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Team Sky boss Dave Brailsford tried to kill Bradley Wiggins Dauphiné package story claims journalist who broke it

Daily Mail's Matt Lawton claims Team Sky boss tried to kill story for fear it would mean "end of Team Sky"; Brailsford must go says David Walsh of Sunday Times...

The journalist who broke the story about a package delivered to Team Sky at the 2011 Critérium du Dauphiné that contained medicine destined for Sir Bradley Wiggins says that team principal Sir Dave Brailsford tried to get him to kill the report.

The Daily Mail’s chief sports reporter, Matt Lawton, also claims Brailsford raised the possibility of him instead being offered another story relating to a rival team winning races with the help of Therapeutic Use Exemptions (TUEs).

Meanwhile, David Walsh, the Sunday Times chief sports reporter who helped bring down Lance Armstrong, has said on Twitter that the answers given to MPs by Brailsford and others yesterday (full video here) smacked of a “massive cover-up.”

He said Lawton’s latest allegations against Brailsford were “not so much a game changer as a game ender” for the Team Sky boss.

Lawton had already broken another of the biggest cycling stories of 2016 – former world champion Lizzie Armitstead’s missed drugs tests – when he met Brailsford in late September as he prepared to reveal details of the package delivered to Team Sky in 2011.

> UK Anti-Doping investigating Wiggins and Sky

In the preceding weeks, hackers who had accessed the World Anti-Doping Agency database had published details of TUEs issued to Wiggins ahead of the 2011 and 2012 editions of the Tour de France – he won the latter – and the 2013 Giro d’Italia.

The journalist says in an article published yesterday evening that at his meeting with Brailsford, the Team Sky principal asked him: “If you didn't write the story, is there anything else that could be done?”

He said that Brailsford was worried that the story could mean “the end of Team Sky,” which when it launched in 2010 insisted it would race clean but which has come under intense scrutiny in recent months especially following the revelations about TUEs and the Dauphiné package.

Lawton said: “First came the offer of an alternative, more positive story. Then possibly a story about a rival team winning races with Therapeutic Use Exemptions – something he did not reveal in the end.”

He made the claim at the end of a day in which Brailsford, Shane Sutton, British Cycling President Bob Howden and Dr George Gilbert, who sits on the governing body’s board and chairs its Ethics Commission, in front of a Parliamentary Committee to be quizzed about doping.

> Brailsford reveals the medicine contained in package for Wiggins at 2011 Dauphiné

After Howden and Gilbert had repeatedly claimed to MPs that they were gagged by UK Anti-Doping from talking about the package while insisting they knew nothing of the contents, Sutton confirmed it did contain medicine, with Brailsford later saying it was a decongestant called Fluimucil.

Walsh, who has been embedded with Team Sky, something that has seen him come under intense criticism from his former Sunday Times colleague Paul Kimmage, said on Twitter: “My impression from listening to Dave Brailsford and Shane Sutton at Select Committee today is that we're being subjected to massive cover-up.”

He added that if the package did indeed contain Fluimucil, why had it taken almost three months for that to emerge given that Lawton quizzed Brailsford about it in September.

“Two months ago I said in Sunday Times only way for Team Sky to move forward was without Dave Brailsford,” Walsh went on. “I believe that now more than ever.”

Those tweets were posted before Walsh saw Lawton’s latest claims against Brailsford, which he described as “not so much a game changer as a game ender.”

Questions are already being raised as to whether the episode may result in Sky, whose longstanding sponsorship of British Cycling finishes at the end of the month, pulling the plug on its financial backing of the WorldTour team.

Meanwhile, British Cycling, which earlier this month learnt that its funding for the next Olympic cycle would be cut by £4 million, has reportedly been warned by UK Sport that it could lose its funding altogether depending on the results of an investigation into its governance.

> British Cycling funding could be withdrawn due to governance issues

That probe was ordered in April following the allegations of bullying and discrimination against Sutton and other staff made by riders including track sprinter Jess Varnish and Paralympic gold medallist Darren Kenny.

In a year that saw Team Sky win its fourth Tour de France in five years, and Team GB dominate the track events for a third Olympic Games in a row, the ongoing controversies – including the UKAD investigation – must raise serious doubts about whether those successes can be repeated in future.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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38 comments

Avatar
FatBoyW | 8 years ago
1 like

Hahahaha!

The clickbait on here almost rivals the DM!

"the ongoing controversies – including the UKAD investigation – must raise serious doubts about whether those successes can be repeated in future" Because everything investigated about a clean team shows - er its clean! What substance are these jokers writing this drivel on?

 

Go do something worthehile, investigate Bertie's team or Astana or Garmin (whatever they are called now)  or any of the other teams besmirched with drug cheats.

And yes the Garmin reference is to Millar who is still a convicted drug cheat. 

Or maybe reveal how amateurs are being unfairly banned because we have to comply with the same processes as the professionals and apparently getting TUEs is not that easy!

Avatar
Vili Er | 8 years ago
18 likes

I note the Daily Reich were, until a few minutes ago, adamant that the Berlin truck driver was a Pakistani asylum seeker with a previous history of sex offenses. So adamant that they rolled out THE BLOCK CAPS for their headline and stirred up a daily dose of racial hatred amongst its readers in the comments section. They’ve now had to stand down as the Police in Germany have not actually caught anyone yet. No doubt they’ll use a distracting series of paparazzi ‘side boob’ shots of the barely 16 years of age daughter of some famous celebrity ‘flaunting her enviable pins’ on a beach somewhere, to take away the fact that they have once again made the news up.

Avatar
Yorkshire wallet | 8 years ago
7 likes

Nobody has been fingered for using a banned substance, so I don't see how this is a 'game ender'

Journos thinking they are celebrity detectives.

Avatar
STiG911 | 8 years ago
2 likes

Jesus - success breeds contempt alright.

Certainly at The Daily Fail.

Avatar
Rapha Nadal | 8 years ago
10 likes

Fuck The Daily Mail.

Avatar
brooksby replied to Rapha Nadal | 8 years ago
0 likes

Rapha Nadal wrote:

Fuck The Daily Mail.

I'd rather not, if you don't mind...

Avatar
ktache replied to brooksby | 8 years ago
0 likes

brooksby wrote:

Rapha Nadal wrote:

Fuck The Daily Mail.

I'd rather not, if you don't mind...

I have said that I shall never use an emoticon, but the trying not to throw up face is in this instance, pure genius.

Avatar
Vili Er | 8 years ago
9 likes

"The Daily Mail’s chief sports reporter, Matt Lawton..."

 

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