Chris Froome Hope To Win Anti-Doping Case
Four-time
Tour de France champion Chris Froome has told the BBC he believes he will win
his anti-doping case.
Froome, who
begins his challenge for the Giro d'Italia on Friday, was found to have double
the allowed level of a legal asthma drug in his urine after a test at last
year's Vuelta a Espana.
Asked if he
will be cleared, Froome said: "Yes. I certainly expect to be."
Meanwhile,
Team Sky principal Sir Dave Brailsford has insisted his own position is secure.
Brailsford
has not spoken publicly since a parliamentary select committee said Team Sky
and former rider Sir Bradley Wiggins "crossed an ethical line" by
using drugs allowed under anti-doping rules to enhance performance instead of
just for medical need.
"Have I
considered my position? Everybody who works in this game considers their
position every day, don't they? I'm constantly thinking about whether I'm the
right person to support these riders," Brailsford said.
"Things
come and go, and things change, and the situation context changes, but I'm
still here, and I'm here because I think I still can help these guys to be the
best they can be."
There have
been calls from some within the sport for Froome to withdraw himself from
racing while his case drags on. However, he is free to compete under the rules
of world cycling's governing body the UCI.
The urine
test, taken on 7 September 2017, showed levels of Salbutamol, commonly taken
for asthma, were at 2,000 nanograms per millilitre (ng/ml). That compares to
the World Anti-Doping Agency's threshold of 1,000 ng/ml.
Froome said:
"Everyone's entitled to an opinion. I can understand lots of people are
frustrated at the lack of information, but this is a process that was meant to
be confidential.
"It has
been a challenging last few months but I like to think I've dealt with it very
well. I certainly haven't had any sleepless nights.
"I'm
confident that people will see it from my point of view when all the details
are out there."
Dutch rider
Tom Dumoulin, the 2017 Giro winner, admitted the uncertainty over Froome's case
has cast a shadow across this year's race.
"It's
not good for cycling. Everybody would like this not to happen, including Chris
Froome, to be starting with doubts or uncertainty," he said.
"Maybe
he is winning this Giro and a few weeks later they say he loses the title, and
that's not good for him. It's not good for anyone.
"It's
his decision to be here. My team is part of the MPCC (Movement For Credible
Cycling) so if I was in same situation as him I wouldn't be here. But it's his
decision and it's not up to me to complain about it."
Team Sky has
not signed up to MPCC, a voluntary union of seven of the 18 World Tour teams
which is based around a 10-point plan for clean cycling.
The first of
those points commits to the provisional suspension of any rider who has
returned an adverse finding.
The Giro
begins in Jerusalem on Friday and stays in Israel for two further stages before
transferring to Italy for the remaining 18.
It finishes
in Rome on Sunday, 27 May.
FROM .bbc.com/sport/cycling

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