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Thursday, April 21, 2011

...from CN - Playing God: Eufemiano Fuentes


By: 
Peter Cossins
Dr Eufemiano Fuentes
Dr Eufemiano Fuentes
  • Dr Eufemiano Fuentes
  • Monies allegedly received by Fuentes and his co-workers, plus some of the costs incurred by the network.
  • Dr. Eufemiano Fuentes
  • Eufemiano Fuentes is a controversial figure.
Arguably the most important figure in Spanish cycling over the past 20 years, Eufemiano Fuentes is reviled by many but views himself as cycling’s ultimate altruist. 

A central figure in 2006’s famous cycling scandal, Operación Puerto, the sports doctor has found himself embroiled in yet another doping investigation as of December last year. Recruited last March by a third division football team, Fuentes continues to protest his innocence. What’s his story?


When news about Spain’s latest large-scale doping investigation, Operación Galgo, broke last December, UCI president Pat McQuaid spoke for many when he told L’Equipe, “It was no great surprise to me to see the name of Dr Fuentes appear in the last few days in that affair linked to athletics.” 

The doctor referred to is, of course, Eufemiano Fuentes, the Spanish gynaecologist who became a training consultant-cum-medical adviser and was a central figure in the Operación Puerto doping inquiry of 2006. He’s been arguably the most influential personality within Spanish cycling over the past two decades.

It’s easy to paint the 55-year-old Fuentes as one of the sport’s arch-villains, especially since he’s rarely talked to the press on the record. When he has spoken, Fuentes has made it clear that he views himself not as a blood-tampering charlatan, a role in which he’s often portrayed, but as one of cycling’s saviours. 

He is, he says, responsible for saving the health – and even the lives – of countless riders who would have been driven beyond their physiological limits by the demands that top-class racing places on them. He insists that he’s been unfairly demonised. Those who know him well describe Fuentes as a gentleman, a man of his word. Yet colourful tales about him and his influence abound. In the 90s, his role was reported to be so crucial to one team that he was the second-highest-paid person on the staff after its leader. 

It’s also claimed that – rather than the road, team directors or riders – it was Fuentes who decided the outcome of races, most notably when Angel Casero won the Vuelta in 2001 and Aitor González claimed the title a year later. In both cases, Oscar Sevilla, also advised by Fuentes, was a rider who lost out.
Born in Gran Canaria, in the Canary Islands, as the eldest of six children, Fuentes enjoyed a privileged upbringing thanks to the wealth his family had accumulated from a successful tobacco business. He was the first member of the family to attend university, studying medicine at the University of Navarra in Pamplona. A keen athlete, he became a decent hurdler under the direction of coach Manuel Pascua Piqueras, with whom he’s maintained close links. 

Fuentes was an outstanding student in Pamplona and passed most of his exams with honours. This achievement looks more impressive set against the tragedy that hit his family during the period. On the day of a gynaecology exam, his uncle, also called Eufemiano, was kidnapped.
A ransom of almost a million dollars was demanded but never paid. Some months later, his uncle’s body was found, headless and limbless, in a well near the family estate. A local delinquent was later charged with the murder.
After leaving Pamplona in 1980, Fuentes returned to Las Palmas and began to establish himself as a gynaecologist. Every afternoon, though, he would turn his focus to athletics, doing strength tests in order to further his knowledge of endurance sports. Later that year, Pascua called with an offer that would enable him to combine his passions for sport and science. Fuentes barely hesitated in taking what was initially planned as a five-year sabbatical from gynaecology but became a much longer break.

Years of isolation during the Franco dictatorship had affected Spanish sport in much the same way as it had its society. The country’s athletes were still in the dark ages in terms of training and preparation. Spain had also never won an Olympic medal in track and field and Pascua was one of those tasked with changing this. One of his first steps was to involve Fuentes, asking him to come 
to Madrid to work with some of Spain’s leading athletes as they prepared for the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics.

