The Swiss voice in the world since 1935

Cyclist admits to blood doping

man riding bike in mud
Sullied: the career of Pirmin Lang, pictured here in 2017 at the Red Bull Velodux Cyclocross relay race in Estavayer-le-Lac, Switzerland © Keystone / Anthony Anex

A Swiss cycling professional has resigned after confessing to his participation in the Aderlass doping network.

Pirmin Lang is the seventh cyclist to be exposed in the international scandal. He resigned from his job as director of the Swiss Racing AcademyExternal link after being contacted by the Neue Zürcher Zeitung (NZZ), a Swiss newspaper.

Lang issued his announcement and apology via Twitter on Friday night:

External Content

The Sunday edition of NZZExternal link reported that a German sports doctor had helped Lang, along with several others, cheat via blood doping in 2015 and 2016. Lang competed for IAM Cycling from 2013-2016.

He co-founded the Swiss Racing Academy in 2019 to foster young local talent. Lang said he wanted to protect these beginners from the wrongdoings he had witnessed and experienced during his own professional racing career: “The negative pressure, the bad influences, the performance at any price”.

Other cyclists implicated in the scandal have been fired or banned for two or four years.

Operation Aderlass (German for “bloodletting”) first made headlines at the Nordic World Ski Championships last winter. 

Danilo Hondo, the ex-coach of Swiss Cycling, was also a part of this network. He was fired from coaching the Swiss national team in May 2019 following his confession to doping. 

Blood doping is when an athlete boosts performance by injecting more red blood cells into the bloodstream.

More
glass bottles

More

Swiss firm stops making anti-doping kits

This content was published on The World Anti-Doping Agency is looking for alternatives now that a Swiss company has ceased production of bottles to collect urine and blood samples.

Read more: Swiss firm stops making anti-doping kits


Popular Stories

Most Discussed

News

Bear kills four sheep near Scuol GR

More

Bear kills sheep in southeastern Switzerland

This content was published on A bear killed four sheep in the Lower Engadine region near Scuol, canton Graubünden last week. This was the first bear attack on livestock in the region in four years.

Read more: Bear kills sheep in southeastern Switzerland
Economists lower their expectations for economic growth in 2026

More

Swiss economists lower growth forecast for 2026

This content was published on Experts believe that economic development in Switzerland will be weaker in 2026 than three months ago. They have also lowered their expectations for the current year.

Read more: Swiss economists lower growth forecast for 2026
Fewer and fewer people are attending religious events

More

Survey: more Swiss reject organised religion

This content was published on Fewer people in Switzerland have a religious affiliation and the proportion who practice their religion regularly is steadily declining, a survey finds.

Read more: Survey: more Swiss reject organised religion
Trees cool cities better than previously assumed

More

Study: trees have major cooling effect even in extreme heat

This content was published on Plane trees in cities have an important cooling effect even in extreme heat, according to a new study by the Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research (WSL). 

Read more: Study: trees have major cooling effect even in extreme heat
The panorama of the Battle of Murten is digitised

More

EPFL launches digitised version of Battle of Murten panorama

This content was published on To mark the anniversary of the Battle of Murten on 22 June 1476, the Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne (EPFL) has launched a website that offers the public an immersive experience of the huge panorama painting of the historic battle. 

Read more: EPFL launches digitised version of Battle of Murten panorama
Diesel oil pollutes Lake Zurich near Rapperswil-Jona

More

Diesel oil slick spreads across Lake Zurich

This content was published on Emergency crews contained the oil and began removing some of the pollution from the water’s surface, said the St Gallen cantonal police on Sunday.

Read more: Diesel oil slick spreads across Lake Zurich

In compliance with the JTI standards

More: SWI swissinfo.ch certified by the Journalism Trust Initiative

You can find an overview of ongoing debates with our journalists here . Please join us!

If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.

SWI swissinfo.ch - a branch of Swiss Broadcasting Corporation SRG SSR

SWI swissinfo.ch - a branch of Swiss Broadcasting Corporation SRG SSR