Doping at the 1999 Tour de France


At the time of the 1999 Tour de France there was no official test for EPO. In August 2005, 60 remaining antidoping samples from the 1998 Tour and 84 remaining antidoping samples given by riders during the 1999 Tour, were tested retrospectively for recombinant EPO by using three recently developed detection methods. More precisely the laboratory compared the result of test method A: "Autoradiography — visual inspection of light emitted from a strip displaying the isoelectric profile for EPO", with the result of test method B: "Percentage of basic isoforms — using an ultra-sensitive camera that by percentage quantify the light intensity emitted from each of the isoelectric bands". For those samples with enough urine left, these results of test method A+B were finally also compared with the best and latest test method C: "Statistical discriminant analysis — taking account all the band profiles by statistical distinguish calculations for each band".
At first, the rider names with a positive sample in the retrospective test were not made public, because this extra test had only been conducted as scientific research, with the purpose of validating the newest invented EPO-test method based on "statistical discriminant analysis". On 23 August 2005, only one day after the confidential test report had been submitted by the test laboratory LNDD to WADA and the French Ministry for Sports, the French newspaper L'Équipe however reported, that after having access to all Lance Armstrong's Sample IDs, they had managed to link him to 6 out of the 12 "definitely EPO-positive" samples. The phrase "definitely EPO-positive" referred to that all three applied test methods had returned a positive result, and it was reported Armstrong's six samples satisfying this requirement had been collected on the following dates: 3+4+13+14+16+18 July 1999. From the leaked report it was also possible to conclude, that all of the four unidentified riders tested at the Prologue on top of the list, had submitted samples being EPO positive by all three applied test methods. As it was known from earlier press reports, that only four named riders had been tested in the Prologue, they were all identified as having tested EPO-positive.
In response, UCI published the so-called Vrijman report in May 2006, where they alleged WADA had been responsible for the leak of the confidential test report to the press, and had been plotting against Lance Armstrong when they asked the French laboratory to note sample IDs in their confidential report, as Vrijman suspected they already had inside knowledge of some journalists being in possession of Armstrongs confidential doping forms — knowing that this all together could be used to link him to the positive samples. However, a few days later, WADA published a full written reply to completely rebut this accusation, and was moreover able to proof the journalist in fact had received the Armstrong doping forms by legal ways, from UCI itself — with Armstrong's written consent — and without any help/interference by WADA.
In July 2013, the antidoping committee of the French Senate decided it would benefit the current doping fight to shed some more light on the past, and so decided — as part of their "Commission of Inquiry into the effectiveness of the fight against doping" report — to publish all of the 1998 rider doping forms and some of the 1999 rider doping forms, along with the result of the retrospective test of the 1998+1999 samples, which made name identification possible for the various sample IDs. This publication revealed for the 1999 samples, that 13 of the 20 positive samples belonged to 6 riders, with the remaining 7 positive samples still not identified. Beside of the 20 positive samples, 34 were reported to have tested negative, and the remaining 30 samples were inconclusive due to sample degradation.

Tests

Sample IDDateRiderTeam
185-553044 JulyNo IDN/A
185-55804 4 JulyNo IDN/A
185-55904 4 JulyNo IDN/A
185-56004 4 JulyNo IDN/A
186-58105 5/6 JulyNo IDN/A
186-58205 5/6 JulyNo IDN/A
186-58705 5/6 JulyNo IDN/A
160-29206 6/5 JulyNo IDN/A
186-59006 6/5 JulyNo IDN/A
186-07507 7 JulyNo IDN/A
186-07607 7 JulyNo IDN/A
186-07707 7 JulyNo IDN/A
186-07907 7 JulyLampre
186-07110 10/12 JulyNo IDN/A
186-07310 10/12 JulyNo IDN/A
157-37809 9 JulyNo IDN/A
157-38009 9 JulyNo IDN/A
160-29608 8 JulyONCE
157-37612 12/10 JulyNo IDN/A
160-29112 12/10 JulyNo IDN/A
186-07812 12/10 JulyNo IDN/A
186-08012 12/10 JulyNo IDN/A
186-39613 JulyNo IDN/A
186-39813 JulyTelekom
185-89314 JulyNo IDN/A
186-58911 JulyONCE
185-47216 JulyNo IDN/A
185-48016 JulyNo IDN/A
185-47817 JulyNo IDN/A
185-89118 JulyNo IDN/A
185-89620 JulyONCE
185-88422 JulyMapei
185-90022 JulyBigMat-Auber 93
186-35822 JulyCantina Tollo

Sample IDDateRiderTeam
157-371 or
160-294***
03 3 JulyBanesto
160-294 or
157-371***
03 3 JulyKelme
160-29703 3 JulyUS Postal
160-30003 3 JulyCantina Tollo
157-37204 4 JulyUS Postal
186-585**05 5/6 JulyNo IDN/A
186-586**05 5/6 JulyNo IDN/A
157-37309 9 JulyUS Postal
160-293*12 12/10 JulyNo IDN/A
186-584*11 JulyUS Postal
185-55713 JulyUS Postal
185-894*13 JulyNo IDN/A
185-47914 JulyUS Postal
186-39914 JulyNo IDN/A
185-47516 JulyUS Postal
185-895*17 JulyUS Postal
185-892*18 JulyNo IDN/A
185-89818 JulyNo IDN/A
186-39718 JulyUS Postal
185-555**20 JulyFestina-Lotus

Confessions

Among the riders testing EPO positive during the 1999 Tour, the following riders have confessed indeed to be EPO positive:
Among the riders in the race who never had their samples tested doping positive, the following nevertheless later on confessed also to have doped in preparation/during the 1999 Tour de France:
French rider Christophe Bassons had come to be known as one of the few riders of the Festina scandal who was not doping. During the 1999 tour he wrote some articles about cycling, the tour, and about doping, finding the speeds to be "suspicious". The peloton began to turn against him, refusing to speak to him, and otherwise shunning him.
Stage 10 occurred on July 14 and was from Sestrieres to Alpe d'Huez. Bassons would later tell the story of this stage to media, including an October 2012 interview with the BBC. He said that nobody had been talking to him. The entire peloton planned to ride slow for the first 100 km without telling him. Bassons only heard about this because a mechanic from his team told him. Bassons decided he was "fed up" and decided to ride ahead of the others. As they came to a flat spot, "all of the teams rode together to close me down". As the teams rode by him, they looked at him.
"... and then Lance Armstrong reached me. He grabbed me by the shoulder, because he knew that everyone would be watching, and he knew that at that moment, he could show everyone that he was the boss. He stopped me, and he said what I was saying wasn't true, what I was saying was bad for cycling, that I mustn't say it, that I had no right to be a professional cyclist, that I should quit cycling, that I should quit the tour, and finished by saying you.... I was depressed for 6 months. I was crying all of the time. I was in a really bad way." - Bassons, on BBC Radio 5, 2012 10 15

In 2011/2012, after investigations into past doping in cycling, especially the 2012 USADA report on Armstrong's US Postal Service team, the media began to re-tell Bassons story. In one interview for the BBC, Armstrong teammate Tyler Hamilton publicly apologized for being part of the peloton that shunned him, saying that he was "100% wrong" not to talk to him. Bassons said "that's life, it's nothing. I don't begrudge Hamilton. I understand."
David Walsh would later claim that Armstrong's treatment of Bassons was what first raised doubts about Armstrong in his mind. These doubts culminated in the 2004 book L. A. Confidentiel which he co-wrote with Pierre Ballester. It contained testimony from Emma O'Reilly and others about Armstrong's alleged doping, including during the 1999 tour.