Banned doping doctor 'met with Astana cyclists'

Banned doping doctor 'met with Astana cyclists'

TURIN (ITALY) - Astana's hopes of remaining within cycling's professional ranks suffered a potential blow after a report on Monday claimed team members met with a banned doctor known for helping Lance Armstrong to cheat his way to success.

Italian sports doctor Michele Ferrari (L) leaves the Bologna's tribunal followed by his lawyer Dario Bolognesi on October 1, 2004

Astana's Pro Tour future is hanging in the balance after brothers Valentin and Maxim Iglinskiy, and three riders from the Astana Continental team, tested positive for banned substances in the past year.

Astana's Continental team was suspended over a week ago and the International Cycling Union (UCI) is expected to make a decision this week on whether to grant the Kazakhstan-based team, run by disgraced former professional Alexandre Vinokourov, a World Tour licence.

That decision could be swayed by a report in Gazzetta dello Sport which claims Doctor Michele Ferrari met with members of the team in November last year at a team training camp in Montecatini Terme.

It said prosecutors from Padua, who began to probe Ferrari and his doping and financial activities in 2010, are set to hand "500 pages of evidence, including the names of 90 cyclists" to anti-doping officials at the Italian Olympic Committee (CONI).

Among that evidence is a "photograph of Ferrari chatting to certain members of the team" in November 2013, although Gazzetta said the evidence contains "nothing to link" the team's reigning Tour de France champion "Vincenzo Nibali with Ferrari".

Ferrari, who advised Armstrong throughout the disgraced American's career, has been banned for life by CONI and the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) from working in sport or with athletes.

Likewise, athletes are banned from consulting Ferrari under threat of suspension.

In the past three years three Italian professionals -- Filippo Pozzato, Michele Scarponi and Giovanni Visconti -- served three-month bans for consulting Ferrari, who is reputed for his expertise in using the banned blood booster EPO (erythropoietin) without detection.

The UCI Licence Commission is set to rule this week on Astana's World Tour future, but UCI president Brian Cookson has been reported as saying he held a "an exteremely dim" view of the situation.

Without a World Tour licence, teams are denied automatic access to major events.

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