Landis loses appeal

Warhawk

Give blood and save a life!
Staff member
#1
Decision means forfeiture of Tour de France title

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2007/more/09/20/bc.cyc.landisdecision.ap/index.html?cnn=yes

PARIS (AP) -- Floyd Landis lost his expensive and explosive doping case Thursday when arbitrators upheld the results of a test that showed the 2006 Tour de France champion used synthetic testosterone to fuel his spectacular comeback victory, The Associated Press has learned.
The decision means Landis, who repeatedly has denied using performance-enhancing drugs, must forfeit his Tour de France title and is subject to a two-year ban, retroactive to Jan. 30, 2007.
The ruling, handed down nearly four months after a bizarre and bitterly fought hearing, leaves the American with one final way to possibly salvage his title -- an appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
If Landis doesn't appeal, he'll be the first person in the 105-year history of the race to lose the title because of a doping offense.
According to documents obtained by AP, the vote was 2-1 to uphold the results, with lead arbitrator Patrice Brunet and Richard McLaren in the majority and Christopher Campbell dissenting.
"Today's ruling is a victory for all clean athletes and everyone who values fair and honest competition," U.S. Anti-Doping Agency CEO Travis Tygart said.
It's a devastating loss for Landis, who has steadfastly insisted that cheating went against everything he was all about and said he was merely a pawn in the anti-doping system's all-consuming effort to find cheaters and keep money flowing to its labs and agencies.
Landis didn't hide from the scrutiny -- invited it, in fact -- and now has been found guilty by the closest thing to a fair trial any accused athlete will get.
Landis, who has a month to file his appeal, is still weighing his legal options, according to a statement released by his legal team.
"This ruling is a blow to athletes and cyclists everywhere" Landis said. "For the Panel to find in favor of USADA when, with respect to so many issues, USADA did not manage to prove even the most basic parts of their case shows that this system is fundamentally flawed. I am innocent, and we proved I am innocent."
Despite the result, it's hard to see this as a total victory for the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, which prosecuted the case. This was a costly affair for the agency, and it exposed flaws in the system.
In its 84-page decision, the majority found the initial screening test to measure Landis' testosterone levels -- the testosterone-to-epitestosterone test -- was not done according to World Anti-Doping Agency rules.
But the more precise and expensive carbon-isotope ration analysis (IRMS), performed after a positive T-E test is recorded, was accurate, the arbitrators said, meaning "an anti-doping rule violation is established."
 

VF21

Super Moderator Emeritus
SME
#2
...sigh...

Nobody wins with this decision. If they were going to reject the appeal, I wish with all my heart it had been unanimous. Anything less and there will always be those who question...

I honestly don't know. The only thing I know for sure is that I will not be getting up early at any time in the future to watch the Tour de France... or any other cycling event.
 
#3
From the sound of it, there was no evidence that the second test was performed incorrectly. The dissenting vote seemed to think that the foulups in the first test by themselves were enough to cast doubt on the second, but there wasn't any specific evidence to that effect.

That's enough for me to believe that the right decision was made. It's too bad, too. I guess I'm lucky that I didn't get caught up in the excitement over Landis' victory in the first place, otherwise I'd really feel cheated.
 
#4
I feel bad for Óscar Pereiro, now the official winner. He gets the title and trophy, but no jubilant ride into Paris drinking champagne and receiving the congratulations of his competitors. No receiving his recognition and trophy in front of the crowd in Paris. What a drag.
 

pdxKingsFan

So Ordinary That It's Truly Quite Extraordinary
Staff member
#5
I feel bad for Óscar Pereiro, now the official winner. He gets the title and trophy, but no jubilant ride into Paris drinking champagne and receiving the congratulations of his competitors. No receiving his recognition and trophy in front of the crowd in Paris. What a drag.
No kidding. It sure seems like Landis is guilty, although I'm one of the cynics that thinks just about all cyclists are cheating some how. But 14 months away from the event in question with a new reigning champ this is almost pointless. Kind of like when UMass or Michigan got stripped of their Final Four statuses years after the fact.