Four more doctors implicated in German doping affair
November 23, 2024
Login
Home
News
Ride Maps
Blogs
Forums
Gear
Resource
VeloTV
Photos
Current Articles
|
Archives
|
RSS Feeds
|
Search
Monday, June 15, 2009
Four more doctors implicated in German doping affair
by Agence France-Presse at 5:24 PM EST
comments
Categories:
Pro Cycling
,
Doping
A doping investigation initially targeting two University doctors has now snared four more, albeit on lesser charges, according to German public prosecutor Wolfgang Maier on Monday.
Maier on Monday confirmed a report, to appear Tuesday in the Badischer Zeitung newspaper, which claimed four other doctors have been actively investigated in the case.
Maier did not reveal names but told the SID agency they faced lesser charges to those of Lothar Heinrich and Andreas Schmid, both of whom were sacked two years ago for helping administer doping substances.
According to the newspaper report to appear Tuesday the four doctors are Andreas Blum, Stefan Vogt, Stephan Prettin and Carsten Temme.
In 2007 a former cyclist with the German team T-Mobile (formerly Telekom) claimed that German doctors Heinrich and Schmid helped organise systematic doping in the team.
Those claims led to their sacking by the their employer, the University Hospital Freiburg - the most reputable in Germany for sporting medicine, with most of the country's top athletes under the care of their doctors.
A team of independent experts concluded earlier this year following a two-year investigation that doping was systematic at T-Mobile and Telekom from 1995 to 2006, during which time fallen star Jan Ullrich won the Tour de France, in 1997.
A magazine report earlier this year accused former T-Mobile riders Andreas Kloeden, who now rides for Astana, and Matthias Kessler, who was sacked by Astana in 2007, of using testosterone and doping products.
Both went to Freiburg University to have blood transfusions on July 2 2006 along with team-mate Patrik Sinkewitz, who later made his confession to a German Cycling Union (BDR) inquiry, the report claimed.
In July 2007, disgraced rider Patrik Sinkewitz was fired by T-Mobile after a test revealed he had abnormally high levels of testosterone and he later admitted using a banned gel and using banned blood-booster EPO as well as having had blood transfusions.
comments
Follow @Pro_Cycling
Tweet
Subscribe via RSS or daily email
Contact the editor about this article
WHAT'S HAPPENING RIGHT NOW
RECENT
READ
Darach McQuaid acknowledges June deadline for plans to restart Tour of Ireland in 2015
Third climbing stage to feature on Presidential Tour of Turkey route, GC battle will be more intense
Philip Lavery interview: Walking away from the sport, then getting a second chance
Stetina wants rethink on dossards: ‘Cycling is still an amateur sport in so many ways’
Walker undergoes heart operation, retires; Philip Lavery to take his place on Synergy Baku team
McQuaid ends his part in legal action against Kimmage, Verbruggen persists
Planned new finale to Milan Sanremo in doubt after La Pompeiana climb and descent deemed too dangerous
Degenkolb beats Hushovd in bunch sprint to make it three from three in the Tour of the Mediterranean
Froome set to begin season in Tour of Oman, gunning for strong overall result
Past winner Gesink feeling on course for strong result in Tour of Oman
Wiggins admits pressure got to him in 2013, speaks about difficulty of being defending Tour champion
Démare swoops to victory on concluding stage of Tour of Qatar, Terpstra takes overall
Degenkolb notches up first win of his 2014 season on stage one of Tour of the Mediterranean
NetApp Endura still perfecting sprint train for Bennett
Greipel fastest in battle for Tour of Qatar’s fifth stage
No articles match criteria.
Terms and Conditions
|
Privacy Policy
Copyright 2008-2013 by VeloNation LLC
About
Advertising
Mission
Contact
Jobs
Content
Pro Cycling News
General Cycling Articles
Training and Health
Gear Reviews
Community
Directory
Blogs
Photos
Forums
Groups
VeloTV