Not so tranquilo

08 February 2012 | 16:00 - By Philip Gomes

Like many in the cycling world Philip Gomes remains puzzled by the entire Alberto Contador debacle.

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Alberto Contador (Getty)

Anyone who is found by a tribunal in a matter in which he was found to be a cheat, is a cheat. So goes the statement by World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) supremo John Fahey in response to the finding by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) that Alberto Contador did indeed have a banned substance in his system in late July 2010.

But of course the word "cheat", used by Fahey, flies in the face of the actual judgement issued by the CAS, which determined that Contador did not cheat but was the victim of an accidental ingestion of a banned substance.

In the Panel’s opinion, on the basis of the evidence adduced, the presence of Clenbuterol was more likely caused by the ingestion of a contaminated food supplement.

There it is in black and white. True, the panel ruled out Contador's bovine source but it also ruled out a transfusion, an idea much loved by tin foil hat wearing plasticiser conspiracy theorists out there on the internets.

Clearly the WADA boss and former Premier of New South Wales didn't read the judgement.

So digest this for a second (pun intended). The final arbiter, the highest court in sport with all the information available to it, supplied by all sides - the International Cycling Union (UCI), Contador and WADA - found that Contador's positive was an accident.

Yes it is true that Contador had clenbuterol in his system, something not even he denies, but how that eventuated became the important question.

So, like many interested observers out there, I spent the darkened hours of Tuesday morning wading through the documentation supplied by the CAS (all 7.4MB and 98 pages of it) looking for proof Alberto Contador was a cheat. I found none.

I was searching to see if El Pistolero's trademark smoking gun had been turned against him, but what was presented was essentially summed up in the synopsis. This generation's best Grand Tour rider was guilty of nothing except taking an unfortunate bite out of something that ended up giving everyone in the sport 18 months of extreme indigestion.

And no one seemed to be happy with the outcome, not the UCI, not the 2010 Tour de France runner-up Andy Schleck and certainly not Contador.

Yet in fan comments all across the globe (with the exception of Spain) and here on Cycling Central, Alberto Contador was as Fahey described, a cheat.

This is a disconnect I'm trying to pull apart as I sit here writing this. Why? Don't cycling fans read? Or are they only interested in seeing what they want to see?

Like Lance Armstrong before him there is no clear proof that Contador is a cheat (if you indignant readers have any actual proof send it to me, I'll pass it on to the relevant authorities), so why the hate out there for Contador? Why the gloating? Why the "hang him high" rhetoric?

I reckon it goes back to another fateful moment in July 2010, one where the gentle Andy Schleck had his pony taken away from him so cynically by Contador in the infamous "Chaingate" incident during Stage 15 of the Tour de France.

But even there most reasonable observers reckoned Contador did nothing wrong, yet the fans persisted. "He cheated," they howled on Twitter, Facebook, forums and websites across the globe.

That Contador is the best Grand Tour rider of his generation is obvious. Like Armstrong, Contador beats everyone like a drum, smashes them, chews them up and spits them out then points his finger into the camera as he crosses the finish line and goes, "BANG".

So it seems the price someone that good must pay in the post-Armstrong era is that he can only be a cheat if he comes close to replicating what Armstrong did.

I await August and the Vuelta a Espana with interest.

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Comments (33)

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10 Feb 2012 12:19 AEST

Capo

From: Adelaide

How did that Mexican cow get to France?

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10 Feb 2012 11:26 AEST

Watto

From: Darlinghurst

Does it matter if it was intentional or not? 1. He acknowledged it was in his system. 2. He most likely got some advantage from it, albeit unmeasurable. Should there be an approach in this unique situation where he has all the relevant titles and prize money stripped yet is not banned from racing - a good compromise? And I agree with LDC's comments about not trusting riders becasue we have been schooled on a generation of ridrs who have lied, only to admit doping when retired.

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10 Feb 2012 9:25 AEST

LDC

From: Melbourne

Why do we attack him? Because we've been lied to by generations of cyclists who have later been found guilty or later admitted to drug use before releasing their tell all book - point is they all deny it. Only a fool would believe a cyclists alibi regarding drugs after the past 15 years. Credibility takes years to obtain and seconds to lose.

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10 Feb 2012 5:30 AEST

Rachel

From: Camden

Phil,I think the hate of Contador goes back to 2009 when he didnt wait for Armstrong and Kloden on the Colombière,as he shouldnt have had to. I still see people talking about it,which is ridiculous... I dont think as many wouldve been SO vocal about Chaingate if it wasnt for that.

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09 Feb 2012 22:44 AEST

Mike (Brighton)

From:

BarkingOwL...lol. It was a typo....the reference was supposed to be TDF2011. But I like your idea of a magical time travel....I bet there's many cyclists who would love that option. Even if he had not done the Giro, Contador did not have the strongest team support and Evans had such good form and was supported by a team that rode well tactically that he was hard to beat and guess what no-one did! Contador is a brilliant rider but got caught out and is now paying the consequences.

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09 Feb 2012 20:36 AEST

Jenni

From: Brisbane

Condor is not the first athlete to be banned for unknowingly consuming clenbuterol -Jessica Hardy was suspended for 12months as it was believed to be in a supplement. Maybe this is why the ban was backdated so the effective ban is only 6months. The main problem I see is why has it taken 18 months ? deliberate so ban would be less?

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09 Feb 2012 18:03 AEST

Matt

From: Bendigo

Well I agree with you this time. I'm not a fan of Contador personally but he is brilliant on a bike and I don't think he deliberately cheated either. I think he was unlucky and perhaps a little careless with what he ate and two years seems a lot for that. Even "chaingate", which had me furious at the time, was just that Andy made a mistake and Contador saw the opening. Life is tough in top level sport. I suspect Alberto will win the Vuelta with absolute ease and plenty of stages on the way.

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09 Feb 2012 16:24 AEST

mary

From: rosanna

integrity intact? throw away the key.

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09 Feb 2012 13:38 AEST

Glenn

From:

If we follow the comment by NIcky B; how can a rider actually monitor 100% of what they consume. Even if they do not receive any food in the feed station, by carrying all their food in the jersey, how can you monitor what fluid is placed in the biddons that riders receive in the feed zone? You reply on others in reality

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09 Feb 2012 12:20 AEST

BarkingOwl

From: Darwin

The reason he didn't win the TDF 2012 is because this race has not yet begun. If he won this race then I would be really suspicious as he would probably have access to some magical time travel drug that would allow him to win races in the future! Seriously, most people believed he failed to win the 2011 TDF because in this day and age it is almost impossible to race the Giro and then be at your peak for the TDF. Also, he had several crashed in the first week.

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