Oh Daryl, we've heard it all before!

By Sean Lee / Expert

Daryl Impey’s positive doping test for the masking agent probenecid was followed by the usual denials.

The Orica-GreenEDGErider was quick to claim his innocence, stating that he hadn’t even heard of the drug that was supposedly found in his blood stream.

Orica-GreenEDGE’s response was also predictable. They suspended Impey pending an investigation, but have refused to completely condemn or support the besieged rider.

Team manager Shayne Bannan was quoted as saying that Impey was “an honest guy”, but also went on to say that there was no question that this was “disappointing for the sport”. There’s an each-way bet if I ever saw one!

The good thing though, according to Bannan, is that cycling now only deals with isolated cases, not the systematic team doping programs of the 1990s.

Isolated cases such as Impey’s? But hang on, isn’t he supposed to be an honest guy?

“Certainly in the time Daryl has been with us, he has had a clean record,” waxed Bannan.

Except for that time at the South African championships in February, apparently, if the adverse results from both his A and B samples are to be believed.

Of course, Impey may very well be innocent, mistakes do happen in testing. Impey himself points out that his positive test on the 6th of February was followed by clear results on the 8th and 9th of the same month. There seems little doubt that this fact will be used as part of his defence, whether to prove that the test results from the 6th were anomalous or due to inadvertent ingestion.

Inadvertent ingestion. How we love that one! Alberto Contador tried it on but failed. Michael Rogers, aided by Chinese agricultural practices, also gave it a crack, and succeeded. Their troublesome substance was Clenbuterol and their defence was at least feasible, but how one can inadvertently ingest probenecid, unless having it prescribed for medical purposes, is yet to be established.

But the wording of Impey’s statement after his failed test went public clearly shows what route will be followed.

“I had no knowledge of probenecid nor have I ever taken the substance knowingly in any manner,” said Impey.

The key word of course is ‘knowingly’.

It is a word that crops up in an increasing number of statements made by riders desperate to preserve what is left of their tattered reputations. And you can’t blame them. Their livelihoods are at stake, maybe their family’s future, and if they have been falsely charged, then it must be a living hell.

But geez, just as a prison is full of criminals who ‘didn’t do it’, so to is our pro peloton. There are an awfully high number of ‘innocent’ riders out their. It is funny though, that almost to a man, they eventually crumble. The lies come crashing down and the truth eventually comes out.

From big boys like Lance Armstrong, to smaller fish like Stuart O’Grady, they all admit it in the end.

This is not to say that Impey is guilty. He deserves the right to present his case. I hope that the popular South African can prove his innocence and finish his career with his head held high, but it will be a long, hard road whichever way the verdict goes.

And it will be a long, drawn out, tiresome procedure, one that cycling unfortunately sees way to often.

Of course it won’t detract from the Tour de France, due to start this weekend. Fans in their millions will still line the roadsides, and the truly devoted will set up camp on the mountain passes days in advance. For every disillusioned fan who is lost to the sport, two new fans seem to materialise, just as crazed and passionate as the ones who came before them.

It speaks volumes about the power of cycling. It has the ability to draw people in and fascinate them for a lifetime.

It’s such a shame that it isn’t shown the respect it deserves from so many of its competitors, the same ones that take us for fools and expect that we will believe every feeble excuse they proffer.

The Crowd Says:

2014-07-06T12:57:01+00:00

Simoc

Guest


Unless the procedures have changed Sample A and Sample B are sent to different labs and the procedures are automated. It seems Impey feels stupid to get caught as so called experts tell us you have to be pretty dumb to get caught. The test must have happened a day early. The good thing is they are getting caught and thrown out of the sport. Or at least they should get life bans at the professional level. That would at least make them think twice before they take on the testing regime. It seems testers are well aware who the probable cheaters are, they just need to catch them. The info. can be obtained from abnormal hormone profiles.

AUTHOR

2014-07-06T02:26:16+00:00

Sean Lee

Expert


Ha ha. I've been waiting for a comment along those lines. Thanks Jack!

2014-07-05T14:19:22+00:00

Jack Russell

Roar Guru


His coach assured him that it was all legal too. #standbyhird

AUTHOR

2014-07-05T13:10:09+00:00

Sean Lee

Expert


It is more like a disappointment train, stopping at all stations!

AUTHOR

2014-07-05T13:09:00+00:00

Sean Lee

Expert


At times the sport seems to be indestructible. Fans continue to flock to the sport despite the dramas. It is sometimes hard to fathom

2014-07-04T09:49:00+00:00

Professor Rosseforp

Guest


Where was Shane Warne's mum during the accidental ingestion?

2014-07-04T05:18:06+00:00

Tim Renowden

Expert


Always hurts when a favourite rider goes positive, and Impey seems (seemed?) like a good guy. And then he gets pinged for an old-school masking agent and we all get back on the disappointment bus. Impeccable timing, too.

2014-07-04T02:07:48+00:00

Griffo

Roar Guru


Great article. I have plenty of friends who follow the sport outside of the Tour de France but to me it is the thought that a rider may be getting 'help' to be competitive that turns me personally off the sport. I don't know that cycling will try and shed that perception of being tainted while new fans keep flocking to the sport in ever increasing droves...

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