It's not mine! Really! It belongs to a friend!

Magicscreen2

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I remember when they used to accuse Spartacus of hiding a motor in his frame. Now we've got the real deal.

http://velonews.competitor.com/2016/01/news/first-technological-fraud-case-rocks-cycling-world_394276

HEUSDEN-ZOLDER, Belgium (AFP) — UCI president Brian Cookson confirmed on Sunday that a Belgian cyclist had been caught cheating at cyclocross world championships, using a concealed motor on a bike being. Femke Van den Driessche, an athlete in the under-23 category is the first rider to be snared by the UCI’s bike checks in a top-level competition.

“It’s absolutely clear that there was technological fraud. There was a concealed motor. I don’t think there are any secrets about that,” UCI president Brian Cookson told a news conference.

The bike was seized on Saturday after Van den Driessche, one of the race favorites, was forced to withdraw from the women’s under-23 race because of a mechanical problem. The 19-year-old denied that she had used a bike with a concealed motor on purpose, saying that it was identical to her own but belonged to a friend and that a team mechanic had given it to her by mistake before the race.

“It wasn’t my bike, it was that of a friend and was identical to mine,” a tearful Van den Driessche told Belgian TV channel Sporza. “This friend went around the course Saturday before dropping off the bike in the truck. A mechanic, thinking it was my bike, cleaned it and prepared it for my race,” she added, insisting that she was “totally unaware” it was fitted with a hidden motor.

“I feel really terrible. I’m aware I have a big problem. [But] I have no fears of an inquiry into this. I have done nothing wrong,” she said.

If found guilty of cheating the rider faces disqualification, a six-month suspension and a fine of up to 200,000 Swiss francs (180,000 euros, $195,000).

“We’ve heard some stories for a long time now about the possibility of this. We have been alive to a potential way that people might cheat and we have been testing a number of bikes and a number of events for several months,” Cookson said.

“I am committed and the UCI is committed to protecting the riders who do not want to cheat in whatever form and to make sure that the right riders win the race.

“We have been looking at different methods of testing this kind of technology and we tested a number of bikes yesterday and one was found.

“We will keep testing both at this event and subsequent events. Whether this means that there is widespread use of this form of cheating remains to be seen.

Cookson said that the matter would next go before the UCI’s disciplinary commission.

Etixx team manager Patrick Lefevere called for a “lifetime suspension for the cheat,” while Belgian national team coach Rudy De Bie was outraged by the discovery. “I never thought that such schemes were possible. It’s a scandal that Femke’s entourage have deceived the Belgian federation,” he said.

However, it isn’t the first time eyebrows have been raised over suspicions of “mechanical doping” — the term used for bikes found to have a hidden motor inside the wheels or frame that serves as an illegal aid to the rider.

Last year’s Tour de France champion Chris Froome faced accusations of using a motorized bicycle, while Fabian Cancellara’s 2010 victory in the Tour of Flanders also stirred a debate. He denied the accusations before, a week later, racing off into the distance to win Paris-Roubaix even more impressively.


Read more at http://velonews.competitor.com/2016...ocks-cycling-world_394276#lcIx6LzqGi2tYSUE.99
 
Wow. Hard to talk your way out of that one. I'm sure the whole world rolled their eyes at the "it's a friends" thing.
 
You would think she would have noticed weight difference. A real racer would say Hey it's a pound or more heavier. Batteries are not light. Not ones that will drive a motor. She knew!
 
Yes, not to mention the friend with the exact bike with the James Bond hack.

I guess she's got nothing to lose, but how silly.
 
http://static.businessinsider.com/image/56af9f4c58c3236d028b6e23/image.jpg

Sheeeeit, what's the fuel cell on that motor? Nuclear fission microbattery? Dilithium crystal? :confused:

Plus, when it's that small, all it needs is for one tooth in the gear mech to get misaligned through whatever Murphy's Law jarring mishap and booooom...

Trying to figure out how that size of a motor carries enough power to be worth enough of a difference in a race to risk getting your name shanked for life.
 
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“It wasn’t my bike, it was that of a friend and was identical to mine,” a tearful Van den Driessche told Belgian TV channel Sporza. “This friend went around the course Saturday before dropping off the bike in the truck. A mechanic, thinking it was my bike, cleaned it and prepared it for my race,” she added, insisting that she was “totally unaware” it was fitted with a hidden motor.
Van den Driessche added
I wondered why there was no water in my bottle despite its weight. I also was curious what the little on/off switch was for and why peddling seemed easier when I pressed it, but I didn't want to stop to see what was going on
 
Four pounds is huge. I use a five pound anchor on my canoe. When I would strip off my lighting system and various commuting crap from my bike I was amazed at how much more responsive it was.

If you can't win by not cheating, what is the point? The tens of thousands of dollars of corporate sponsorship!
 
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