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sábado, mayo 22, 2010
armstrong acusado de doping se cae en california
armstrong arriba se cae en el tour de california. Habìa sido acusado ayer por landis de doparse.Ha necesitado 8 puntos de sutura en la cara y ya està fuera del hospital
la polémica dopaje
Landis acusa a Armstrong de dopaje
El ex ciclista se autoinculpa de hacerlo de forma sistemática, al igual que el heptacampeón del Tour
césar ortuzar/agencias - Viernes, 21 de Mayo de 2010 - Actualizado a las 07:27h.
Galería Noticia
* Lance Armstrong junto a Floyd Landis cuando ambos formaban parte del US Postal.
bilbao. Cuenta la leyenda que en una mañana de lluvia y frío en Girona, Floyd Landis se bajó de la bicicleta para refugiarse en una cafetería y hamacarse junto al calor de una humeante taza de café y un pieza de bollería. Al otro lado del cristal, Lance Armstrong, espartano, perfeccionista, pedaleaba contra los caprichos de la meteorología. Hasta que su mirada azul hielo divisó la silueta de Landis en la cafetería. Entonces el tejano tiró de la maneta del freno, echó pie a tierra, abrió la puerta e irrumpió en el local con determinación. Contaba Landis que Armstrong le dijo que si quería ser un gran ciclista tenía que estar dispuesto a sacrificarse. Aquel día en Girona, donde reposaba la pretemporada invernal del norteamericano, iluminó a Landis, su compatriota y compañero de equipo. La escena de aspecto redentor para el ciclista amish fue la que le impulsó a coronarse años después en el Tour de Francia de 2006.
La gloria de aquella fábula, su efigie gobernando los Campos Elíseos de París, se escurrió por el desagüe por culpa de un positivo debido a un elevado nivel de testosterona que le despojó del triunfo. Landis nunca admitió su dopaje y peleó con ferocidad en los tribunales -perdió su fortuna personal en el costoso litigio- para convencerles de que no se trataba de un tramposo. Hasta que ayer buscó otro perdón, el de la conciencia, el de la paz interior, confesando que se había dopado de manera sistemática. "Quiero limpiar mi conciencia. No quiero seguir siendo parte del problema", aseguró Floyd Landis a Espn. Además de su autoinculpación -Landis reconoció que había consumido de sustancias prohibidas de manera regulada (EPO, hormonas de crecimiento, anabolizantes, autotransfusiones de sangre)- acusó directamente a Lance Armstrong, su compañero de equipo hasta 2004 en el US Postal, de haberse dopado. Landis advirtió que continuó dopándose en el Phonak durante 2005 y 2006 y que sus responsables lo conocían, aunque éstos lo desmienten.
El diario estadounidense The Wall Street Journal informó ayer que Landis envió unos correos electrónicos a las autoridades ciclistas, entre ellas a Pat McQuaid, presidente de la UCI, en los que admitía el uso de sustancias prohibidas. "Envió a siete personas esos tres correos electrónicos, incluyendo a dirigentes de la Federación Estadounidense y de la Unión Ciclista Internacional", apunta el diario. En uno de los e-mails, fechado el 30 de abril y enviado a Stephen Johnson, presidente de la Federación Estadounidense, Landis afirmó que Johan Bruyneel, director del US Postal, donde corría con Armstrong, le introdujo en el uso de parches de esteroides, del doping sanguíneo y de la hormona de crecimiento en 2002 y 2003.
En el mismo documento, Landis enfatizaba que Armstrong le había ayudado a conocer y a emplear sustancias dopantes. El correo electrónico recogía que durante una de las concentraciones del equipo US Postal en Girona, en 2003, a Landis le extrajeron medio litro de sangre en la casa que Armstrong poseía. El plasma se le reinyectó en el Tour meses después según The Wall Street Journal. Narra Landis en el correo electrónico que en la vivienda del heptacampeón de la ronda gala había bolsas de sangre del propio Armstrong e Hincapie guardadas en un frigorífico, y añade que el propio Armstrong le encargó "controlar la temperatura de la sangre todos los días para que no se estropease" durante la ausencia de éste.
