UKAD investigating Team Sky allegations

Allegations cycling outfit Team Sky injected some of its riders with Fluimucil and other substances to aid recovery are being investigated by UK Anti-Doping.

Team Sky, UKAD

Team Sky continues to perform despite being in the eye of a ethics hurricane. Source: Getty

UK Anti-Doping is investigating an allegation that Team Sky injected some of its riders with Fluimucil and other substances to aid recovery even after cycling's world governing body banned needles at races in 2011.

None of the substances are illegal under World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) rules but there are concerns about the ethics of administering them intravenously and the possibility that Team Sky may have breached the "no needles" policy adopted by cycling's world governing body the UCI.

Fluimucil is a brand name of acetylcysteine, an amino acid important in the synthesis of glutathione, a muscle anti-oxidant that aids recovery. Also used as a decongestant, it is at the heart of the controversy about a mystery package delivered to Team Sky doctor Richard Freeman at the end of the Criterium du Dauphine race in 2011.
Dr Freeman claims the package, which was couriered from Manchester to France by a British Cycling employee, contained Fluimucil and that he gave it to star rider Sir Bradley Wiggins via a nebuliser to clear his airways.

But Press Association Sport can exclusively reveal that a whistle-blower has sent information to the House of Commons' Culture, Media and Sport select committee and UKAD that some Team Sky doctors were using intravenous recovery methods towards the end of the team's difficult first season in 2010 and continued to do so despite the UCI ban, which Team Sky publicly supported.

So-called "IV recovery" was common in cycling a decade ago as it was believed infusions or injections of substances that repair tissue damage and replace lost nutrients were almost essential, particularly in stage races.

For example, Team Sky's current star Chris Froome told the Irish Independent in 2014 he had been injected with Fluimucil when he was with former team Barloworld in 2008 and 2009. There is no suggestion of any wrongdoing on Froome's part.

The source, who is understood to have worked for Team Sky, has provided UKAD and the select committee's chairman Damian Collins with evidence that some Team Sky riders were even injected with Tationil, a glutathione commonly used to whiten skin.

The source has claimed Team Sky hired Dr Fabio Bartalucci in late 2010 after senior riders complained the British team's desire to break with cycling's troubled past and be beyond suspicion was affecting results, as Dr Bartalucci was believed to have expertise in IV recovery.
Some members of staff are understood to have objected to the decision to bring in Dr Bartalucci, who was picked up by police in an anti-doping raid at the 2001 Giro d'Italia but not charged, and the Italian did not stay with Team Sky for long after the UCI needles ban came in. One of the team's original doctors, David Hulse, left the team unhappy about the change of policy on IV recovery.

The source, however, has claimed Dr Freeman continued to give some riders injections but not during races, so there is no obvious breach of the UCI's "no needles" policy, although the team's record-keeping has already been proven to be lax so it would be hard to prove or disprove how close to the start of races these jabs were administered.


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3 min read
Published 14 April 2017 9:49am
By Cycling Central
Source: Cycling Central


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