This Will NEVER Happen Again! || The DOPED DONKEY who DESTROYED Indurain

Описание к видео This Will NEVER Happen Again! || The DOPED DONKEY who DESTROYED Indurain

The 1996 Grand Boucle was the 83rd edition of the Grand Boucle, starting on 29 June and ending on 21 July, featuring 19 regular stages, 2 individual time trials, a prologue and a rest day (10 July). It was won by Danish rider Bjarne Riis.

This competition was noted by the "fall" of favorite Miguel Indurain, ending his record run of five consecutive victories. The course included a stage through his home town Villava, however he suffered a bronchitis because of the poor weather in the first week, and was fined and penalised for accepting drinks illegally. Indurain started to lose time in stage 7, and finally ended 11th failing to win a single stage or spend one day in the yellow jersey.

Stage 9 was scheduled to be a 176 kilometer ride from Val-d'Isère to Sestriere. However, due to appalling weather conditions, including snow, the organizers cut the stage to just 46 km. Bjarne Riis won the stage and opened a crucial 44 second gap over Telekom teammate Jan Ullrich. Ullrich, only 22, really broke through in this Tour, and won the individual time trial of stage 20.

Over a decade after the race, several riders with Team Telekom confessed to doping offences around the period of the 1996 tour, including support riders Rolf Aldag, Udo Bölts, Christian Henn and Brian Holm and team masseur Jef d'Hont has admitted in his autobiography that there was organised use of EPO in the team. On 24 May 2007, Erik Zabel admitted to using EPO during the first week of the race. The winner of the Yellow Jersey, Bjarne Riis, admitted on 25 May 2007 that he also used EPO during the race, as a result was asked by the International Cyling Union (UCI) to return the yellow jersey he received. So far, runner-up Jan Ullrich, who has been under suspicion of doping as a part of the Operación Puerto doping case, has not commented on allegations that he also used EPO. Third place Richard Virenque and fourth place Laurent Dufaux were implicated in the 1998 Festina scandal.

UCI lawyer Philippe Verbiest stated in 2007 that the statute of limitations for removing Riis as winner of the Grand Bouclé had expired, "you cannot strip him of the title but it possible not to mention it anymore ... Because of what he admitted, he is not the winner of the Grand Bouclé. Riis did not win." At the same time tour spokesman Philippe Sudres stated that: "We consider philosophically that he can no longer claim to have won." In 2007, Riis' victory was removed from the Grand Bouclé, yet in 2008 they listed Riis as winner of Grand Bouclé 1996, albeit with a remark about his confession.

Intro 0:00-1:05
Main Favourites 1:05-3:24
Banesto’s Doping Issues 3:24-4:50
Prologue Zulle (ITT) 4:50-8:00
Stage 1 Moncassin 8:00-9:20
Stage 2 Cipollini 9:20-10:12
Stage 3 Zabel 10:12-11:21
Stage 4 Saugrain 11:21-13:14
Stage 5 Lance Armstrong Punchs Rival 13:14-14:46
Stage 6 Lance Armstrong Dropped 14:46-16:46
Stage 7 Miguel Indurain Breakdown 16:46-28:37
Stage 8 Berzin (ITT) 28:37-34:40
Stage 9 Riis Sestrieres 34:40-40:36
Stage 10 Ullrich Attack (Zabel) 40:36-43:33
Stage 11 Chepe Gonzalez 43:33-45:17
Stage 12 Pascal Richard 45:17-46:33
Stage 13 Virenque Attack (Sorensen) 46:33-51:03
Stage 14 Doped Adboujaparov 51:03-52:27
Stage 15 Old Doped Pondenzana 52:27-53:47
Stage 16 Doped Riis Hautacam 53:47-01:01:17
Stage 17 Queen Stage Dufaux vs Riis 01:01:17-01:11:03
Stage 18 Bart Voskamp 01:11:03-01:12:16
Stage 19 Moncassin 01:12:16-01:13:02
Stage 20 Ullrich Destroys Riis 01:13:02-01:17:04
Stage 21 Baldato and Outro 01:17:04-01:18:40

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