This is dynamite! Anti-Doping Norway's ABP-expert Mats Drange reviewed blood profiles from 2001-2007 and found clear evidence of EPO and blood doping.
http://www.vg.no/sport/artikkel.php?artid=10149928
It was in 2007 that Drange was tasked to set up a so-called "national blood profile program." It involved the collection of a number of blood values of Norwegian performers, in order to hunt abnormal variations in individual athletes. Such variation may suggest EPO use or traditional blood doping.
In this work as Drange also on older blood values back to 2001, to acquire knowledge. It was then that he discovered variations caused him to turn on the alarm Anti-Doping Norway.
"Several times, I had to double and triple check if I so voted, for having tried every possible explanations I could not find another answer to these results than blood doping," writes Drange in his book.
He claims to have found traces of both the banned substance EPO turbo, and blood transfusion of his own blood, the blood profiles of Norwegian performers. When the wacky variations also voted against major competitions, he decided to take matters further.
Later, in 2008, he sent the information anonymously to an international expert on blood values. The answer was not to be misunderstood: The tests indicated the use of blood transfusions or EPO.
Mads Drange does not mention the names of the performers in his book. He reveals neither sport. But according to the former doping hunter, there was talk athletes as both are active now, and earlier in the 2000s.
"The situation was difficult. We sat thus on information about both older and still active exercisers who probably did drugs currently or had drugged the former, but the information was of such a nature that it was impossible to take it further in any way other than to intensify the testing » it says in the book "The Great doping bluff."
In 2009 it was possible to establish disciplinary cases by the finding of abnormal blood values. Then Mads Drange immediate change in blood profiles of the affected athletes.
"Some stopped to dope themselves, while others are now almost always lay beneath the variability that was needed to run a case, even if the profile showed signs of manipulation," writes Drange.
Later in the book he comes following claim:
"... I also know that there are Norwegian elite athletes from several sports that have drugged him, and who still do drugs, even in a country in which for many years has been one of the leading testing programs in the world. "