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Post by achebeautiful on Jul 25, 2007 10:48:29 GMT -5
"I always turn to the sports section first. The sports section records people's accomplishments; the front page nothing but man's failures."
~ Chief Justice Earl Warren From Sports Illustrated, July 22, 1968
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Post by achebeautiful on Jul 25, 2007 10:56:46 GMT -5
Hmmm.....I have to wonder what he'd say today.
Would anybody here want to be the commissioner of the NFL (Vick incident), NBA (Referee incident) or MLB (Barry Bond's home-run record/ steroid issue) right now?
Not me.....
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Post by achebeautiful on Jul 25, 2007 17:55:37 GMT -5
And just in case you thought that you could get away from all the corruption by finding another sport besides football, basketball and baseball to enjoy......
"Rasmussen out of Tour de France By JEROME PUGMIRE" ~ Associated Press Writer
GOURETTE, France - Tour de France leader Michael Rasmussen was removed from the race by his team after winning Wednesday's stage, the biggest blow yet in cycling's doping-tainted premier event.
"Michael Rasmussen has been sent home for violating (the team's) internal rules," Rabobank team spokesman Jacob Bergsma told The Associated Press by phone.
The expulsion, which Bergsma said was ordered by the Dutch team sponsor, was linked to "incorrect" information that Rasmussen gave to the team's sports director over his whereabouts last month. Rasmussen, who also has been suspended from the team, missed random drug tests May 8 and June 28, saying he was in Mexico. But a former rider, Davide Cassani, told Denmark's Danmarks Radio on Wednesday that he had seen Rasmussen in Italy in mid-June.
Bergsma said the team had not decided yet whether its other riders would take the start on Thursday in Pau.
The 33-year-old Danish rider, who's led since July 15, looked set to win the race which ends on Sunday in Paris.
As Rasmussen raced toward what would have been his first Tour victory, Tour officials questioned why he was allowed to take the start on July 7 in London, England.
"We cannot say that Rasmussen cheated, but his flippancy and his lies on his whereabouts had become unbearable," Tour director Christian Prudhomme told the AP.
The leader of cycling's governing body applauded the decision.
"My immediate reaction is, why didn't they do this at the end of June, when they had the same information," Pat McQuaid said. "The team decided to pull him out; that's their prerogative. I can only applaud that. It's a zero-tolerance policy, and it's a lesson for the future."
With Rasmussen out, Spanish rider Alberto Contador of the Discovery Channel team moved into the race lead.
"It's in no way a celebration on our end. It's the third piece of bad news," said Discovery Channel spokesman P.J. Rabice. "It reflects badly on our sport."
In recent days, Tour riders had openly voiced their skepticism about Rasmussen, and fans booed him at the start of Wednesday's stage. Last week, he was kicked off the Danish national team last week for those two missed drug tests.
After the Tour's upbeat start in London, when millions of spectators lined the streets, bad news — nearly all of it related to doping — quickly claimed the spotlight.
German rider Patrick Sinkewitz crashed into a spectator then was revealed to have failed a drug test in training before the race began.
Then on Tuesday, star cyclist Alexandre Vinokourov was sent home after testing positive for a banned blood transfusion, and his team pulled out of the race. Wednesday, it happened again when the Cofidis squad confirmed its rider Cristian Moreni of Italy had failed a doping test, prompted the withdrawal of the entire squad.
It wasn't immediately clear whether the 104-year-old Tour ever had lost its leader in such fashion so close to the finish.
"In the very old history of the Tour de France, I don't know, but the recent past — never," said Tour spokesman Philippe Sudres.
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Post by ocelot on Jul 26, 2007 20:57:55 GMT -5
I'm happy when I hear of someone getting caught for doping because that's another cheater no longer competing in the sport. I am totally against doping in sports and to me there is much more guilt than that found in positive drug tests. There is missed drug tests, abnormal strength gains (seen in Barry Bonds career), and abnormal recovery times that hints at cheating (doping) even if there is never a positive drug test. The sadness part of me was seeing Kloden kicked out of the tour (he was in 4th) because he was on the same team as Vinokourov. I'm very impressed with the tour's commitment to ending doping in their sport, you no longer need a positive drug test to be kicked out of the tour.
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