Michael Rasmussen

Michael Rasmussen

Rasmussen
Personal information
Full name Michael Rasmussen
Nickname Kyllingen fra Tølløse
(The Chicken from Tølløse)
Born (1974-06-01) 1 June 1974
Tølløse, Denmark
Height 1.74 m (5 ft 8 12 in)
Weight 59 kg (130 lb; 9.3 st)
Team information
Current team Retired
Discipline Road, mountain biking
Role Rider
Rider type Climbing specialist
Professional team(s)
1993–1994 Wheeler (MTB)
1995–1996 Scott International (MTB)
1997–1998 Trek-Volkswagen (MTB)
1999 Gary Fisher (MTB)
2000–2001 Haro-Lee (MTB)
2001 Dungarees (MTB)
2001 CSC–Tiscali (stagiaire)
2002 CSC–Tiscali
2003–2007 Rabobank
2009 Tecos Guadalajara
2010 Miche
2011–2013 Christina Watches–Onfone
Major wins

Grand Tours

Tour de France
Mountains Classification (2005, 2006)
4 individual stages
Vuelta a España
1 individual stage

One-day races and Classics

World Mountain Bike XC Champion (1999)
Giro dell'Emilia (2002)
Infobox last updated on
31 January 2013

Michael Rasmussen (born 1 June 1974) is a retired Danish professional bicycle racer, who competed in road racing and mountain biking. His most notable victories include four stages of the Tour de France, one stage of the Vuelta a España and a win on the Italian classic Giro dell'Emilia in 2002. He also won the best climber classification in the 2005 and 2006 Tour de France. His nickname in Danish is Kyllingen (English: The Chicken), originating from his period as a mountain biker when teammates were watching the Danish children's TV show Bamses Billedbog, about a bear and a chicken. A large team mechanic was nicknamed Bear, and so Rasmussen was dubbed The Chicken.[1]

Specializing in climbing, Rasmussen showed a propensity for attempting spectacular wins in mountain stages in which he broke away from the peloton early and rode alone for most of the stage. Michael Rasmussen was known for his care for detail when considering weight. With a low weight (60 kg) he was usually one of the lightest riders in his class. He was known for peeling off unnecessary stickers from his bike, not wearing the Livestrong wristband which was common among many Tour de France riders, due to the additional grams. He used to count each grain of rice before eating and had water with his breakfast cereal, instead of milk. He only carried one water bottle holder and his Colnago Extreme-C bike weighed 6.81 kg, only 10 g more than the minimum limit.[2]

In the 2007 Tour de France, Rasmussen, while wearing the yellow jersey and well on his way to winning the Tour, had his contract terminated by his team and was removed from the Tour. He served a two-year ban from July 2007 to July 2009 for lying about his whereabouts. At a press conference on 31 January 2013, Rasmussen admitted that he had used performance-enhancing drugs and methods, including EPO, growth hormones, insulin, testosterone, DHEA, IGF-1, cortisone and blood doping, for most of his professional career.[3]

Biography

Rasmussen began his career as a mountain biker, and he won the Mountain Bike World Championships in 1999 before becoming a stagiaire with the professional cycling team CSC–Tiscali in 2001. There he secured a one-year contract for 2002, and following a string of good results in August and September, including his first professional win, he switched from CSC-Tiscali to Rabobank in 2003. After being sacked by Rabobank in the 2007 Tour de France, Rasmussen got a contract offer from Acqua & Sapone–Caffè Mokambo. The team's manager then decided that the move would be too expensive and thus Rasmussen was without contract.

Tour de France history

2004

His first Tour de France was in 2004, in which he failed to get any stage wins but was third in the mountain classification, which was won by Richard Virenque. Rasmussen then agreed with his team that he could train alone and focus on the Tour de France for 2005.

2005

At the 2005 Tour de France his training paid off when he took the polka dot jersey on stage eight. The next day he won stage nine after riding alone for three-quarters of the course; he had broken away after 3 km and stayed clear to the finish 168 km later. He led over the first category 1 climb, the Ballon d'Alsace. In the penultimate stage (Stage 20), an individual time trial, he lost his third place after a fall at 4 km, then two bike changes, two wheel changes and a crash into a ditch. After his first fall, he lost confidence and his ability to descend at speed, said by Rabobank's sports director Erik Breukink. Rasmussen finished 77th that day and dropped from 3rd to 7th on the GC. However he needed only to finish the final stage the next day to assure his status as King of the Mountains.

