Zürcher Nachrichten - Raudenski: from Homeland Security to Tour de France engine hunter

EUR -
AED 4.280356
AFN 81.017007
ALL 98.366247
AMD 447.184742
ANG 2.085921
AOA 1068.777427
ARS 1551.836578
AUD 1.793628
AWG 2.100841
AZN 1.969021
BAM 1.963769
BBD 2.35315
BDT 141.835598
BGN 1.955145
BHD 0.439417
BIF 3436.520674
BMD 1.165515
BND 1.499385
BOB 8.07117
BRL 6.364413
BSD 1.16543
BTN 102.325575
BWP 15.721205
BYN 3.836168
BYR 22844.091982
BZD 2.341061
CAD 1.60182
CDF 3368.337722
CHF 0.940157
CLF 0.028963
CLP 1136.202026
CNY 8.372068
CNH 8.373438
COP 4714.880723
CRC 590.109976
CUC 1.165515
CUP 30.886145
CVE 111.015439
CZK 24.571849
DJF 207.134989
DKK 7.463722
DOP 71.096295
DZD 151.635663
EGP 56.466518
ERN 17.482723
ETB 161.045019
FJD 2.631034
FKP 0.875846
GBP 0.872959
GEL 3.149563
GGP 0.875846
GHS 12.295801
GIP 0.875846
GMD 84.499436
GNF 10110.841482
GTQ 8.943294
GYD 243.844215
HKD 9.148231
HNL 30.711475
HRK 7.532026
HTG 152.940664
HUF 397.990693
IDR 19060.947178
ILS 4.003567
IMP 0.875846
INR 102.289025
IQD 1526.824515
IRR 49097.314396
ISK 142.810805
JEP 0.875846
JMD 186.255864
JOD 0.826338
JPY 171.734543
KES 150.933391
KGS 101.924394
KHR 4673.714663
KMF 492.429694
KPW 1048.902614
KRW 1615.240607
KWD 0.356018
KYD 0.971267
KZT 626.243663
LAK 25175.121518
LBP 104371.858598
LKR 350.63294
LRD 234.268586
LSL 20.710991
LTL 3.441462
LVL 0.705009
LYD 6.334501
MAD 10.561867
MDL 19.795845
MGA 5169.05919
MKD 61.508371
MMK 2446.778309
MNT 4185.871531
MOP 9.423408
MRU 46.502897
MUR 53.182757
MVR 17.959969
MWK 2023.919576
MXN 21.685849
MYR 4.920219
MZN 74.545854
NAD 20.711207
NGN 1783.35534
NIO 42.832615
NOK 11.879948
NPR 163.718403
NZD 1.967529
OMR 0.448141
PAB 1.16549
PEN 4.145151
PGK 4.825811
PHP 66.794503
PKR 329.316477
PLN 4.273186
PYG 8729.425789
QAR 4.243055
RON 5.075583
RSD 117.129572
RUB 93.244792
RWF 1680.089724
SAR 4.373485
SBD 9.577112
SCR 17.057413
SDG 699.880656
SEK 11.199654
SGD 1.498334
SHP 0.915912
SLE 26.922763
SLL 24440.269233
SOS 666.110098
SRD 43.165986
STD 24123.805203
STN 24.767192
SVC 10.197383
SYP 15153.293045
SZL 20.711472
THB 37.715764
TJS 10.89768
TMT 4.090957
TND 3.35727
TOP 2.729752
TRY 47.394935
TTD 7.901268
TWD 34.886306
TZS 2890.476792
UAH 48.48697
UGX 4160.885722
USD 1.165515
UYU 46.769801
UZS 14598.074386
VES 150.057421
VND 30565.628175
VUV 138.840938
WST 3.230231
XAF 658.6639
XAG 0.030789
XAU 0.000346
XCD 3.149862
XCG 2.100424
XDR 0.821587
XOF 659.101785
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.248358
ZAR 20.741258
ZMK 10491.028241
ZMW 26.836289
ZWL 375.295321
  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.1200

