On the subject of irony – this time of the unintended variety – Astana’s mercurial climber Miguel Ángel López has been sacked by the Kazakh team after fresh links to a suspected doping doctor were revealed.
López was initially suspended by Astana in July after reports emerged claiming that the Colombian was being investigated for his alleged involvement in a drug trafficking ring in Spain, led by physiologist Marcos Maynar, who was arrested in May charged with a crime against public health, drug trafficking, and money laundering as part of the Spanish police’s Operation Ilex investigation.
With the absence of any concrete findings from the authorities in Spain or the UCI, López’s summer suspension proved short-lived and he was integrated back into the squad less than two weeks later.
However, in a statement released last night – which appeared to cause so many clicks that the team’s website kept crashing – Astana announced that it “had discovered new elements showing Miguel Angel Lopez’ probable connection with Dr Marcos Maynar.
“Accordingly, the team had no other solution than to end the contract between team and rider, based on breaches of said contract and internal team rules, with immediate effect.”
Yes, you read that right. Astana, the team barred from the 2008 Tour de France for its widespread doping practices, led by former rider Alexander Vinokourov, he of the two-year suspension for blood doping and, when he returned to the peloton, bribery charges (which he was eventually cleared of due to the lack of concrete evidence), sacking a rider for his alleged involvement in a doping conspiracy.
Cycling can be a strange world sometimes.
Vino wins the controversial Liège-Bastogne-Liège in 2010 (©Photosport International)
In another eery throwback to the mid-2000s, Spanish newspaper ABC has reported that the “new elements” of the investigation discovered by Astana relate to a document which claims that López received a dose of menotropin, a human growth hormone that increases muscle mass and eliminate fluids, before the start of this year’s Giro d’Italia in Hungary.
The drugs were allegedly received by Astana soigneur Vicente Belda García, the son of former Kelme manager Vicente Belda, who was a central figure in the Operación Puerto case which brought down Jan Ullrich, Ivan Basso, and a host of others.
According to ABC, the drug caused a problem in López’s left leg, forcing him to pull out of the Giro during stage four’s ride to Etna. A hip injury was cited as the official reason for the 28-year-old’s early withdrawal.
Cycling author Peter Cossins noted the similarities between López’s DNF at the Giro and the early rumblings of Operación Puerto, sparked by Kelme rider – and eventual whistle-blower – Jesús Manzano’s adverse reaction to a drug at the 2003 Tour de France.
Alex Whitehead/SWpix.com
And if that wasn’t enough on your 2000s-era pro cycling bingo card, López has released his own statement, prepared by his lawyers, which describes his sacking as “a clear case of abusive termination without just cause” and includes one of that period's finest chestnuts – ‘I have never tested positive’.
“The rider hereby informs that he considers such decision as with no cause, and that there are no new facts which could justify such decision, not known or reported before November 2022 by Astana Team,” the statement says.
“The rider rejects any allegation that could damage his name and honour as professional rider, and reminds that he has never tested positive for any drugs or doping, nor has he been investigated by any authority.
“Mr. Miguel Angel Lopez hereby informs that he will defend his rights before the corresponding Courts, in a case which he understands as a clear case of abusive termination without just cause.”
It’s been a while since we’ve heard the ‘I’ve never tested positive’ line being trotted out, but it’s nice to have the old girl back, if only for nostalgia purposes.
López – known as ‘Superman’, for some reason – has been a consistent, if mercurial, presence on the sport's biggest climbs since turning pro in 2015 with Astana, where he has spent all of his career apart from one ill-fated and dramatic season with Movistar in 2021.
> Miguel Angel Lopez slaps fan who knocked him from bike
He’s finished in the top ten at all three grand tours and taken stages at the Tour and Vuelta – though if the current Puerto premonitions are anything to go by, his name may be remembered for completely different reasons in the years to come.
New generation, and all that.