Rasmussen rode the next day partially alone, saying he needed to clear his mind after the day before.[4] After becoming king of the mountains, Rasmussen wore not only the polka dot jersey, but polka dot helmet, shorts, gloves, and socks. For the final stage, he rode a polka dot bike made by Ernesto Colnago, founder of the Colnago company.[5]

2006

Michael Rasmussen in the polka dot jersey in the 2006 Tour de France

In the 2006 Tour de France, he finished well overall but he was not team leader; that honour went to the Russian, Denis Menchov. Rasmussen won the King of the Mountains polka dot jersey for the second year and claimed stage 16 in the process. On Stage 16 he broke away after 4 km and took the Souvenir Henri Desgrange, awarded to the first across the summit of the highest mountain in each year's tour, on the Col du Galibier (2645 m), winning 5000 euros. He led over all the climbs and won stage 16 by more than a minute on Carlos Sastre of Team CSC. In Paris he claimed the final polka dot jersey of the tour while holding his newly born child, who was in a polka-dot shirt and cap.

2007

In the 2007 Tour de France he won the 8th stage from Le Grand-Bornand to Tignes, taking the Yellow jersey and polka dot jersey. On 25 July, he held a 3:10 lead on Alberto Contador, who was in second place for the yellow jersey. With four stages remaining, this made him favourite for the yellow jersey in Paris.[6] That evening however, he was withdrawn from the race and fired by his team Rabobank for "violating internal rules". Davide Cassani, an Italian retired professional rider, reported that he had seen Rasmussen in Italy in June 2007, a time when Rasmussen claimed to have been training in Mexico. The accusations were denied.[7]

Controversy

Unavailability for doping controls

Rasmussen was the center of controversy while wearing the yellow jersey in the 2007 Tour de France, when it was announced that he had been suspended from the Danish national cycling team at UCI World Championships and Olympic Games following missed doping controls.[8] Rasmussen failed to report his whereabouts for a three-week training session in Mexico and was unavailable for testing during that period; for that he received a recorded warning from the UCI.[9] Counting these missed tests together, the Danish cycling union decided to ban Rasmussen. Rasmussen said: "I do admit that I've committed an administrative error. I was informed of this at the Danish championship two and a half weeks ago, so it's no news... It might be a surprise that it comes out right now."[10] The timing of the announcement led to speculation by Patrice Clerc, then chief of the Amaury Sport Organisation, which organises the Tour de France, that the UCI had leaked the news in the middle of the Tour to damage it, as part of a dispute between the two organisations over the running of the UCI ProTour.[11] This was rejected by the UCI president Pat McQuaid, who said the timing was the choice of the Danish cycling union.

Alleged doping in 2002

According to a multiple sourced VeloNews[12] article published on 20 July 2007, mountain bike racer Whitney Richards accused Rasmussen of trying to get him to transport a box, which Rasmussen had told Richards contained his favourite cycling shoes, to his training base in Italy in early 2002. The box turned out to contain packets of Hemopure, a bovine-hemoglobin-based blood substitute which is not currently approved for human use outside South Africa and did not become commercially available there until January 2006, and which might potentially have been used in a doping program. At the time there was no screening test for Hemopure; it is, however, banned by the WADA. Richards said he destroyed the Hemopure, at which Rasmussen is said to have grown angry and said to Richards "Have you any idea how much that shit cost?"[13]

A second journalist[14] confirmed that Richards had related the same story to him over two years ago, off the record, and claims that the incident is the one described in the epilogue of journalist David Walsh's recent book From Lance to Landis. Rasmussen had declined to comment on the story, saying only, "I cannot confirm any of that."

On 23 July 2007 he was pushed about his reluctance to deny the allegations in an interview on British TV channel ITV4 (also broadcast in a podcast). He denied any such incident and said he had not spoken to Richards for five years and was unsure what he had done to cause such allegations.[15]