sobornos y transfusiones En su edición digital de ayer, El País informaba sobre el contenido de algunos correos electrónicos que detallaban el dopaje en el seno del equipo según Landis. De entre las distintas comunicaciones, ordenadas cronológicamente, el ex ciclista expone que fue Johan Bruyneel el que le enseñó a emplear los parches de testosterona durante la Dauphiné Libéré de 2002. Ese mismo año el doctor Ferrari le extrajo medio litro de sangre para emplearla en una transfusión durante el Tour. Asegura Landis en su correspondencia que Armstrong dio positivo por EPO en la Vuelta a Suiza, que conquistó un mes antes del Tour. Entonces Armstrong y Bruyneel, director del equipo, acudieron a la sede de la UCI en Suiza y llegaron a un acuerdo económico con Verbruggen, presidente de la UCI, para tapar el positivo del corredor.
De aquella época rescata Landis que Bruyneel le explicó cómo debía usar la hormona de crecimiento. En 2004 afirma Landis que en el autobús del equipo, entre la meta de una etapa y el hotel, le realizaron una transfusión. Para ello el conductor simuló una avería en una remota carretera de montaña para que Landis recibiera medio litro de sangre.
Lance Armstrong, que se encuentra disputando el Tour de California, rechazó al igual que Bruyneel, las acusaciones realizadas por Landis: "Es su palabra contra la nuestra. No tenemos nada que ocultar. Prefiero mi credibilidad". Para Pat McQuaid, máximo dirigente de la UCI, las declaraciones de Landis responden al afán de "venganza" del ex ciclista y carecen de credibilidad.
http://www.deia.com/2010/05/21/deportes/ciclismo/landis-acusa-a-armstrong-de-dopaje
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Rogge, Fahey To AP: Landis Must Provide Proof
Cyclists Lance Armstrong, top left, and Lucas Euser (107) fall after crashing during the fifth stage of the Tour of California cycling race in the outskirts of Visalia, Calif., Thursday, May 20, 2010.
FILE - U.S. Postal Service team leader and five-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong, left, rides with teammates George Hincapie, center, and Floyd Landis, right, during a training session outside Limoges, central France. Disgraced American cyclist Floyd Landis has admitted to systematic use of performance-enhancing drugs and accused seven-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong of involvement in doping, the Wall Street Journal reported Thursday, May 20, 2010.
4_Landis_Cycling_Doping.sff.jpg
Associated Press
FILE - U.S. Postal Service team leader and five-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong, left, rides with teammates George Hincapie, center, and Floyd Landis, right, during a training session outside Limoges, central France. Disgraced American cyclist Floyd Landis has admitted to systematic use of performance-enhancing drugs and accused seven-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong of involvement in doping, the Wall Street Journal reported Thursday, May 20, 2010.
The leaders of the IOC and World Anti-Doping Agency want Floyd Landis to provide concrete evidence to support his allegation of doping by seven-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong.
"He has to bring proof that this is true," International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge told The Associated Press on Friday. "These are accusations that need to be corroborated by proof."
"You can't condemn without proof," Rogge added. "He would be better off by giving evidence to corroborate that, otherwise he is risking a lot of libels .... You can only sanction an athlete with tangible proof."
WADA president John Fahey, in a separate interview with the AP, said if there is any substance to Landis' allegations, the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency or International Cycling Union should intervene.
"If he has evidence, he should make that evidence available to the USADA or UCI and I'm sure if there is any substance to that evidence, either of those bodies would act," Fahey said. "There will always be rumors about it."
Hein Verbruggen, former president of the cycling union, denied Landis' contention that he helped cover up a positive drug test by Armstrong in 2002.
"He has never been (tested) positive," Verbruggen told the AP.
The international officials spoke after Landis, in a series of e-mails sent to sponsors and sports officials, confessed to years of doping after having previously denied cheating.
The American rider was stripped of the 2006 Tour de France title and served a two-year ban for doping. He also alleged that Armstrong not only joined him in doping but taught others how to beat the system.
