We’ve all heard the phrase “poacher turned gamekeeper.” But now, Bernard Kohl, the Austrian cyclist who retired from the peloton after being banned for two years as a result of failing a drugs test during the 2008 Tour de France, plans to become possibly the first doper turned shopkeeper.
According to the newspaper Österreich, Kohl’s store, which will open in February 2010, will be the largest in Vienna, covering 1,1100 square metres. Called Fitstore 24 - Bikepalast Kohl, the shop will be located next to a Harley-Davidson dealership.
The former Gerolsteiner rider reportedly plans to put in daily 12-hour stints at the store, and will no doubt be hoping that his fame – or notoriety, perhaps – proves a greater asset to his shop than it did for his former manager Stefan Matsincher, who recently received a paltry 71 euro after auctioning a Tour de France musette and polka dot jersey signed by Kohl.
Kohl, 27, finished third in the 2008 edition of the Tour de France, winning the mountains jersey, but was stripped of both after it his positive result was revealed.
Matsincher no doubt will be disappointed in the price he received, but when you think about it there’s certainly scope to build a rather niche collection revolving around polka dot jerseys sported by the likes of Richard Virenque and Michael Rasmussen.
Add new comment
1 comments
What a crook - he's brought shame on himself and on the sport we all love and now he wants to continue to profit from cycling?! I wont be shopping at Bikepalast Kohl - nor should anyone else, afetr all it'll be very difficult to find out who their suppliers are!