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All 189 Tour cyclists sign anti-doping charter

Riders agree to pay year’s salary on top of 2-year ban if caught doping

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updated 12:44 p.m. ET July 6, 2007

LONDON - All 189 Tour de France riders signed the UCI’s anti-doping charter in time for Saturday’s opening prologue stage.

The International Cycling Union requested that all cyclists sign a charter saying they are not involved in doping and promising to submit DNA samples to Spanish authorities for the Operation Puerto probe. Cyclists also had to agree to pay a year’s salary on top of a two-year ban if caught doping.

“Every rider has signed the pledge. I’m very happy with that,” UCI president Pat McQuaid said Friday. “It shows a commitment from the riders and the teams for a clean future. With each rider it’s a personal commitment. It gives a message to the world that cycling is not completely driven with drugs.”

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Tour director Christian Prudhomme had said that anyone who refused to sign would not race.

The Tour begins Saturday with a 4.9-mile prologue in London and ends July 29 in Paris.

Italian rider Enrico Degano is scheduled to start first, with last year’s runner-up, Oscar Pereiro, going last.

© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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