For the best part of the next decade, Fuentes helped to bring Spanish athletics into the modern age as one of a select and tight-knit group of coaches and scientists. Athletes were sent to altitude to train, underwent strength testing and were given all kinds of scientific advice. Blood transfusions, which weren’t banned at that point, were also administered. Fuentes and Pascua were also given the opportunity to travel to other countries to learn from their training procedures. Many were behind the Iron Curtain, where doping of athletes was systematic and the techniques were more advanced.
Despite rumours of doping, Fuentes’s career progressed smoothly until Spanish sprinter and hurdler Cristina Pérez tested positive in the wake of the 1988 Seoul Olympics. Trained by Pascua, Pérez was also Fuentes’s girlfriend. The pair married later that year, by which point it had been revealed that Spanish sports authorities had tried to cover up her positive result.
A change of regime saw Pascua and Fuentes ushered out of the Spanish athletics hierarchy in 1989. “There are many reasons to think that they were using doping techniques,” explained new Spanish Athletics Federation president José María Odriozola.
Fuentes took advantage of the situation by focusing full time on professional cycling, where his skills were in demand and the financial rewards were substantially bigger. He took up an offer from ONCE team boss Manolo Saiz to become the Spanish squad’s doctor but even by that point his links to the sport were well established.
In 1985, thanks to Pascua’s brother, cycling coach José Luis Pascua (who has also been implicated in the Galgo investigation), Fuentes had started working with the Orbea team. That year, the team won the Vuelta with Pedro Delgado. In 1988, backed by Caja Rural, Fuentes accompanied them on his first Tour de France.
During those early years, Fuentes was a popular if somewhat maverick member of the teams he worked for. Former Orbea staff remember how he needed to be woken up by one of the soigneurs most mornings and arrived late to almost every race, always using the excuse that his grandmother had died. “How many grandmothers have you got?” he was eventually asked.
In 1989, Fuentes moved to the emerging ONCE team. Although his relationship with domineering team boss Saiz lasted only two seasons, it would become apparent that the pair maintained their co-operation in a less obvious way. At this point in his career, Fuentes wasn’t one for remaining in the shadows. In 1991, he flew out to Mallorca for one of the key time trials in that year’s Vuelta, with a small fridge occupying the seat next to him.
“In here lies the key to the Vuelta,” he joked with journalists on the flight. What was in the fridge and who received it is a mystery. ONCE’s Melchor Mauri won the time trial and went on to take the Spanish tour’s overall title.
Fuentes worked briefly with Amaya, then moved on to the long-standing Kelme team, where his skills were to grow to legendary proportions, at least among those on the inside of the sport. At Kelme, Fuentes was much more than the standard team doctor. He decided on strategy, selected teams and provided training advice. By the time of the Puerto investigation, this advice was reportedly costing each rider consulting with him about 24,000 Euro a year. Given the number of athletes whose names would surface in the Puerto inquiry, or were rumoured to be involved, Fuentes must have been one of the sport’s best-paid men.
In 2005, it was reported that Fuentes had left the sport to focus on research work but it soon became clear that he was still involved in cycling. His undoing stemmed from an incident that barely made news at the time. In September 2003, Kelme had fired Jesús Manzano after it was claimed that a woman had been found in his room during the Vuelta. Manzano contested the charge and, having failed to regain his place on the team or get the wages he claimed he was owed, decided to outline the extent of doping activity within the squad to Spanish sports paper Diario AS.
The Wire
Although widely discredited by Kelme and others, Manzano’s allegations prompted Spain’s Guardia Civil to launch their own undercover investigation. So began a process that wouldn’t have been out of place in the TV series The Wire. During 2004, the Guardia’s first key lead came from a tap they’d installed on Manuel Pascua’s mobile phone.
This led police to Madrid-based haematologist José Luis Merino Batres, who had been collaborating with a number of sports doctors, including Fuentes. When police searched Fuentes’s Madrid home on the Calle de Alonso Cano in 2006, they turned up dozens of bags of blood and plasma, plus EPO and hundreds of documents regarding products given to athletes listed under code names.
With Liberty Seguros team manager Saiz also detained, the inquiry quickly led to the team’s sponsor quitting the sport. A few weeks later, on the eve of the 2006 Tour, news of the operation broke and Jan Ullrich, Ivan Basso and several other key riders were pulled out of the race.
Among those banned as a result of the Puerto affair was Liberty Seguros rider Jörg Jaksche, who described to the German press just how hands-on Fuentes had been when it came to dealing with riders. “He was the one who personally did the blood transfusions,” Jaksche told Der Spiegel

The German rider said he had been guided towards Fuentes by Saiz. “He never mentioned Fuentes’s name but he told me that a doctor was going to call me. Fuentes called me just before New Year and said, ‘I’m Eufemiano.’ He asked me to come to the Canary Islands.”
Jaksche went in January 2005 and was offered “the full programme”. They discussed and rejected the use of steroids and artificial haemoglobin, then moved on to EPO. Jaksche admitted he was afraid of being caught out in controls but Fuentes had found a way around them. “He told me that he had a method for hiding EPO use, something that he gave me in a little box of pills, something I had to mix with my urine in dope controls. Then we started talking about blood doping. It was all new to me but he talked about it as if it was just like shelling peas.”
Asked what surprised him most about the Puerto affair, Jaksche confessed that it wasn’t the names that had appeared, which included the two biggest favourites for the Tour title. Instead, it was “those that did not appear”. He explained that no one really knows who was working with Fuentes, who he described as “a master of camouflage. None of his clients know about each other. Not even riders on the same team know if other riders are working with him.”
Although it’s the doping allegations that have brought Fuentes’s name to wider attention, his expertise in the complex science of endurance sports can’t be understated. Nor can his constant search for knowledge. In 2003, he received high praise for his doctoral thesis, entitled Indicators of Muscular Damage in Professional Cyclists During Major Tours.
Earlier this year, Saiz pointed out another quality, describing Fuentes as “the best psychologist that exists”. He went on to add: “I’ve seen him giving group therapy sessions when he was with me at ONCE and the dynamic he created within the group was very good.” These qualities were at least a part of what made him such a key member of the teams he worked for.
Set to be prosecuted, although the Galgo investigation is ongoing, Fuentes has remained unrepentant.
Indeed, he’s even compared himself to another famous scientist who was vilified for his heretical beliefs – Galileo. The comparison is laughable but Fuentes insists that he’s an honest man. 

In 2007, he told Stern that he’s a lifesaver. What some call doping, he said was therapeutic medicine, explaining, “The body of a cyclist isn’t designed to cope with the continuous demands being made on it for three weeks.”
He described his job as being to ensure that riders could put up with the physical demands being made of them. His primary concern, he affirmed, was the health of the athletes. In addition, he claimed that he was one of the few people within the sport focused on their health.
He concluded by asserting that he had been demonised, but declared that history may well be his redeemer. “In 20 years’ time they may give me the Nobel Prize or build a monument commemorating my achievements,” he said. “But they might kill me as well.”
This article appears in the May 2011 issue of Procycling. Click here to find out how you can obtain your copy

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