Vincenzo Nibali: 'If you dope, you will get caught'

Amid his Astana team's recent spate of doping positives, Tour de France winner Vincenzo Nibali brands dopers as 'stupid'

Vincenzo Nibali during 2014 Tour de France first rest day

(Image credit: Gregor Brown)

Tour de France winner, Italian Vincenzo Nibali explained that doping is risky and stupid amid four positive cases in his Astana team at the end of the 2014 season.

"Today we have a biological passport, regular doping control, race controls," Nibali said in an interview with The Guardian.

"If you are doping, you will be caught. Even if the technique of doping can be advanced, you will still be caught in another four years. It makes me laugh. Risking and cheating today is for stupid people."

Nibali spoke to the newspaper ahead of Wednesday's news that a fourth rider from the team, Victor Okishev, tested positive for doping. The 20 year-old races for the Astana's third division feeder team, but his failed steroid test made headlines regardless after three other cases.

Both of Iglinskiy brothers, Maxim and Valentin, failed EPO tests this autumn. Maxim helped Nibali win the Tour in July and in 2012, won Liège-Bastogne-Liège classic solo by catching and passing Nibali, then with team Liquigas.

Ilya Davidenok raced on the third division team, but his positive case – the team's third in two months – drew sharp criticism. Cycling's governing body, the UCI called the doping scandal "an extremely serious situation" that reflects poorly on the Kazakh team and its management.

The four cases, all Kazakh riders, also draw questions about Nibali's Tour de France win, especially since Maxim Iglinskiy helped win the 2014 title. Nibali said that he is angry about his "stupid" and former team-mate.

"He was not part of my training team. I have a training team of seven and he was never part of it. The two other members of the team are chosen at the last minute. They are like a filler," continued Nibali.

"Apart from the obvious reaction – anger – my main feeling was that this was unbelievably stupid. It did not make any sense. He had just renewed his contract. He did not have a massive goal to chase."

Nibali explained that he did not speak to Maxim Iglinskiy after the positive case because he "disappeared". He considers Maxim's and Valentin's Iglinskiy cases as one since they are brothers. The others, from the continental team, are different.

"This guy [Davidenok] is not from our team. Astana has a satellite team of youngsters. It's a completely different team. I dug up a little info on him because I didn't even know who he was."

The 30-year-old Sicilian raced at Okishev's side in the Tour of Almaty, where they could have talked. Okishev was already on borrowed time since his positive test stemmed from a control on May 29, when he won the Asian Cycling Championships time trial.

"The great things we're trying to achieve can be jeopardised by a single rider," Nibali added. "That's why it's so upsetting. One mistake can ruin so much. But I believe cycling is the cleanest sport because of all the doping controls."

The UCI may have the final say when it announces the teams who will race in the first division WorldTour in 2015. An announcement should come as soon as next week.

More on Astana's doping crisis

Another Astana rider fails doping test

Continental Team Astana rider Victor Okishev fails test for anabolic androgenic steroids in May

Credit: Andy Jones

Vincenzo Nibali in "rage" after Astana doping revelations

Astana's WorldTour licence in jeopardy after another failed drug test

Thank you for reading 20 articles this month* Join now for unlimited access

Enjoy your first month for just £1 / $1 / €1

*Read 5 free articles per month without a subscription

Join now for unlimited access

Try first month for just £1 / $1 / €1

Gregor Brown

Gregor Brown is an experienced cycling journalist, based in Florence, Italy. He has covered races all over the world for over a decade - following the Giro, Tour de France, and every major race since 2006. His love of cycling began with freestyle and BMX, before the 1998 Tour de France led him to a deep appreciation of the road racing season.