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Posted at 1:54 a.m., Friday, July 27, 2007

Cycling: Disgraced Rasmussen vows to continue riding

By Jan M. Olsen
Associated Press

COPENHAGEN, Denmark — Michael Rasmussen plans to continue his career as a professional cyclist despite being kicked out of the Tour de France by his own team while leading the race.

The 33-year-old Dane was expelled by the Rabobank team after winning Wednesday's stage for giving incorrect information about his whereabouts before the Tour, which he had led since July 15.

He had missed random drug tests on May 8 and June 28, saying he was in Mexico. But a former rider, Davide Cassani, said he had seen Rasmussen in Italy in mid-June.

"I know very well that I was late with information about my whereabouts," Rasmussen said in today's edition of the Politiken newspaper. "For that I have been punished with a fine and warnings. But that it should lead to such drastic (measures) which have been taken, is out of all proportion.

"I have now had time to collect my thoughts and I can guarantee that I am not done as a rider."

Rasmussen was fined $13,700 for missing the two random drug tests, and was also banned from representing his country in any international event by Danish officials.

Rasmussen is adamant he was in Mexico during those months, but Team Gerolsteiner manager Hans-Michael Holczer told Danish radio that one of his riders also saw Rasmussen in Italy at the time.

"I maintain that I was in Mexico," Rasmussen told the Danish tabloid B.T. "I was not in Italy. Not at all."

International rules require cyclists to inform officials of their whereabouts for possible unannounced doping tests, but Rasmussen says he feels cheated.

"I feel I have won the Tour de France ... but the victory has been stolen from me," he told Politiken.

Rasmussen captured the overall leader's yellow jersey in cycling's premier event for the first time after winning the eighth stage and held onto it through Wednesday's 16th stage.

Shortly after the stage, Rabobank manager Theo de Rooij pulled Rasmussen aside at the team's hotel and ordered him to pack his bags.

"I was kicked out of the hotel like an animal," Rasmussen told the Berlingske Tidende daily.

Only once before in the 104-year-old Tour has the race leader been expelled. In 1978, Belgian rider Michel Pollentier, trying to evade doping controls after winning a stage at the Alpe d'Huez in the Alps, was caught with an intricate tube-and-container system that contained urine that was not his, said Tour historian Jean-Paul Brouchon.