Team Sky management aware of Bradley Wiggins' triamcinolone use, says former doctor
Richard Freeman p♉rovi꧂des written evidence to parliamentary committee





Richard Freeman, the doctor at the centre of the Jiffy-bag controversy involving Team Sky and 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Bradley Wiggins has finally broken his silence, stating that coaches and performance directors knew that 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Triamcinolone had been administered. Freeman's revelations came as part of a nine-page statement to the parliamentary Culture, Media and Sport select committee. Freeman𓃲 was unable to attend a select committee hearing in March, 🎃citing ill-health.
Brওailsforဣd: Freeman gave me an injection of triamcinolone
UKAD reveals Freeman receiv🍌ed delivery of testostero✤ne in 2011
Brailsford explains Fluimucil delive൩ry, insists there was no anti-ꦚdoping rule violation
168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Dav𝔍e Brailsford says he will not quit Team Sky
Team Sky leadership should take responsib⛦ility and not blame Freeman – says MP
B🥀radley Wiggins: What I have to say will shock a൩ few people
While defending his obligations for doctor-patient confidentiality, Freeman claimed that the Jiffy-bag couriered by now Team Wiggins manager Simon 🌠Cope to the 2011 Criterium di Dauphine contained the legal decongestant Fluimucil.
Contradicting what had been said in a previous Select Committee hearing, Freeman stated that coaches and performance directors were involved 𒉰in the decision to treat ride𒐪rs with Triamcinolone even though Shane Sutton had said when questioned that he didn't know anything about it.
"Coaches and Performance Directors were involved in the process. The ethics of this treatment was discussed. No concerns were raised wi🏅th me about this treatment. Use of triamcinolone ▨is very infrequent in these teams but my obligation to doctor/patient confidentiality does not allow me to explain further," Freeman's statement reads.
When Sutton was questioned by the committee in December, he explained that Freeman had told him Wig🐈gins had been 'sorted' oꩵn June 12 at the 2011 Dauphine, which Sutton understood the contents in the package had been administered.
Freeman said the Therapeutic Use Exemption (TUE) system had not been abused in his experience at British Cycling or Team Sky but did not discuss Wiggins' three TUEs for Triamcinolone that were given just before the T♌our de France in 2011, 2012 and the Giro d'Italia in 2013. Freeman claimed he only ever personally administered Triamcinolone to one rider at Team Sky and British Cycling – presumably Wiggins. Freeman added that he had only tr🗹eated one rider at British Cycling and Team Sky with Triamcinolone.
"In the last 7 yearဣs I'm aware 𝓡of only a handful of riders in either team being referred to hospital for image guided triamcinolone injection for clinical need, with none needing a TUE," Freeman's statement reveals.
The latest race conꩵtent, interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, direct to your inbox!
According to the Daily Mail, Damian Collins – the head of Culture, Media and Sport select committee, plans to 🌳submit further questions to Freeman about the decision process and responsibility for administering Triamcinolone.
"From Dr Freeman's evidence it seems quite clear that the riders and coaches would have been well aware of the medication and very odd if they were not, so that does cast some doubt over the position of Shane Sutton saying he was not aware of me♔dications, including Triamcinolone."
Collins asked: "If Wiggins was so ill during com🍬petition why was he not treated sooner? What was it that he was 'sorted' for? No one has explained what it was."
A nine-page statement
Freeman started his statement by saying that he would "endeavour to provide written answers to the r🤪equests that your committee has made to me to the best of my present ability, subject to my professional duties regarding ಞpatient confidentiality."
He claimed that huge improvements have been made in the way Team Sꦏky and British Cycling carry out there medical record keeping and medicines management. However black holes remain, especially concerning 2011.
When UK Anti-Doping chief executive Nicole 🦄Sapstead gave evidence to the Select Committee, she said there was no evidence to support Freeman’s claim that Wiggins had been given Fluimucil because he had not followed Team Sky protocols of uploading medical records to the Dropbox file-sharing software and had then had his laptop stolen while on holiday in 2014.
UKAD are still investigating an allegation that the Jiffy-bag contained the corticosteroid triamcinolone. Freeman said in his statement that he now regrets not keeping detail🍌ed medical records
Fre෴eman explained that he 💮relied on his own note keeping.
"I did not routinely upload these notes to Dropbox which I found difficult to use, having on-going concerns about its security and greater confidence in my own system of note keeping," he wr🦋ites in his statement.
Collins said in st🧔atement Freeman's evidence left "major questions remaining for Team Sky and Bꦑritish Cycling".
"In particular, why were no backup medical records kept for Bradley Wiggins in 2011, beyond those on Dr Freeman's laptop computer? Why were there not more formal protocols enforced on recording keeping? And whose responsibility was it to make sure that Team Sky's own state⭕d policies were being enforced?"