The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

Tour de France: the sulphurous Bahrain Victorious team in the sights of the investigators

2022-06-30T11:39:12.060Z


Searched this Thursday in Denmark, the cycling training created in 2017 has been under investigation for a year by the Marseill prosecutor's office.


Surprising performances, a leader involved in a former doping case, an open investigation and now two searches in two years on the Tour de France.

This is starting to do a lot for the Bahrain Victorious team.

This cycling formation present on the Grande Boucle which starts this Friday from Copenhagen (Denmark) received this Thursday at dawn the visit of the French police, in its hotel in the Danish capital.

Not ideal as a preparation on the eve of the start of the biggest race in the world.

If the police did not take anything according to a press release from the Bahraini team, the noose seems to be tightening around the team of Slovenian Matej Mohoric and Belgian Dylan Teuns.

These two classic hunters won three stages on the Tour last year (two for Mohoric, one for Teuns) and two classics this year (Milan-San Remo for the Slovenian, the Flèche Wallonne for the Belgian).

🤩 team presentation vibes @LeTour



💛🙌💛👍💛#RideAsOne #TDF2022



📸 @SprintCycling pic.twitter.com/uDm7zlhx0s

— Team Bahrain Victorious (@BHRVictorious) June 29, 2022

Last year, their team had surprised the peloton and the followers by the "outperformances" of unknown riders or riders at the end of their career: the two stage victories of the Ukrainian Mark Padun in the Dauphiné, the breakaways in the mountains of the Italian sprinter Sonny Colbrelli, later winner of Paris-Roubaix, or 2nd place on the Giro by Damiano Caruso.

The latter will also be the co-leader of the team on this Tour, with the Australian Jack Haig, 3rd in the last Tour of Spain.

Read alsoUkrainian Mark Padun, double mountain stage winner, creates discomfort in the Dauphiné

All this is not enough to condemn a team and riders presumed innocent.

But Bahrain also has more concrete suspicions that have weighed on it since the opening of an investigation in July 2021 by the Marseille public prosecutor's office, for "acquisition, transport, possession, import of a prohibited substance or method for the purpose of use by an athlete without medical justification".

Two weeks later, the Bahraini team, then first in the team classification, was the subject of a search in its hotel in Pau, after the 17th stage of the Tour.

In particular, she is suspected of having used Tizanidine, a drug used in the treatment of multiple sclerosis.

A rider and a sports director suspended for doping in 2019

Even before the search on Thursday morning, other police raids had taken place on Monday, by the European Union Police Cooperation Agency (Europol), in Slovenia, Poland and Spain.

The boss of the Bahraini team, the Slovenian Milan Erzen, the Polish doctor Piotr Kosielski and the French physiotherapist Barnabé Moulin, residing in the province of Alicante (Spain), saw European police officers entering their residences on orders of the court.

But it was from its creation in 2017 that the Bahrain team (first Bahrain Merida, then Bahrain McLaren) was able to arouse suspicion, since its manager from the outset, Milan Erzen, is cited in the Aderlass affair, a police investigation in Austria into doping cases.

Erzen has never been convicted or suspended in this case, but has been investigated by the UCI.

On the other hand, a rider from Bahrain, Kristjian Koren, and a sporting director, Borut Bozic, both Slovenians, were suspended for two years in 2019, for violations of the anti-doping regulations committed in 2011 and 2012. The facts certainly dated back to before the creation of Bahrain, but these suspensions did nothing to fix the sulphurous image of the formation.

Source: leparis

All sports articles on 2022-06-30

You may like

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.