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USA Cycling drops British anti-doping expert after EPO comments

Dr Paul Dimeo “disappointed” in governing body’s stance and says he was “misrepresented” by The Times

A British academic who advised USA Cycling on anti-doping issues will no longer be working with the organisation due to comments he reportedly made about legalising EPO and non-emergency blood transfusions.

Dr Paul Dimeo of the University of Stirling, who was chair of the governing body’s anti-doping committee has claimed that his comments, made in an interview with The Times newspaper, were taken out of context and that he had been misrepresented.

> British academic advocates legalising EPO

In a statement, USA Cycling said that Dr Dimeo’s “recent comments advocating the legalization of certain doping practices made it clear that he does not share our fundamental views regarding eliminating doping from sport through the rigorous application of well-established anti-doping efforts."

But Dr Dimeo, who in the past has argued that Lance Armstrong was treated unfairly in being banned for life when his US Postal Service team mates who also used performance enhancing drugs received six-month bans, insists he was not calling for EPO and blood transfusions to be permitted.

Instead, he claims he was simply questioning why certain substances and methods are banned under the World Anti-Doping Agency’s Prohibited List, while others are not.

The academic told Cycling News: “The discussion of EPO and blood doping was a generic one. All I was really saying was can we go back and reconsider why these things are banned, and at the same time look at which are the most important ones that we want to ban. Is it about performance enhancement? 

“Because there are some drugs that enhance performance that are not on the banned list. Is it about health? If it is, maybe there are better ways of managing peoples' use.

"It was a general discussion. But then the Times used this headline about legalising EPO and transfusions. 

“As soon as I saw that I phoned the times and asked them to change it. It's not what I said. They agreed to change the headline, but that's what had been sent to USA Cycling, and that's what they've assumed to be the case."

Dr Dimeo says he was “misrepresented” by The Times, and that he is “disappointed” by USA Cycling’s decision to drop him from the committee. He added that as an academic, it is his job to ask questions that may result in what are, for some, “uncomfortable answers.”

He added: “It's a taboo area. I think that if you say something that is not part of the orthodoxy of anti-doping, it's either you're for us or you're against us."

In The Times article published last month Dr Dimeo, author of A History of Drug Use in Sport: 1876-1976, said that today’s anti-doping policies were rooted in the 1960s and the time had come to reconsider how appropriate they were in the modern world.

“What made sense then is no longer viable, practically or idealistically,” he maintained. “We now live in a world of technology, commerce and performance, where drugs could be safely used for recovery and performance if only the rules were relaxed.

“Of course, people will react with dismay. But it is time that we had a proper 21st-century debate on the issue, rather than sticking to what was set in stone almost 60 years ago.”

Regarding EPO, he said: “There are some studies which state that low doses of EPO improve cardiac function,” he insisted. “A whole generation of cyclists used a lot of EPO and they have survived to tell the tale.

“If we understood the dosages and the timing of dosages then maybe it would be relatively safe. Would an athlete mind taking a small amount of a drug that has been trialled and medically approved?”

On the subject of blood transfusions, he added: “It’s safe, of course, because it happens all the time in hospitals. They would help recovery between the stages of a bike race or rounds of a tennis tournament.

“What is the harm if we know there is a doctor on hand, that everything is clean and sterilised and the blood comes from the right place? People will say it’s cheating, because not everybody can get access to that, but that’s not the same as saying it’s harmful.”

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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4 comments

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HarrogateSpa | 8 years ago
2 likes

It may not be a killer argument, but I would say a good reason not to ban caffeine is because millions of people around the world drink tea or coffee at breakfast time, but none of them have a blood transfusion with their Weetabix.

As for Mr Dimeo, he's been sacked because of what he said, not because of the headline, and I think it's the right decision. If he doesn't believe what he said, and it's just a bit of brainstorming, he should have done it in the pub with colleagues or mates, not in a national newspaper.

Avatar
Colin Peyresourde | 8 years ago
1 like

I understand the philosophical debate - why not ban caffeine since it is performance enhancing? Etc. But that debate should surely be limited to drugs which have a limited effect and are widely available. EPO and Blood transfusions are not those PED. They have a strong efficacy and a massive effect on performance.

Avatar
Gus T | 8 years ago
0 likes

Serve's him right for talking to a Murdoch owned paper, the truth is an unknown quantity to them.

 

Avatar
zzk | 8 years ago
0 likes

Just desserts

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