Topic: Pat Mcquaid
World cycling president Pat McQuaid believes the sport has turned a corner and has ushered in a new era in which cheats have very little room for manoeuvre.For decades cycling has suffered from a doping culture which, in 1998, hit epic ...
0 . The International Cycling Union says there were no more positive doping tests at this year's Tour de France.. . The UCI said in a statement ...
0 . The International Cycling Union and its current and former president have started legal action against disgraced rider Floyd Landis over his ...
Report: UCI President Pat McQuaid renews call for bans to be doubled to 4 years for EPOThe president of cycling's governing body renewed his call for stiffer penalties for EPO use while insisting that cycling is the cleanest of sports.International ...
Being a professional sport, and similar to many other professions, cycling teams will attempt to gain the advantage by fair means and, frequently, foul means. This is not a new problem in cycling; the greatest living cyclist, Eddy Merckx famously said that ...
As Jacques Anquetil, the first five-time victor of the Tour de France, famously quipped, "You don't ride the Tour de France on mineral water alone. Michel Pollentier, after his victory on l'Alpe d'Huez which put him in the yellow ...
UCI president Pat McQuaid says all precautions will be taken before verdict in Contador's caseUCI president Pat McQuaid says it won't be rushing the investigation into whether Alberto Contador took performance enhancing drugs to win his third Tour de France ...
Spain should be doing more to prevent doping in cycling, International Cycling Union (UCI) chief Pat McQuaid said on Saturday. McQuaid was speaking two days after Tour de France champion Alberto Contador was provisionally suspended after a positive test for clenbuterol, which ...
By Iain Rogers. . MADRID — Tour de France champion Alberto Contador's positive drugs test has heaped more shame on Spain as a country celebrating a...
Bans for failing doping tests could be doubled to four years as of next year, according to the International Cycling Union (UCI). The news comes after Austrian rider Bernhard Kohl, who came third at this year's Tour de France, tested positive ...