Dane leads third-placed Carlos
Rodriguez by a massive five minutes and 21 seconds.
Since the first two mountain stages in the Pyrenees, it became
evident they would not have any rival for the title.
On Sunday, Pogacar and Vingegaard clocked 18:27 on the final climb,
beating four-time Tour winner Chris Froome's record by 42 seconds.
On Saturday, they went faster than Marco Pantani, the 1998 Tour
champion whose career was marred by doping allegations, in the first
10km of the ascent to the Col de Joux Plane.
"To be honest I fully understand the skepticism. We have to be
skeptical, with what happened in the past, otherwise it would happen
again," Vingegaard told a news conference after Sunday's 15th stage.
"So yes, I fully understand the questions we're getting about it
(our performances)," said Vingegaard. "All I can say is I'm not
taking anything but yes to be honest there is skepticism about us
going fast and yes I think it's a good thing."
"And also something else, there is the food, the material, the
training (that have improved) but again it's always good to be
skeptical or think about it at least."
DOPING SCANDALS
Cycling has had to deal with several full-scale doping scandals,
including the 1998 Festina affair when the team was kicked out of
the race after customs officers seized banned substances, including
the blood-boosting drug erythropoietin (EPO) before the start of the
race.
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Cycling - Tour de France - Stage 15 -
Les Gets Les Portes Du Soleil to Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc - France -
July 16, 2023 Team Jumbo–Visma's Jonas Vingegaard in action during
stage 15 as spectators cheer on REUTERS/Benoit Tessier
In one of the biggest drug scandals in world sport,
American Lance Armstrong was stripped of his seven titles from
1999-2005 and handed a lifetime ban in 2012 for using
performance-enhancing drugs and the following year admitted to
doping.
Germany’s 1997 Tour winner Jan Ullrich and Giro d’Italia champion
Ivan Basso were among nine competitors withdrawn on the eve of the
prologue that year after being implicated in a Spanish doping
investigation, Operation Puerto.
In 2006, Floyd Landis became the first Tour winner to fail a drugs
test during the race after testing positive for the male sex hormone
testosterone. The American was stripped of the title and given a
two-year ban.
In 2007, pre-race favorite Alexandre Vinokourov tested positive for
blood doping after winning a time trial.
The Kazakh’s Astana team left the Tour and sacked Vinokourov, who
denied any wrongdoing, and Tour leader Michael Rasmussen was then
fired by his Rabobank team during the race for lying about his
whereabouts in training.
(Reporting by Julien Pretot; Editing by Ken Ferris)
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