Removal from the 2007 Tour

On 25 July 2007, Rasmussen won stage 16 of the 2007 Tour de France. He had led the general classification (overall lead) since winning Stage 8, and with a lead of over three minutes over second-place Alberto Contador, he was all but assured of winning. However, hours after his win, Rabobank abruptly fired him and removed him from the race.[7] Previously, an Italian cycling commentator for RAI and former professional road bicycle racer, Davide Cassani, telling a story about Rasmussen's intense preparations for the Tour,[16] stated he had seen Rasmussen in the Italian Dolomites on 13 June 2007, cycling in the rain. According to the schedule Rasmussen submitted to the UCI, he should have been in Mexico at that time.[17] When confronted with this accusation, according to initial press reports, Rasmussen admitted the facts to his team leader, which resulted in Rasmussen's removal from the team and the Tour.[18] Rasmussen himself later first denied that he had admitted any such thing, stating that Rabobank manager Theo de Rooij "was a desperate man on the verge of a nervous breakdown,"[19][20] but later admitted lying about his whereabouts.[16] Two days later on 27 July Theo de Rooij announced his resignation from his position as team manager.[21] Rasmussen's in-laws later confirmed to the Danish newspaper BT that he had visited them in Mexico, but that they did not know where exactly he had been on 13 and 14 June 2007.[22] Rabobank backed the decision to withdraw Rasmussen but reconfirmed its commitment as a sponsor in cycling,[23] at least at the local level.[24]

On 17 December 2007, the Dutch law firm BrantjesVeerman confirmed Rasmussen had hired it to fight his dismissal from Rabobank.[25]

On 1 July 2008 the Monaco Cycling Federation, which holds Rasmussen's racing license, announced that he was banned from the sport for two years from his exclusion from the Tour de France; the ban ended on 25 July 2009.[26] Rasmussen appealed the ban to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, which upheld the ban on 22 January 2009.[27]

2009 return

Rasmussen's suspension expired on 25 July 2009, and he took part in the Designa Grand Prix in Kjellerup, Denmark two days later, finishing in second place. Later that season, he won the opening stage, a time trial, and was race leader for three days,[28] in the Mexico's Vuelta a Chihuahua, as a member of Team Tecos Trek. The following season, he signed for the Italian Continental ranked team, Miche Silver Cross.[29]

On July 30, 2010, Michael Rasmussen got a personal sponsor in Christina Design London.[30] On December 9, 2010, Rasmussen and Christina Design owner Christina Hembo presented their new team Christina Watches–Onfone. Hembo received a UCI Continental licence and announced the goal to become a UCI Pro Tour team by 2016.

Doping admission

On 31 January 2013, he admitted to the use of performance-enhancing drugs from 1998 to 2010 during a press conference.[31] He stated that he used EPO, growth hormone, testosterone, DHEA, insulin, IGF-1, cortisone and did blood transfusions.[32] He also stated that his cycling career was over and that he wanted to cooperate fully with the Danish anti-doping institutions.[33] The Danish Authorities stated that they would be looking to enforce a two-year ban, reduced from the normal eight-year ban in exchange for revealing what he knew about other illegal doping activities.

In September 2013 it was confirmed by Danmarks Idræts-Forbund (DIF) that he would receive a 2-year ban from 8 February 2013 to 7 February 2015 and would be stripped of results from January 2005 to March 2010.[34] This decision has yet to be ratified by Danish Anti Doping (ADD) or the UCI.

Career achievements

Major results

1999
1st, Mountain Bike World Champion (cross-country)
2002
1st Stage 4, Tour of Burgos
2003
7th Overall, Vuelta a España
1st Stage 7
2004
1st Stage 6, Dauphiné Libéré
14th Overall, Tour de France
3rd King of Mountains Classification
Combativity Award, Stages 13 & 15
2005
7th Overall, Tour de France
1st King of Mountains Classification
1st, Stage 9
Combativity Award, Stage 9
1st RaboRonde Heerlen
2006
18th Overall, Tour de France
1st King of Mountains Classification
1st, Stage 16
Combativity award, Stage 16
2007
Tour de France:
1st, Stages 8 & 16
Combativity Award, Stage 8
Maillot Jaune Stages 8 to 16*
2009
6th Overall, Vuelta Chihuahua Internacional
1st, Prologue Time Trial
Leader Prologue, Stages 1 & 2
2011
2nd Overall, Tour de Serbie
1st, Stage 3
4th Overall, Tour of Norway
4th Overall, Brixia Tour
8th Overall, GP Herning
8th Overall, Himmerland Rundt
2012
1st Ringerike GP
3rd Overall, Tour of China I

*Withdrawn from the race after stage 16 while still leading general classification

Grand Tour general classification results timeline

Grand Tour 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
Pink jersey Giro 45     WD WD 48
Yellow jersey Tour     14 7 17 WD
red jersey Vuelta - 7 - - WD -

