Cyclist Contador gets two year ban

Sport’s highest court banned Alberto Contador for two years on Monday after finding the Spanish cyclist guilty of doping, a decision that will strip him of his 2010 Tour de France title.

Spanish cycling federation president Juan Carlos Castano told The Associated Press that the Court of Arbitration for Sport suspended the three-time Tour champion after rejecting his claim that his positive test for clenbuterol was caused by eating contaminated meat.

The three-man CAS panel upheld appeals by the International Cycling Union and World Anti-Doping Agency, which challenged a Spanish cycling tribunal’s decision last year to exonerate Contador.

Contador has continued racing since testing positive on a 2010 Tour rest day, and is expected to be stripped of all of his results over the past 17 months, including his Giro d’Italia victory last season.

Contador will become only the second Tour de France champion to be disqualified and stripped of victory for doping.

The first was Floyd Landis, the American who lost his 2006 title after testing positive for testosterone.

Andy Schleck of Luxembourg, who finished second at the 2010 Tour, stands to be elevated to victory.

Contador tested positive on the July 21 rest day. The positive results were not confirmed publicly until September 2010, when the UCI announced it had provisionally suspended him pending an investigation by Spain’s cycling body.

Contador blamed steak bought from a Basque producer for his high reading of clenbuterol, which is sometimes used by farmers to fatten up their livestock.

Contador was originally cleared last February by the Spanish cycling federation’s tribunal, which rejected a recommendation to impose a one-year ban.

Days earlier, then Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero said on Twitter that there was no reason to punish the rider, who is a sports icon in his home country.

After the UCI and WADA appealed the Spanish verdict, a twice-postponed hearing was eventually heard by CAS in November.

The four-day session almost ended in chaos as lawyers for the UCI and WADA considered walking out when the panel chairman, Israeli lawyer Efraim Barak, prevented one of their expert witnesses from being questioned about the science of blood doping and transfusions.

The complex 18-month legal case has also raised questions about the status of clenbuterol in anti-doping rules and the honesty of Spanish farmers. The drug is banned in Europe.

Contador is one of only five cyclists to win the three Grand Tours – the Tour de France, the Giro and the Spanish Vuelta. He also won the Tour de France in 2007 and 2009.

In reaction, the UCI said though it derived no satisfaction from the verdict, it “welcomed the news as the end of a long-running affair that has been extremely painful for cycling.”

“This is a sad day for our sport. Some may think of it as a victory, but that is not at all the case,” said UCI President Pat McQuaid.

“There are no winners when it comes to the issue of doping – every case, irrespective of its characteristics, is always a case too many.”

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