Contador case shames Spain into facing up to its problems

MADRID, (Reuters) – Tour de France champion Alberto  Contador’s positive drugs test has heaped more shame on Spain as  a country celebrating a sporting golden age is being forced to  face up to a doping problem that is tarnishing its image.

The recent achievements of tennis world number one Rafa  Nadal, Spain’s World Cup-winning national soccer team and  Formula One driver Fernando Alonso, among others, have helped  lift the nation to the pinnacle of world sport.

But Contador was one of four Spanish cyclists to be  suspended in three days, prompting International Cycling Union  (UCI) president Pat McQuaid to suggest the government should  recognise and tackle a doping problem in cycling.

In an editorial yesterday responding to McQuaid, Spain’s  biggest-selling sports daily Marca said his comments were “a  blow to the heart for a country that owes a large part of its  recent joy to the success of its athletes”.

However, the 20 positive doping cases in Spanish cycling  over the past year and a half proved that there was a lot more  to do to “banish this curse”, Marca wrote.

“This does not mean that we can doubt the successes of our  athletes. But the truth is that McQuaid’s comments contain more  truth than we perhaps like to hear.