Yep! Just have a look at the top 10 in 2000. Pick a clean rider out of that lot
1 Lance Armstrong (USA) US Postal Service 92h 33' 08"
2 Jan Ullrich (GER) Telekom +6' 02"
3 Joseba Beloki (ESP) Festina +10' 04"
4 Christophe Moreau (FRA) Festina +10' 34"
5 Roberto Heras (ESP) Kelme +11' 50"
6 Richard Virenque (FRA) Polti +13' 26"
7 Santiago Botero (COL) Kelme +14' 18"
8 Fernando Escartín (ESP) Kelme +17' 21"
9 Francisco Mancebo (ESP) Banesto +18' 09"
10 Daniele Nardello (ITA) Mapei +18' 25"
Going from a
Cycling Weekly article, and allowing for more recent info:
Armstrong - fingered by USADA
Ullrich, Beloki, Botero and Mancebo - named in Operacion Puerto documents, Ullrich also popped for an OOC amphetamine positive.
Moreau, Virenque - Festina affair
Heras - popped for EPO at the 2006 Vuelta a Espana, which he had won. Stripped of that race win and banned for two years
Which leaves Escartin and Nardello...
We could discard Escartin because former Kelme rider Jesús Manzano exposed systematic doping in the team in an interview in 2004. Although Escartin left Kelme at the end of the 2000 season, we can't be sure how far back from 2004 any team-wide doping was going on for.
Thus Nardello might
possibly be the moral victor of the 200 TdF.
The following blog post shows why trying to rewrite the post-LeMond/Indurain years is fraught with difficulty. See just how far down the GC the author had to go to get a plausibly clean top 10!
http://cypresstrees.blogspot.co.uk/2012/07/revised-tour-de-france-top-10-clean.html