Patrik Sinkewitz

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Patrik Sinkewitz
File:Henninger Turm 2006 -T-Mobile Team-a.jpg
Personal information
Full name Patrik Sinkewitz
Born (1980-10-20) 20 October 1980 (age 44)
Fulda, Germany
Height 1.73 m (5 ft 8 in)
Weight 63 kg (139 lb)
Team information
Current team Meridiana–Kamen
Discipline Road
Role Rider
Rider type Climbing specialist
Amateur team(s)
2000 Mapei–Quick-Step (stagiaire)
Professional team(s)
2001–2002 Mapei–Quick-Step
2003–2005 Quick-Step–Davitamon
2006–2007 T-Mobile Team
2009 PSK Whirlpool–Author
2010–2011 ISD–NERI
2012– Meridiana–Kamen
Major wins
Deutschland Tour (2004)
Rund um den Henninger Turm (2007)
Infobox last updated on
22 February 2014

Patrik Sinkewitz (born 20 October 1980) is a professional German road racing cyclist, who competes for the Meridiana–Kamen team. He is a climbing specialist who can ride well over a stage race, as in winning the 2004 nine-stage Deutschland Tour. He also rode well in one-day races such as Liège–Bastogne–Liège, where he finished in the top 10 in 2006. He did not perform well in his first major tour, finishing 59th in the 2005 Tour de France. The following year he finished 23rd and had good stage results. In February 2014 he was banned from competition for 8 years for a second anti-doping rule violation, having tested positive for testosterone in 2007 and recombinant human growth hormone in 2011.[1][2]

Biography

Born in Fulda, Sinkewitz started his amateur career with Mapei–Quick-Step and turned professional in 2003 with Quick-Step–Davitamon. Following 2005 he moved to T-Mobile Team where he had a good early season. He came fourth in the Vuelta al País Vasco and twice finished stages in the first five. Then he finished fifth in the Amstel Gold Race, fifth in the Flèche Wallonne and fourth in Liège–Bastogne–Liège.

Sinkewitz did not start stage nine of the 2007 Tour de France after colliding with a spectator the previous day.[3]

Doping

File:Patrik Sinkewitz Stage 1 3-Länder-Tour 2006 yellow jersey.JPG
Patrik Sinkewitz receives the leader's jersey at Stage 1 of the 2006 3-Länder-Tour in Kassel.

On 18 July 2007, his blood tested positive for testosterone and he was suspended by his team. On 31 July 2007, Sinkewitz was fired by T-Mobile after he declined to have his "B" or second blood sample tested.[4] He admitted using Testogel, a testosterone ointment.[4] On 3 November, he admitted using EPO and blood transfusions.[5]

Sinkewitz was banned for one year, until 17 July 2008.[6] In 2009, Sinkewitz joined the Czech-based team PSK Whirlpool.[7] He went on to ride for Team ISD for the 2010 and 2011 seasons.

On 18 March 2011 the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI)[8] announced that Sinkewitz had tested positive for recombinant Human Growth Hormone in a blood sample taken during the GP di Lugano earlier in the year. He was provisionally suspended by the UCI, and a B-sample was analysed a month later, also testing positive for HGH.[9] Sinkewitz appealed to the German Institution of Arbitration which ruled that the calculation of the sample analysis was "not sufficiently documented and therefore the ADRV [Anti-Doping Rule Violation] not validly proven," thus clearing Sinkewitz of the ADRV and allowing him to apply for a new license.[9] The German anti-doping agency appealed to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), who in February 2014 found Sinkewitz "guilty of an Anti-Doping Rule Violation in the form of the presence of recombinant hGH in his body specimen", banning him for 8 years, imposing a €38,500 fine, and disqualifying all his results from the 2011 GP di Lugano.[9] Later confirmed in the evidence of the USADA report in 2012, as well as by University of Freiburg doctors, to have done blood transfusions during the 2006 Tour de France alongside some of his teammates on the T-Mobile Team.

Palmarès

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2002
GP Winterthur
2004
Deutschland-Tour and 1 stage
Japan Cup
2005
1 stage Hessen-Rundfahrt
2007
Rund um den Henninger Turm
2009
1 stage Tour of Portugal
Sachsen-Tour and 1 stage
2010
Giro di Romagna
2013
1st Jersey yellow.svg Overall Settimana Ciclistica Lombarda
1st Jersey violet.svg Points classification
1st Jersey green.svg Mountains classification
1st Stages 1 & 2
1st Mountains classification Tour de Slovaquie
2nd GP Industria & Artigianato di Larciano
3rd Overall Istrian Spring Trophy
1st Stage 2
3rd Overall Tour of Slovenia
3rd Raiffeisen Grand Prix
4th Banja Luka–Beograd II
6th Gran Premio della Costa Etruschi
2014
2nd Trofeo Laigueglia

See also

References

  1. Sinkewitz banned for eight years by CAS - Cycling News, 24 February 2014
  2. CAS hands Patrik Sinkewitz 8-year doping ban - Road CC, 24 February 2014
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  4. 4.0 4.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[dead link]
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External links