Sunday, 16 October 2016

David Millar outlines 'How to Get Away With Doping' in New York Times essay

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In a revealing opinion piece published in the New York Times titled 'How to get away with doping', former professional David Millar has provided a detailed account of his personal use of Therapeutic Use Exemptions (TUEs) during his career, including the powerful effect of Kenacort, and how WADA and the UCI "have failed in their oversight of the list of drugs available with a T.U.E. and in their administration of the application process."

In 2004, Millar was arrested by French police and under questioning would confess to using EPO in 2001, and 2003. In August 2004, he was handed a two-year ban from the sport, stripped of his 2003 individual time trial world title and was fired by his Cofidis team. Millar, now 39, returned to racing in 2006 with Saunier Duval–Prodir but would leave the team at the end of 2007 season to join the newly created Slipstream–Chipotle outfit. The American team and its owner Jonathan Vaughters stressed a strong anti-doping stance with Millar becoming a spokesman for 'clean cycling'

"I served a two-year ban. My life was in ruins, but I felt relieved — at least I was free of all the deception and disgust. When I returned to the sport, I was determined to do everything in my power to prevent the next generation of riders having to make the decisions I'd made. Telling my story is my way of helping to prevent other athletes' careers being poisoned as mine was," writes Millar in the New York Times article.

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Millar also writes that while be believes the "the biggest races are today being won by clean riders", the Fancy Bears hack of WADA and release of TUEs for athletes such as Team Sky's Tour de France winners Bradley Wiggins and Chris Froome "has opened the world's eyes to a disturbingly gray area in sporting law: the therapeutic use exemption", and shown the "system is open to abuse".

Team Sky, Wiggins and British Cycling have been weathering a storm of criticism and controversy since the August leaks with UK Anti-Doping (UKAD) opening an investigation into multiple allegations of wrongdoing in the sport. This month, UKAD also confirmed that it has been pushing for the last three-years to introduce a blanket ban of the drug used by Wiggins – triamcinolone acetonide – and other such glucocorticoids.

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