Sunday 20 July 2008 | Personalise | Help  
HOME
NEWS & RESULTS TEAMS KIT RACES FEATURES FORUM
GALLERY
Subscribe today
win a copy of rouleur
Support Our Partners
 RACE NEWS 07 / 03 / 08
 

UCI act against French Federation

The International Cycling Union (UCI) decided today to initiate disciplinary proceedings against the French Cycling Federation (FFC) and its President, Mr Jean Pitallier, on the grounds that they colluded in effecting the withdrawal of Paris-Nice from the regulatory framework of the UCI, when there was no reason why the race should not have been held under the aegis of the UCI as an event on the international calendar. By so doing, the FFC and Mr J. Pitallier betrayed their obligations of loyalty towards the UCI and the entire cycling community.

Further to the comments recently made about the UCI ProTour by Mr Eric Boyer, President of the International Association of Professional Cycling Groups (AIGCP), the UCI wrote today to Mr Boyer asking for his resignation from the UCI ProTour Council.

The UCI has also decided to open disciplinary proceedings against Mr Boyer. The grounds for the complaint are that he encouraged members of the AIGCP to contravene the UCI rules by asking them to take part in Paris-Nice when the event is not on the UCI calendar, which means that member teams of the AIGCP are not entitled to take part in the race.

President McQuaid letter released on the French Newspaper Le Monde.

ASO-UCI: what lies behind the tricolour smokescreen

Today, ASO directors decided that they would no longer comply with the UCI rules. How did we get to this point? The answer is simple: over and above our differences of opinion about the way professional cycling is organised, the very role of the UCI is being called into question by a body that sees it as an obstacle to its own ambitions.

Let there be no mistake: ASO is a limited company, answerable only to its shareholders. The UCI, on the other hand, is a democratic supranational organisation that represents the interests of all those involved in cycling. Its revenues are used for the universal development of all disciplines of cycling.

In their attempt to gain power, while choosing not to exercise it in areas that do not interest them – unlike the UCI, ASO could not care less about defending anyone’s interests other than its own – ASO’s executives have accomplished quite a feat: they have created the belief that they are the Tour de France, and that opposing them is tantamount to attacking the Tour. This has enabled them to insinuate that anything that goes against ASO’s interests is a violation of France’s cycling heritage. This tricolour smokescreen must be cleared away. The Tour does not belong exclusively to the company that organises it: it also belongs to those who love it, and who are its raison d’être, which means, above all, the riders. Those who are passionate about cycling should be warned: agreeing to ASO’s demands would transform professional cycling into a league managed by the dominant organiser, rather than by an international organisation that represents the collective interest.

ASO is currently refusing to register Paris-Nice on a calendar decided through democratic process. It wants its events to take place outside the UCI rules, so that it can decide, by means of contracts, which rules will govern the teams. This has created an unstable situation with adverse effects on many of those involved. ASO is resorting to blackmail by using the Tour, which teams feel obliged to take part in from a financial point of view, and forcing them to choose between their short-term interests (participating illegally in the Paris-Nice in order not to risk being excluded from the Tour) and respect for an institution which guarantees the long-term health of their sport. Placing teams in this position is an act of sabotage on the structure the UCI has developed over the years to guarantee the rights of all those involved. This is why we have reached a situation where the French Cycling Federation is risking suspension, for having consented to the infractions committed by ASO executives; its President will probably be called to appear before a disciplinary commission, for the same reasons; and riders may be suspended for taking part in a race that is not part of the regulatory framework of the UCI. The effectiveness of the anti-doping campaign is also under threat. The UCI has had considerable success in this area, particularly with the biological passport, but it cannot conduct tests in a race that is not on the calendar. I realise that, after reading this list, you may feel the UCI is making a mistake; but I hope you will understand that, if we are to defend the established system, the UCI cannot afford not to take these measures, however painful they may be. If anyone here bears a heavy responsibility, it is the directors of ASO.

