WADA labs corrupted, claims Kohl

Bernhard Kohl's manager bribed WADA lab workers, claims Kohl (AFP/Getty Images)
Disgraced Tour de France cyclist Bernard Kohl said on Friday that scientists working in laboratories accredited by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) were bribed by his former manager, the alleged head of a doping network.
Austrian Stefan Matschiner, who managed the careers of several top Austrian athletes including Kohl, is accused of organising an elaborate doping network which helped top athletes in Europe to cheat by using performance-enhancing drugs and methods.
Former Gerolsteiner rider Kohl was revealed as a drugs cheat and banned for two years shortly after his astonishing third place finish in last year's Tour de France, where he also won the coveted climbers' prize of the polka dot jersey.
Matschiner, who has already admitted to performing irregular blood transfusions for Kohl, claimed in a recent interview with German television ARD that he was able to corrupt employees at several WADA-accredited laboratories based in central Europe.
The public prosecutor's office in Vienna responded by demanding he be brought to a new hearing.
Now retired from the sport, Kohl appeared to back up those revelations when he said Matschiner paid between 150 and 500 euros a time to laboratory employees for the testing of samples so that his athletes could avoid being caught by anti-doping tests.
"Matschiner would have our samples analysed so we could find out exactly how far we could go (with drugs) without being caught," Kohl told the Kurier newspaper.
Kohl said he personally benefited from two tests, one following his use of the blood booster EPO (erythropoietin), another for testosterone - both banned products.
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"That way you find out exactly how much you could take at night to avoid being detected the next day," added the Austrian, who was caught for using a later generation of EPO called CERA which was previously thought undetectable.
Matschiner, who was arrested in March but later released, is seen as a key figure in a doping affair which has taken on immense proportions in Austria. He reportedly had close ties with former nordic skiing coach Walter Mayer, who was involved in the 2006 Turin Olympics doping scandal, and the Viennese laboratory Humanplasma, which has repeatedly come under scrutiny for irregular practices.
Austria embarked on a major anti-doping clean-up in March with a series of arrests, including that of Mayer, cyclist Christof Kerschbaum and a Vienna pharmacist and doctor believed to have supplied banned substances to athletes.
© AFP 2009...
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User Comments
There are 3 comments on this post
Showing 1 - 3 of 3 comments
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mylesrants
Posted Fri 14 Aug, 11:09 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
Matschiner, is the figure who should be vilified .
love the fact that Kohl is correcting some of the damage he has done to our sport.
whistle blowing isnt popular but needed.
got to know where the cut is before the band aid is applied.
www.bikepure.org
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crankycrank
Posted Sun 16 Aug, 5:21 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
Hmmm, odd that Matschiner claims to have bribed the the lab employees yet they still exposed him. Is it possible he's lying??? Obviously anything is possible but his credibility is a little suspect to say the least. Kohl gets none of my sympathy either. When fans are screaming for clean racers and he's still sneaking around using EPO and steroids only to admit using after being caught, I'd say he's just as bad. If using drugs were just something that pros used and only harmed themselves then I'd have to say it's their choice. But everything they do works it's way down to the athletes who are barely even teenagers. Not to mention the fact that most amateurs don't have a Doctor available to them for monitoring it's use. Would you want a 13yr old educating your 13yr old on steroid dosage?
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Meds1962
Posted Wed 19 Aug, 1:08 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
If the integrity of the labs is called into doubt it won't be long before some that have tested positive raise doubt in their own cases, and that will be a huge can of worms.


