Cyclist Pfannberger Gets Lifetime Ban For Doping
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Posted: 11:09 AM Nov 21, 2009
Cyclist Pfannberger Gets Lifetime Ban For Doping
Cyclist Christian Pfannberger has been banned for life by the national anti-doping agency NADA after a second doping offense, the Austrian cycling federation said Saturday.
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VIENNA (AP)—

Pfannberger, a two-time Austrian national champion, pulled out of the Giro d’Italia and was suspended by his Katusha team in May after he tested positive for the banned drug EPO in an out-of-competition check on March 19.

Pfannberger had previously been suspended for two years for testosterone in 2004.

The 30-year-old cyclist has denied any wrongdoing and can appeal the ban at the agency’s arbitrary committee.

“This is what we expected after he had been caught twice,” cycling federation board member Herbert Kocher said. “We are fighting hard against doping so we are satisfied with this result.”

Pfannberger and NADA could not be reached for comment.

Pfannberger rode for Barloworld and Elk Haus before joining Katusha this year. He had his best season in 2008, finishing fifth in Liege-Bastogne-Liege, sixth in the Amstel Gold Race and eighth at the road world championships in Varese, Italy.

His ban marked the third doping scandal to rock cycling in Austria within a year.

In November 2008, Bernhard Kohl was banned for two years after a doping violation at last year’s Tour de France, where he finished third and won the polka-dot jersey for best climber.

Kohl admitted to using the new blood-booster CERA and later retired from the sport.

In March, Christoph Kerschbaum became the first Austrian athlete arrested under the country’s new anti-doping laws for allegedly selling EPO and other performance-enhancing substances.

Earlier this year, the country’s cycling federation had called for doping to be classified as a criminal offense, leading to harsher punishment for riders who use banned substances.

As of Jan. 1, 2010, athletes in Austria caught doping could be charged with serious fraud and face prison terms of up to 10 years, if a proposed amendment to the national fraud act is ratified by parliament later this year.