/ 10 November 2010

Spanish chief: No Contador decision for two months

Spanish Chief: No Contador Decision For Two Months

Spain’s cycling federation (RFEC) said it will take at least two months to decide whether to sanction Tour de France winner Alberto Contador for alleged doping violations, a Spanish newspaper reported Wednesday.

The final decision of the RFEC’s Competition Committee on the Spanish rider “will not be known before two months,” the federation’s chief, Juan Carlos Castano, said in comments reported by the sports daily AS.

The decision could even take three months, AS said.

“Everything depends on arguments that Contador will present and the checks that the Competition Committee will seek from neutral experts to look into the veracity of the evidence presented,” AS said.

Under the anti-doping rules of world cycling’s governing body, the UCI (International Cycling Union), the RFEC has a maximum of one month to deliver its decision.

Contador decision falls under Spanish rules
The UCI “sets a rule of a one-month deadline to take a decision in doping cases … but under Spanish anti-doping rules, which is what will be followed, the authorised period is three months,” AS said.

Contador, 27, won his third yellow jersey in July, but it was later revealed that he tested positive for trace amounts of the banned substance clenbuterol during the second rest day of the Tour de France at Pau on July 21.

Contador claims he ate contaminated meat, although his critics suggest he may have inadvertently put clenbuterol — a weight-loss and muscle-building drug — back into his system via an illicit and performance-enhancing blood transfusion.

Provisionally suspended by the UCI, Contador’s future is hanging in the balance. If suspended for two years, he has threatened to quit the sport.

Contador, who also won the Tour de France in 2007 and 2009, in August signed a two-year contract with the Saxo Bank team.

Luxembourg’s Andy Schleck, runner-up behind the Spaniard in the last two editions of the race, has recently quit Saxo Bank and set up a new team with his brother Frank and other members of the Danish outfit. – Sapa-AFP