WD = Withdrew/withdrawn

See also

References

  1. Anthony Tan, To Rule the Roost, CyclingNews.com, 10 July 2004
  2. UCI Cycling Regulations p. 61 Archived February 11, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.
  3. Rasmussen ord for ord: Jeg har snydt, løjet og bedraget folk [Rasmussen verbatim: I have cheated, lied and deceived people] (in Danish), Politiken, retrieved 31 January 2013
  4. Shane Stokes, Magnificent seven for Armstrong, CyclingNews.com, 25 July 2005
  5. John Stevenson, Michael Rasmussen's Colnago Extreme C Special Pois, CyclingNews.com, 26 July 2005
  6. "SI.com – Spectacular kid – Jul 23, 2007". CNN. 2007-07-23. Retrieved 2010-05-12.
  7. 1 2 Rasmussen out of Tour de France
  8. Weislo, Laura (2007-07-20). "Tour leader dumped from national team". Cyclingnews.com. Retrieved 2007-07-21.
  9. "Tour leader Rasmussen in the red as fresh doping allegations made". Yahoo! Eurosport. 2007-07-21. Archived from the original on 2007-08-10. Retrieved 2007-07-21.
  10. "Tour leader Rasmussen admits error in drug-testing rules after expulsion from Danish team". International Herald Tribune. 2007-07-20. Retrieved 2007-07-21.
  11. Stokes, Shane (2007-07-21). "McQuaid rejects ASO's claim that UCI is trying to damage Tour de France". Cyclingnews.com. Retrieved 2007-07-21.
  12. Pelkey, Charles (2007-07-20). "Ex-cyclist levels doping charges at Rasmussen". VeloNews.com. Retrieved 2007-07-20.
  13. Walsh, David (2007-07-22). "Rasmussen rides into new storm". The Times. London. Retrieved 2007-07-22.
  14. Lindsay, Joe (2007-07-21). "Boulder Report: Fresh Doping Allegations Hit Rasmussen". Bicycling.com. Archived from the original on 2008-02-13. Retrieved 2007-07-21.
  15. Boulting, Ned (2007-07-23). "ITV Tour de France Podcast – Stage 14". ITV Tour de France Podcast. Retrieved 2007-07-24.
  16. 1 2 "Zembla TV program, episode "Tijdbom Rasmussen"". 2008-02-03.
  17. TV 2 Tour de France – Michael Rasmussen ude af Touren.
  18. "Team Rabobank withdraws and fires Rasmussen" (Press release). Rabobank. 25 July 2007. Retrieved 2007-07-26.
  19. Johansen, Thomas Møller (2007-07-26). "Rasmussen til B.T.: Min chef er gal". www.bt.dk (in Danish). Archived from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved 2007-07-26.
  20. Staehelin, Jacob. Michael Rasmussen: Jeg er grædefærdig, B.T. Tour section, p. 3, 26 July 2007.
  21. Jensen, Finn T. (2007-07-27). "Theo de Rooij kaster håndklædet". tour.tv2.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 2007-07-27.
  22. "Rasmussen was wel in Mexico" (in Dutch). NOS. 2007-07-27. Archived from the original on 2007-09-30. Retrieved 2007-07-27.
  23. "Rabobank blijft actief in wielersport" (in Dutch). NOS. 2007-07-26. Archived from the original on 2007-09-30. Retrieved 2007-07-27.
  24. "Sponsors Reconsidering After Doping Scandals". New York Times. 2007-07-27. Retrieved 2007-07-27.
  25. "Wielrenner Rasmussen klaagt Rabobank aan". nrc.nl (in Dutch). NRC Handelsblad. 2007-12-17. Retrieved 2007-12-17.
  26. "Rasmussen receives two-year ban". BBC Sport. BBC Online. 2008-07-01. Retrieved 2008-07-02.
  27. Cyclist Michael Rasmussen Appeal Denied SI.com, 22 January 2009
  28. "La Vuelta A Chihuahua: Stages, Route Maps & Results". cyclingnews.com. 2009-10-10. Retrieved 2010-03-27.
  29. Rasmussen signs with Miche-Silver Cross
  30. http://www.mynewsdesk.com/dk/view/pressrelease/kyllingen-koerer-for-christina-racing-446057
  31. Lars Fink (2013-01-31). "Michael Rasmussen:Jeg har snydt og løjet" (in Danish). sporten.tv2.dk. Retrieved 2013-01-31.
  32. "Michael Rasmussen confesses to 12 years of doping". CyclingNews. Future Publishing Limited. 31 January 2013. Retrieved 31 January 2013.
  33. Shane Stokes (31 January 2013). "Michael Rasmussen retires and admits doping over a fourteen year timeframe". VeloNation. Velo Nation LLC. Retrieved 31 January 2013.
  34. http://www.dif.dk/da/nyt/dif-nyheder/2013/september/20130927_rasmussen
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