Aussie cycling great admits to EPO use

Olympic gold medallist Stuart O’Grady admits to using banned blood-booster before 1998 Tour de France.

Stuart O''Grady
O’Grady’s confession came just days after the Australian announced his retirement [EPA]

Only days after retiring from professional cycling, Stuart O’Grady admitted to using a blood-booster during the scandal-plagued 1998 Tour de France.

The 39-year-old Australian rider, a six-time Olympian who wore the leader’s yellow jersey for a total of nine days in 17 Tours de France, announced his retirement earlier this week after the 100th edition of the race. He admitted he had used erythropoietin (EPO) for two weeks before the 1998 event, saying he had acquired it himself and used it without the knowledge of his team.

His admission in an Australian newspaper came after the French senate inquiry into doping in sport released its findings and implicated dozens of cyclists for suspicious test results, uncovering evidence that 1998 Tour de France champion Marco Pantani and runner-up Jan Ullrich used EPO to fuel their performances.

You win Olympics, Paris-Roubaix and now all of that is going to be tainted by this action... That's the hardest thing to swallow out of all this - it was such a long time ago and one very bad judgment is going to taint a lot of things

by Stuart O'Grady,

“You win Olympics, Paris-Roubaix and now all of that is going to be tainted by this action,” O’Grady, who won the Madison gold medal at the 2004 Olympics and was a silver medallist in the team pursuit at the 1992 Olympics, was quoted as saying Thursday in News Corp Australia newspapers.

“That’s the hardest thing to swallow out of all this – it was such a long time ago and one very bad judgment is going to taint a lot of things.”

O’Grady told the newspapers he just had to “drive over the border and buy it in a pharmacy” and used “extremely cautious amounts” of EPO.

Scandal

The 1998 Tour de France was notable for the major scandal that emerged with the discovery of widespread doping on the French Festina team. The subsequent police crackdown led to seven of the original 21 teams either withdrawing or being ejected from the Tour.

“When the Festina affair happened, I smashed it, got rid of it and that was the last I ever touched it,” he said.

“It wasn’t systematic doping, I wasn’t trying to deceive people. I was basically trying to survive in what was a very gray area.”

Samples taken at the 1998 race were re-tested in 2004, and anti-doping investigators passed that information to the French government inquiry.

France’s Senate, after a five-month investigation focused on fighting sports doping, confirmed Wednesday that use of the banned substance EPO was rife in cycling in the late 1990s, before a test for the drug had been developed.

Pantani was suspended in 1999 from the Giro after failing a random blood test. He died in 2004 of an accidental drug overdose. Ullrich, the 1997 Tour winner, has admitted to blood doping and was stripped of his third-place finish in the 2005 Tour.

O’Grady rode for GAN in 1998. He joined Orica-GreenEdge last year, his fifth pro team, and rode his last Tour with the Australian team, which issued a statement about the veteran rider’s admissions.

“ORICA-GreenEDGE supports Stuart O’Grady’s decision to step forward and place the findings of the French Senate Report into perspective regarding his own past,” the team’s general manager, Shayne Bannan, said.

“The team would also like to express its support in Stuart as a person and as an advocate for a clean sport. Like the majority of the riders in his generation, he was also exposed to the issues and wrongdoings of the sport and made some wrong choices in that environment.”

One-off

O’Grady said that brief period before his second Tour de France was the only time he ever used EPO.

“I was lucky enough to win a lot of things, they can test my samples from Paris-Roubaix and my Olympic medals for the next thousand years, they’re not going to find anything,” he said. “There is nothing more to hide.”

The Australian Olympic Committee is expecting O’Grady’s resignation from its athletes’ commission.

“Athletes’ Commission members are chosen for their qualities of integrity and leadership and by his admission Stuart does not deserve to be a member of that group,” AOC president John Coates said.

AOC media director Mike Tancred said O’Grady would be dismissed if he didn’t quit.

“He’s a gold medallist, but really his career is tarnished as of today,” Tancred said.

“It’s sad he won’t be remembered as a fantastic competitor. Instead he’ll be remembered as an athlete who succumbed to the temptation of drugs in sport just to get an edge on some of his fellow riders.”

Source: AP