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Geneviève Jeanson

Canadian cyclist

Geneviève Jeanson (born August 29, 1981) is a former professional bicycle racer from Quebec, Canada. She won the world junior road and time trial championships in 1999 and the Tour de Snowy in 2000. Later that year she won La Flèche Wallonne World Cup race. She joined the Canadian Olympic team that year. She acknowledged in a do*entary on Radio-Canada (the French-language CBC) on September 20, 2007, that she had been administered EPO more or less continuously since she was 16 years old.

After residing in Phoenix, Arizona and San Diego, California (where she studied sociology and psychology), Jeanson came back to Lachine, Quebec in 2012 to live with her once estranged parents and complete her college-level education at the Saint-Anne Collégial International. In autumn 2014, she attended Concordia University, in Montreal, where she studied neuroscience. Jeanson currently lives with her common law husband and works in the fitness industry.

Contents

  • 1 2000 Olympic selection
  • 2 2000 Olympics
  • 3 2001 Racing
  • 4 Doping
  • 5 2014 Movie
  • 6 Major results
  • 7 See also
  • 8 References
  • 9 External links

2000 Olympic selection

Controversy dogged Jeanson throughout her career. Before the Olympics in 2000, she was accused of seeking special treatment by wanting an exemption from Olympic selection rules adopted by the Canadian Cycling *ociation. She said the procedure considered *ulative results for 1999 and 2000 but that she had raced as a junior in 1999 and could not achieve the results needed for selection. She and the Canadian Cycling Federation agreed that she would qualify for the Olympic selection race if she could finish in the top eight of two of five selected races. This she did by winning the Tour de Snowy and La Flèche Wallonne Féminine. Then, in July 2000, she qualified by finishing ahead of the other candidates in the Canadian Road Cycling Championship.

2000 Olympics

Controversy followed her to the Olympics. Towards the end of the road race, her teammate Lyne Bessette was in a break. Jeanson's detractors maintain that, on instructions from her coach, André Aubut, Jeanson helped chase the break and denied her teammate an opportunity to win a medal. Jeanson's defenders said she had ridden near the front as expected of a teammate trying to break the chase, and moved forward only to close a small gap when the break was almost caught.

2001 Racing

In 2001, she won four of five stages at the Redlands Bicycle Cl*ic, winning overall by nearly 10 minutes, an unprecedented margin. Then, at the Tour of the Gila in early May, she won four of five stages and the overall victory, this time by an unprecedented 15 minutes. On some stages she broke away early and rode alone the rest of the way. In early June, she won the Montreal World Cup, lapping most of the field and winning by more than seven minutes.

Doping

Geneviève Jeanson with her coach André Aubut

In late 2003, while with the national team preparing for the world championships in Hamilton, Ontario, Jeanson had a hematocrit level (a measure of red cells in the blood) above the limit and was not allowed to race for two weeks. She missed the championships. Jeanson blamed the finding on an al*ude tent used as part of her training. Subsequent doping tests were negative.

On 25 July 2005, at the Tour de 'Toona stage race in Pennsylvania, Jeanson had an out-of-compe*ion test. Jeanson said months later that she tested positive for EPO, a banned substance. She denied taking a banned substance but in January 2006 she announced her retirement. On November 28, 2006, the United States Anti-Doping Agency said she had accepted a two-year suspension from 25 July 2005, the day her sample was taken.

In an interview on Cyclingnews.com on 20 December 2006, Jeanson said that although she could race again from mid-July 2007, she "won't race ever again." She said she had "changed so much this past year that I have a hard time imagining who I was before." She finally admitted to doping to a French CBC journalist. Her coach André Aubut and doctor Maurice Duquette were banned for life by the Canadian Center for Ethics in Sport in 2009.

2014 Movie

The Little Queen (La Pe*e reine), a movie inspired by her life, was released in 2014. Jeanson’s character is renamed Julie Arseneau (played by Laurence Leboeuf).

Major results

19983rd Time Trial, UCI Junior Road World ChampionshipsNational Junior Road Championships1st Road Race1st Time Trial1999UCI Junior Road World Championships1st Road Race1st Time TrialNational Junior Road Championships1st Road Race1st Time Trial20001st Overall Tour de Snowy1st La Flèche Wallonne2nd Time Trial, National Road CHampionships20011st Overall Redlands Bicycle Cl*ic1st Stages 1, 3, 4 & 61st Overall Tour of the Gila1st Stages 1, 2, 3 & 51st Overall Tour de Toona1st Prologue & Stage 41st La Coupe du Monde Cycliste Féminine de MontréalNational Road Championships2nd Time Trial3rd Road Race20021st Time Trial, National Road CHampionships1st Overall Women's Challenge1st Stage 51st Prologue Le Tour du Grand Montréal2nd Overall Redlands Bicycle Cl*ic1st Stage 12nd Overall Tour of the Gila1st Stages 1, 2, 3 & 53rd La Coupe du Monde Cycliste Féminine de Montréal2003National Road Championships1st Road Race2nd Time Trial1st Overall Pomona Valley Stage Race1st Stages 1 & 21st Overall Redlands Bicycle Cl*ic1st Stages 2, 3 & 51st Overall Sea Otter Cl*ic1st Stages 1 & 21st Overall Tour of the Gila1st Stages 1, 2 & 31st La Coupe du Monde Cycliste Féminine de Montréal1st Prologue Le Tour du Grand Montréal2nd Overall Tour de Toona1st Stages 1 & 420041st La Coupe du Monde Cycliste Féminine de Montréal1st Stage 4 Tour de Toona2nd Overall Redlands Bicycle Cl*ic1st Prologue & Stage 12005National Road Championships1st Road Race2nd Time Trial1st Overall Tour de Toona1st La Coupe du Monde Cycliste Féminine de Montréal2nd Overall Tour of the Gila1st Stage 13rd Overall Valley of the Sun Stage Race

See also

  • List of doping cases in cycling
  • List of sportspeople sanctioned for doping offences

References

    External links

    • A fan site in French.
    • Terse biography on Canoe
    • Interview on Cycling News
    • Toronto Star article on Jeanson lifetime suspension
    • La Presse article on Jeanson's lifetime suspension (in French)
    • USADA announces 2-year suspension November 28, 2006
    • "Velo News article on USADA action in re Jeanson". Archived from the original on 2006-12-02. Retrieved 2006-12-09.
    • Cyclingnews article by Matthew Hansen where Jeanson announces she will never return to cycling
    • 2017 Interview with Anne-Marije Rook from Ella Cycling - Geneviève describes making peace with her tainted and troubled past