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Froome begins the Giro under a blanket of suspicion over his unresolved salbutamol case.
Froome begins the Giro under a blanket of suspicion over his unresolved salbutamol case. (Photo: Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty)

Op-Ed: Chris Froome Should Not Ride the Giro d鈥橧talia

Amid an ongoing doping scandal, the Sky racer is within his rights to continue racing. He shouldn't be.

Published: 
Froome begins the Giro under a blanket of suspicion over his unresolved salbutamol case.
(Photo: Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty)

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Once again聽professional cycling is setting itself up for a self-inflicted, scandal-driven mess. Next week, Chris Froome, who stood atop the podium of both the Vuelta a Espa帽a and the Tour de France in 2017, will line up at the Giro d鈥橧talia to take aim at the one Grand Tour victory that has eluded him. In a doping-free world, the pre-race hype would be focused on whether the Brit will become the seventh racer in history to win all three Grand Tours. Instead, the聽speculation revolves around whether he鈥檒l become the聽first rider since Alberto Contador to be stripped of a Grand Tour title.

Froome begins the Giro under a blanket of suspicion over his, which dates back to last year鈥檚 Vuelta. Froome鈥檚 urine sample following Stage 18 of that race indicated more than the permissible amount of salbutamol鈥攁 bronchodilator used to treat asthma. While the drug isn鈥檛 banned for use by pro racers and does not require聽a therapeutic-use exemption, the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) sets a threshold聽for its presence in a urine sample. Froome鈥檚 sample came in at twice the allowed concentration. Experts 聽that it鈥檚 unlikely that Froome could have registered such a high amount while staying inside the restrictions for the drug.聽Meanwhile, Froome and Team Sky have denied any wrongdoing, claiming that the high test value is due to doctor-recommended聽.聽They are challenging the results.

So Froome lines up next week in hopes of conquering the first Grand Tour of 2018 even as it鈥檚 still unclear whether he legitimately won his last Grand Tour race.

According to the rules, Froome has every right to race. Because salbutamol is a 鈥渟pecified substance鈥 under the WADA code, his Vuelta result聽doesn鈥檛 trigger a racing聽ban. Instead, Froome has the right to exonerate himself by providing documentation and a medical explanation for the failed test鈥攁nd to keep on racing until a decision is reached. That saga will play out in the courts, according to what UCI president David Lappartient has called a . 鈥淗e has more resources than the others and has good lawyers, like we do,鈥 Lappartient told the French newspaper 尝鈥Equipe. 鈥淏ecause he argues that he has followed the rules, that has made the investigation a lot bigger.鈥 Initially, there was some hope that the dispute would be resolved ahead of the Giro, but the intricacies of the case and the legal wrangling have prevented that.

The rules permit Froome to race, but they shouldn't. It鈥檚 impossible to argue that his participation will tarnish professional cycling鈥檚 reputation鈥攚hich, following decades of scandals, is about as credible as the WWE鈥攂ut聽participation makes a mockery of the rules and the race.

Allowing him to ride is like finding evidence that suggests聽your bookkeeper stealing from you, demanding an explanation,聽then giving him as much time as he needs to come up with one聽while still allowing him access to your accounts.聽The聽other racers can have no confidence in their chances given that Froome exceeded the legal limit聽for a performance enhancer in a previous race and could still be upheld as its winner.聽If I were 2017聽Giro champ Tom Dumoulin聽or聽any聽of the other big contenders, that question mark over equality would make the聽whole endeavor an exercise in futility.

Why should fans care about the sport if the results of the three biggest races of the season could be in question?

Imagine how pointless it would be if Froome wins the race,聽then loses his salbutamol defense. That loss would likely lead to a suspension; in two similar聽salbutamol cases, Diego Ulissi was handed a nine-month layoff and Alessandro Petacchi聽received a one-year ban. More important, it would聽negate Froome鈥檚 2017 Vuelta victory and probably his Giro results, too鈥攅ven his 2018 Tour results, if the case drags on into the summer. In 2011, Alberto Contador won the Giro while his case over a failed clenbuterol test during the 2010 Tour de France was pending. When the case was decided against him that February, Contador was stripped of his聽Giro title. In other words, not only do WADA鈥檚聽rules lead to the absurd situation of聽a race鈥檚 results being revised in the absence of a specific聽offense鈥擟ontador still maintains that he is the rightful victor of the 2011 Giro, since he passed all drug controls while riding it鈥攂ut it also steals the podium experience聽from those who鈥檝e truly earned it. When the Giro results were revised in 2012, no one cared that Michele Scarponi became the champ on paper, nor did his team reap the financial and PR benefits.聽

The scenarios described above聽involve聽a lot of what-ifs, and it鈥檚 unlikely that all of them聽will come to pass. However, that they鈥檙e even possible underscores just how big a farce pro cycling has become. Why should fans care about the sport if the results of the three biggest races of the season could be in question?

One way to prevent聽future situations like this would be for the UCI to change its rules to immediately eliminate from competition any rider who tests outside the regulations until the matter is resolved. Doing so would help bolster the sport鈥檚 credibility; after all, doesn鈥檛 it make sense that if you break the rules鈥攐r at least if it seems like you broke the rules鈥攜ou don鈥檛 get to race? Mandatory suspension would also speed up doping proceedings, since racers, teams, and governing bodies would all have a vested interest in reaching a swift conclusion. Of course, there鈥檚 been no serious discussion of any rule changes. And if cycling history tells us anything, it鈥檚 that there's unlikely to be聽a permanent fix.

Lead Photo: Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty

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