It is enormously disappointing that those institutions that should have been the first to defend the role of the international federations that govern their sport according to the Olympic Charter have failed to do so. The French Sports Ministry seems more concerned to support ASO’s projects than to urge a sense of discipline on a body that is breaching international rules. By condoning an organiser’s wish to opt out of the established structure, the Ministry is giving its blessing by default to the creation of a private league. And this is all the more astonishing given the Ministry’s stated wish to avoid this! Is it right for a country to breach international rules, in support of what it believes to be its national interests, when these interests, far from being under threat, are actually being manipulated by a commercial entity? Is it right for a responsible politician to become the accomplice of a private organiser that wants to opt out of an institutional framework that has been so carefully set up? These questions are worth asking.

Pat McQuaid, UCI President


Bookmark thisPrinter friendly version
Want to send this article to a friend? Please join here
 

Discuss this article, 1 of 1 messages, read more:
John Mullineaux 
Posted: 07/03/08 14:52:30 30
It means something  if the FFC and Byer care to remain inside the UCI otherwise, it could be meaningless-  it's an Olympic year and the Olympic movement will look to the UCI and not others. Any potential Olympian might want to rethink taking part in Paris Nice.
Read more...
Related articles:
Tour de France - ASO respond to Ricco scandal
We will go on to win the game say Tour de France organisers
Tour de France - Ricco team statement
Saunier Duval Scott leave the Tour de France and stop racing
Tour de France - Ricco tests positive
Riccardo Ricco drags Tour into deeper scandal
Tour de France - Duenas Nevado tests positive
Barloworld plead innocence in Moises Duenas Nevado positive Tour drug test
Tour de France - Duenas Nevado tests positive
Barloworld rider thrown off Tour de France prior to stage 11
Cash for Rasmussen
Rabobank entitled to sack him, but incorrectly.
Rasmussen banned
Two year ban for 2007 Tour leader
UCI saddened by independent Tour
TDF was wrong to break away, UCI supremo McQuaid says
Landis loses appeal
CAS decides on 2006 Tour de France doping case
Back racing
Tom Boonen to start Ster Elektrotoer
Boonen out of Tour
ASO deny Boonen entry to 2008 race
Boonen Team Statement
Quickstep and Tom Boonen issue statements
Boonen latest
Tour de France participation in question
Boonen took cocaine
Tom Boonen tested positive for cocaine prior to the Tour of Belgium
Boonen tests positive
Paris Roubaix winner tests postive for cocaine
Igor Astarloa
Former world champion faces axe from Team Milram
Petacchi leaves Milram
Alessandro Petacchi and Milram terminate contract
Petacchi suspended and Vila tests positive
Spain's Vila tests positive and Petacchi out until August
Liquigas out of Franfurt Grand Prix
Liguigas cold shouldered by German race organisers
Move over UCI?
ASO, a new world cyling federation?
No decision on Di Luca doping case
Scientists to review samples, case on hold
Brailsford nearly quit
Rob Hayles test failure led to soul searching for GB team head
Ullrich revelations
More details on Ullrich's doping practices
WADA v UCI
Wada pull out of UCI bio-passport scheme
Blow to UK hopes at Manchester Champs
Hayles out of competition after doping tests
Landis appeal
Court of Arbitration begin to hear Landis appeal
Landis Tour Doping Appeal
Landis set for last appeal of doping ban, stripped Tour title
2008 Tour Teams
ASO to announce 2008 squads soon and race will be outside UCI
Paris Nice Rider Protest
Riders protest crematorium control for grieving colleague
How to make friends...
Kevin Impe forced to undertake drug test despite son's death
UCI Back Contador
UCI boss urges Contador to attack over Tour exclusion
UCI Anti-Doping Foundation
UCI Foundation formally constituted on March 7
Paris Nice 2008
The 'Race to the Sun' begins on March 9
Paris Nice Row 2008 latest
ASO maintains position and will go ahead with race without the UCI
Paris Nice Row 2008
UCI welcomes Euro Federation Support
Paris Nice Row
European Cycling Union calls for ASO to hold Paris Nice under UCI
Paris Nice 2008
Threats of sanctions hang over Paris Nice
Paris Nice 08
Things get plain crazy as ASO and UCI talk tough

Support Our Partners