Ex-cycling star talks about doping and his crash

Jan Ullrich spoke for the first time about years of doping in Team Telekom and justified the use of banned substances with a lack of equal opportunities. “Without helping, that was the widespread perception at the time, it would be like going to a shooting armed with only a knife,” the 49-year-old told “Stern”. After joining the then top German racing team in 1995, he “learned pretty quickly that doping was widespread.” In 1997, Ullrich was the only German to win the Tour de France.

However, he did not want to go public with the equal opportunity argument in 2006 after he was suspended from the team because of connections to the Spanish doping doctor Eufemiano Fuentes. “I didn’t want to be a traitor. “I didn’t want to come out with half-truths and certainly not with the whole truth,” said Ullrich, citing legal constraints. “Lives depended on it, families, friends. The lawyers told me: Either you go out and tear everything down, or you don’t say anything at all.”

No chance without doping

In the past he lacked the strength to say “I doped”. He can’t say it in the “Stern” interview either. Ullrich talks about doping without explicitly confessing. However, this could follow in the Amazon documentary “Jan Ullrich – The Hunted”, which will be released on November 28th. Doping was normal in cycling and the inhibition threshold was correspondingly low. “The general attitude was: If you don’t do this, how will you survive in a race? Then you ride in the peloton and you know that you are probably one of those who have nothing in it and that’s why you have zero chances,” said Ullrich.

Ullrich now regrets not having spoken out in detail about doping earlier. “From today’s perspective, I should have spoken. It would have been very hard for a short moment, but after that life would have been easier,” said the Rostock native. However, there is no point in mourning it. “It has been a life of extremes so far. I was in heaven and I was in hell. Now I’m back on earth, on the way to the center.”

Criminal proceedings prevented confession

In 2007, drivers like Bert Dietz, Christian Henn, Udo Bölts, Rolf Aldag, Erik Zabel and Bjarne Riis publicly admitted doping. Ullrich did not join his teammates. “There was still criminal proceedings going on against me at the time. My lawyers recommended that I remain silent. “It was advice that I followed, but I suffered from the consequences for a long time,” said the Sydney Olympic champion. In 2012, Ullrich was banned for two years by the International Court of Arbitration for Sports (Cas), and various successes between 2005 and 2006 were revoked.

Armstrong helped in the darkest hours

Between 2010 and 2020, Ullrich made many negative headlines in his private life. In 2015 he wanted to start a new life by moving to Mallorca. It was “first and foremost an escape from the dreary German winter weather,” “but it didn’t work for me. On the contrary. In the end, the crash followed – it couldn’t get that deep, any deeper,” said Ullrich. Because of his alcohol escapades, his then wife Sara went back to Germany with their three children. Then the “total crash” began.

Ullrich was plagued by loneliness when his family abandoned him. The now 49-year-old started drinking. “Wine became whiskey. First one bottle a day, later up to two. It was a complete anesthesia,” said the Rostock native. From then on, his finca developed into a “party place”, “at some point someone brought cocaine with them” and that “turns you from a human to a monster in a very short time,” admitted Ullrich.

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But when his wife Sara threatened that he would no longer be allowed to see his children, Ullrich gave in. That was “the only reason” to “seek medical treatment,” he said: “I knew: I had to do something if I even wanted to see her again.” Among other things, with the help of his once greatest rival, Lance Armstrong Ullrich fought his way out of the long-term depression and found his way back into a regular everyday life. “I wasn’t far away from death,” said Ullrich, but also: “I’m hungry for life again.”

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