Lainaus:
In 2011, WADA reviwed 1,700 doping cases around the world and appealed 18 because they did not conform to the World Anti-Doping Code.
"All indications are, so far, that USADA have done everything correctly and the UCI have also acted correctly," WADA spokesman Terence O'Rorke said.
World Anti-Doping Agency chief John Fahey said USADA’s case against Armstrong, based largely on damning testimony from witnesses that included former teammates, supported WADA’s stance that "testing and analysis alone is not sufficient to expose the doping of athletes who have the support of sophisticated and unscrupulous individuals."
"It has always been incumbent on anti-doping organizations to undertake a more coherent approach to widespread allegations of doping, and it is not sufficient to claim that enough was done just because testing did not lead to analytical violations," Fahey said.