The UCI has asked the Cycling Anti-Doping Foundation to retest samples taken during the 2016 and 2017 seasons, following receipt of information and documents received from law enforcement authorities in Austria as part of the Operation Aderlass anti-doping investigation.
The investigation, which first hit the headlines when a number of arrests were made at the Nordic World Ski Championships in Asustria in February, is centred around the Erfurt-based German sports doctor Mark Schmidt, formerly team doctor with Gerolsteiner.
That team’s former rider, convicted doper Bernard Kohl, had accused Schmidt as long ago as 2009 of having organised the team’s blood doping programme.
The UCI’s statement published yesterday evening suggests that samples from specific individuals are being targeted for retesting. The governing body said:
In light of information and documents received from Austrian law enforcement authorities in the Aderlass affair, the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) announces that it has asked the Cycling Anti-Doping Foundation (CADF) to proceed with necessary reanalyses of samples taken during the 2016 and 2017 seasons.
During the Aderlass investigation, and thanks to close collaboration between the UCI and Austrian authorities, several procedures have been initiated for anti-doping rule violation. Several individuals, most of them active at the highest level, have now been sanctioned.
The UCI would like to thank all the authorities working on this investigation and will continue to work closely with the parties concerned with the aim of protecting honest athletes and guaranteeing a clean sport.
The UCI will make no further comment at this stage.
A number of cyclists have already been sanctioned as a result of the Operation Aderlass (the codename is German for 'bloodletting').
Austrian cyclists Stefan Denifl and Georg Preidler and the Croatian, Kristijan Durasek, have all received four-year bans, while Slovenian riders Kristijan Koren and Borut Bozic were both banned for two years.
The highest profile rider involved in the investigation to date is the Italian Alessandro Petacchi, winner of Milan-San Remo and the points jersey at all three Grand Tours. Now retired, he received a two-year ban in August.
The excellent Garmin software and firmware is what you're paying for when you buy expensive Garmin gadgets. I'm a great fan and they're not going...
FOI request submitted...
We constantly hear how cyclists film women and children in cars, whereas cars get used to to attempt to abduct women children off the street ...
Three taken to hospital after car overturns in Tivoli Road, Margate https://www.kentonline.co.uk/thanet/news/three-in-hospital-after-car-sma...
Emergency services called to incident in Verwood...
Was in need of exercise so popped over for a look this evening. Short: it's a bodge - bollards would fix that *. Or rather (safer for all) a...
... and of course "what does good look like" is not hard to experience - just over 100 miles away......
Actually any person, victim or even just a member of the public with no connection to the offence, can ask the Attorney Genertal to review a case...
When I was cycling to every Crystal Palace match for a season back in 2016/17, my LBS gave my bike Palace coloured outers.
So let water and sweat in from the outside! I'm all for economic solutions and £30 for this case is just daft but not sure your alternative is a...