    22.95

    -0.52%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    23.54

    +0.13%

  • SCS

    0.0300

    15.99

    +0.19%

  • BCC

    -3.8500

    82.92

    -4.64%

  • RIO

    0.3900

    60.09

    +0.65%

  • JRI

    0.0800

    13.34

    +0.6%

  • BCE

    -0.3100

    23.25

    -1.33%

  • RBGPF

    1.0800

    76

    +1.42%

  • GSK

    -0.5700

    36.75

    -1.55%

  • RYCEF

    0.1300

    14.48

    +0.9%

  • NGG

    0.0200

    72.3

    +0.03%

  • BTI

    0.5600

    56.4

    +0.99%

  • VOD

    0.2000

    11.3

    +1.77%

  • RELX

    -1.7800

    48.81

    -3.65%

  • AZN

    -0.8800

    73.6

    -1.2%

  • BP

    0.2800

    33.88

    +0.83%

Raudenski: from Homeland Security to Tour de France engine hunter
Raudenski: from Homeland Security to Tour de France engine hunter / Photo: Anne-Christine POUJOULAT - AFP

Raudenski: from Homeland Security to Tour de France engine hunter

In a former life Nick Raudenski "hunted terrorists" now he is chasing down those who might pull a fast one and use engines in Tour de France bikes.

Text size:

"I'm not one to look away. If we find something, it's going to be a big deal" he told AFP.

With his solid build, bushy beard, baseball-cap and gravelly voice, the American has been the head of the fight against technological fraud at the International Cycling Union (UCI) since 2024, a potential plague that hovers over an increasingly fast peloton.

Raudenski explains he tried to get into the mindset of a fraudster, to imagine how they might behave in order to avoid detection, in the same manner he did at the Department of Homeland Security.

"Having that mentality of what you expect to see, what's normal, and then what's out of the ordinary, what's abnormal,"he said.

"Some idiot decided to blow up a plane by putting a bomb in his shoe (Richard Reid in 2001) so now everyone has to take their shoes off at the security check at airports," he explains. "Now it's the same in cycling."

Although technological fraud is often discussed, the only proven case in professional cycling dates back to 2016 when the Belgian Femke Van den Driessche, 19, was found to have a motor in her bike at the U23 Cyclo-cross World Championships.

Since then despite thousands of checks nothing more has been found.

"Why haven't we found anything since 2016 why hasn't there been any proven case since the girl in Belgium, I just don't know, but it haunts me," he said.

- 'That's not me' -

To find out why that is the case the UCI is strengthening its system year after year.

In 2024, some 192 bikes were X-rayed at the Tour de France, including systematically those of the stage winner and the overall leader, a 17% increase compared to 2023

"This year there will be more," insists the UCI, which has also launched a rewards program offering incentives, including financial ones, to those who provide real information.

At last month's Critérium du Dauphiné Raudenski gave AFP a behind-the-scenes look at these tests, from the finish line, where he intercepts the riders, to the tent set up behind the podium where the bikes are examined.

"At the start of the stage the race stewards inspect the bikes with magnetic boards," he said.

"They can then alert us by phone if they notice something.

"We watch the race to see if anything stands out, like a rider changing his bike.

"That allows us to target riders we want to test come the end of the stage aside from those we automatically do."

The UCI also checks the bikes of riders who undergo doping tests.

To check the bikes, Raudenski and his team now use a portable X-ray machine with which technicians, wearing dosimeters around their necks, scan the bikes from top to bottom.

"These (X-ray) machines are so high grade we can see everything that is inside the bike," he said.

"It is like one in a hospital.

"This prevents the need to dismantle 30 bikes every day.

"There are not 150 places where one can hide something.

"Also we know exactly what we are looking for."

Raudenski says he and his team are constantly on the lookout regarding the latest technology.

"We're looking at developments across drone capabilities how they power battery-powered drones and how they can hide a smaller battery," he added.

He is "very confident", though, that the checks are effective.

"I am really keen people believe what they see in the ascent of a mountain or a dazzling attack and do not say: 'ah there you go he is using an engine'."

As for accusations that the UCI might bury a potential case to avoid damaging the sport's image, the former investigator is adamant: "That's out of the question."

"I don't know if it ever happened in the past, but that's not me. If we find something it'll be a big deal."

P.E.Steiner--NZN