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UCI boss slams colluding ASO and French sports ministry

UCI boss slams colluding ASO and French sports ministry

PARIS, March 7, 2008 (AFP) - World cycling chief Pat McQuaid on Friday
stoked the feud with race organisers Amaury Sports Organisation (ASO),
accusing them of colluding to form a private league with the backing of the
French sports ministry.
International Cycling Union (UCI) president McQuaid made his accusations in
a column in French daily Le Monde just two days before the start of the
Paris-Nice stage race.
The UCI have threatened to expel riders who take part in the first European
stage race of the season from their organisation. The race is being organised
by the ASO outside the UCI authority but under the aegis of the French
federation.
Despite the UCI threat, a representative for the teams’ association said
Friday afternoon that following a meeting a clear majority of them had agreed
to back participation.
At the same time, the Swiss-based Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS)
declared it was not for it to judge on the legality of UCI sanctions.
The UCI and ASO are in dispute noteably over team selections for the Tour
de France, which is organised by the latter.
And McQuaid accused the ASO of “blackmail”, using the Tour de France to
force teams to participate in the Paris-Nice.
“We have to warn those who love cycling: accepting the demands of the ASO
means transforming professional cycling into a league controlled by the
dominant organiser and not an organisation representing the collective
interest,” wrote McQuaid in Le Monde.
“The ASO is currently refusing the registration of the Paris-Nice in a
calendar determined following a democratic process. They want to place their
events outside the regulations to decide themselves, through contracts with
the teams, the rules to which they will be subject.”
The Irishman also warned that the French federation risked being suspended
from the UCI for their support of the ASO.
“Its president (French federation) will certainly be called before a
disciplinary commission for the same reasons; the riders could be suspended
for having participated in a race outside the bounds of UCI regulations.”
McQuaid claimed that the organisation of a race outside their jurisdiction
would threaten “the efficiency of the anti-doping battle”.
And he slammed the French sports ministry for being “more occupied by
supporting the projects of the ASO than motivated by the necessity to call to
order a private agent which does not respect international rules.”
He added: “By favouring the exit of an organiser from a federative
framework the Ministry is in effect giving its blessing to the creation of a
private league.
“Surprising, after affirming in November 2007 wanting to avoid it!
“Can a country circumvent international rules to favour what it believes to
be national interests, which moreover are not so much threatened but
manipulated by a commercial agent? Can a political leader be party to a
private organiser who wants to step outside a federative framework which is
patiently elaborate?
“It’s worth asking these questions.”

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