Armstrong denied the claims by his former teammate.
"We have nothing to hide," Armstrong said at an impromptu news conference before the fifth stage of the Tour of California. "Credibility, Floyd lost his credibility a long time ago."
Pat McQuaid, president of cycling's governing body, also questioned Landis' credibility.
Rogge said the cycling body will require "more evidence than just an e-mail. They need to have more details to launch an inquiry."
Rogge also expressed doubts about Landis' claim that Armstrong and longtime coach Johan Bruyneel paid Verbruggen to cover up a test in 2002 after Armstrong purportedly tested positive for the blood-booster EPO.
"To my knowledge it is not possible to hide a positive result," Rogge said, adding that each doping sample has a code known to laboratory testing teams. "The lab knows the code. WADA gets it also. Then it goes to the national and international federations.
"One person cannot decide: 'I can put this under the carpet.'"
Verbruggen said there was never any positive test in the first place.
"Everyone can have a lot of doubts and say whatever they want — the guy has never been positive," the Dutch official said. "Never has Lance Armstrong been declared positive by a lab."
Verbruggen said Armstrong made one visit to cycling's headquarters at Aigle, Switzerland, in 2002 after the center's new indoor training track had opened.
"It was a Monday morning," he said. "I remember that because we had a lot of the pupils and youngsters there. It was a great thing for them to be in the picture with him."
Verbruggen said he was told a few weeks ago that Landis would be making his allegations.
"The guy has been lying for three years and spending zillions of money to defend his own lies," Verbruggen said. "Now he is broke and he comes out with a different story."
The cycling body issued a statement denying changing or concealing a positive test result, and Bruyneel said, "I absolutely deny everything (Landis) said."
Rogge welcomed Landis's confession of his own doping.
"The fact that he is coming out is something that we applaud," he said. "It will clear his conscience. An admission is proof under the WADA Code and you should be penalized."
Fahey, reached by phone in Melbourne, Australia, said Landis' confessions didn't surprise him.
"There was absolutely no doubt about the decision in the Court of Arbitration for Sport on his final appeal," Fahey said. "They saw him as being a cheat, and in this context, he has now admitted it, and I am pleased. There is no contrition, however, no apology, and I regret that."
In two e-mails obtained Thursday by the AP, Landis admitted for the first time what had long been suspected — that he was guilty of doping for several years before being stripped of his 2006 Tour title.
"I want to clear my conscience," Landis told ESPN.com. "I don't want to be part of the problem any more."
Neither Landis nor his family returned repeated messages from the AP.
The Wall Street Journal first reported the details of the e-mails. The newspaper also reported Landis was cooperating with the Food & Drug Administration's criminal investigations unit and had met with FDA special agent Jeff Novitzky, the lead investigator in the BALCO case.
In an e-mail Landis sent to USA Cycling chief Steve Johnson, he said Armstrong's positive EPO test was in 2002, around the time he won the Tour de Suisse. Armstrong won the Tour de Suisse in 2001 and did not compete in 2002.
"We're a little confused," Armstrong said.
The e-mail to Johnson also said: "Look forward to much more detail as soon as you can demonstrate that you can be trusted to do the right thing."
Landis also implicated at least 16 other people in various doping acts, including longtime Armstrong confidant George Hincapie, Olympic medalist Levi Leipheimer and Canadian cyclist Michael Barry.
The Wall Street Journal reported another e-mail from Landis also linked another top American racer, Dave Zabriskie, to doping.
"At the end of the day, he pointed the finger at everybody still involved in cycling," Armstrong said.
Landis is part of a long list of former Armstrong teammates and former U.S. Postal Service riders who have either acknowledged or been caught doping.
USA Cycling would not comment about Landis' series of e-mails, citing its policy on not discussing "doping allegations, investigations or any aspect of an adjudication process." The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency also declined comment for similar reasons.
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Dunbar reported from Lausanne, Passa from Brisbane, Australia. AP Sports Writers Tim Reynolds in Miami and Rachel Cohen in New York contributed to this report.
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=127006437
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