Schleck unruffled after dad's customs search
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Thursday, July 24, 2008

Schleck unruffled after dad's customs search

by Agence France-Presse at 11:15 AM EST   comments
Categories: Pro Cycling, Tour de France
 
Tour de France star Andy Schleck suggested "jealousy" may have been the reason a car driven by his father on the race was subject to a French customs police search on Thursday.

A car being driven by Johnny Schleck, the father of Luxembourg stars Andy and Frank, was stopped and searched by customs officials 30km into the 196.5km 18th stage which began in Bourg d'Oisans.

Customs officials in Grenoble later confirmed that "no doping products or banned substances" were found during the search which took place at Vizille in the Isere region of the Alps.

When told of the news, Andy - who is wearing the race's white jersey for the best placed rider aged 25 years or under - said he was a little shocked, but unconcerned. "I heard that the customs stopped my dad and a family friend who is often travelling with us, but it's not a problem for me," said Schleck, whose older brother Frank is second overall in the race at 1min 24sec behind their CSC teammate Carlos Sastre of Spain. "It's not the first time we've seen something like that happening at the Tour. I'm a bit shocked, but it's not a problem. I don't know what was behind it, maybe someone's jealous or something."

Johnny Schleck, a former professional cyclist who raced with Belgian legend Eddy Merckx, was stopped along with another vehicle as both cars were driving along with the advertising procession which precedes the stage itself.

Several journalists and photographers witnessed the scene, at the 30km mark of the 196.5km stage. Customs chiefs confirmed that two Luxembourg-registered cars - one of which was being driven by a journalist who was later allowed to go - were stopped and searched.

"One of the vehicles was taken out of the public's view for a more thorough search," said a customs official. CSC team manager Bjarne Riis, a former Tour winner, has promoted his team as strictly doping-free in recent years although the Dane has admitted that he took the banned blood booster EPO (erythropoietin) to win his 1996 yellow jersey.

Riis played down the incident, saying the police were "only doing their job". "They didn't find anything. Now it's over. As a team, we have nothing to hide," said Riis. "We're here to do as best as we can on the race and the police are just doing their job. Johnny isn't part of our team but he's a friend of our team because his two sons are with us."

According to high-ranking customs officials in Paris, the operation was carried out "as part of a programme to target banned substances on the Tour de France".

In a television interview Johnny Schleck said he was stunned that people could suspect his sons of doping. "My sons race cleanly. With all the doping controls they are subjected to how would it be possible for them to be otherwise?" he said.

In 2002 third place Tour finisher Raimondas Rumsas of Lithuania was suspected of doping after his wife Edita was discovered to have doping substances in her possession during a customs search at the French border. Rumsas completed the Tour without testing positive for any banned substances. A stash of illegal products, including EPO (erythropoietin) and testosterone were found in his wife's car.
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