Armstrong accused of doping (again!)

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It appears as though the US Anti Doping Agency can't leave Lance Armstrong alone - they've written a fifteen page letter to him littered with yet more allegations dating as far back as 1996, claiming a "pervasive pattern of doping" over many years.

Unsurprisingly, Armstrong has hit back: "I have never doped ... These charges are baseless [and] motivated by spite ... These are the very same charges and the same witnesses that the Justice Department chose not to pursue after a two-year investigation."

You can probably find a fuller account on almost any news website; my excerpt's from BBC News.

Comments

Did he? Didn't he?

Angharad's picture

Maybe we'll find out one day, maybe we won't. Either way he was still quite an athlete.

Angharad

Another county heard from

I am the county being heard from here. ;-)

I've been an enthusiastic and dedicated cyclist since 1992, here in the U.S., where I am a proud and patriotic military veteran.

For my money, and your mileage may vary, Armstrong is most likely guilty of doping. The accusations against Armstrong have been too detailed, originated from people too close to Armstrong at the time of the alleged occurrences, and the accusers have had too little to gain by going publoic, for me to doubt their truth. Or that at least some of them are true. Also, the accusations have mostly been consistent with other facts, been internally consistent, and generally been credible in manner and details.

Those who defend Armstrong leave me unconvinced when they echo his own assertion that accusers are trying to gain fame for themselves by attacking whoever is on top of the profession at the time. He says it is a natural consequence of being on top. But we haven't been seeing this in other sports, and Armstrong ignores saying anything about why cycling should be uniquely victim to such a phenomenon.

In more recent years, it has become widely admitted -- without names being named -- that probably two-thirds of the professional peloton were doping during the approximately two decades when Armstrong had his career. It is difficult to imagine that someone could win the Tour de France seven times during the peak of the doping era and not have themselves been doping. And some of those who were there at the time have been the most credible accusers, as it happens.

Some fellow Americans have felt that we prefer to fight fair in competition and no American athlete in such prominent display would ever do such a thing. The shockingly foolish and crooked attempt by Floyd Landis to get away with doping during the Tour de France was followed by Landis' disgusting, take-no-prisoners, catch-me-if-you-can, thoroughly mendacious, attempt to cover it up and get away with it. Proving that even so recently, American cyclists have been more than capable of cheating and more. Nor was he the only prominent American cyclist to be caught red handed.

Some, including Armstrong himself for most of the years in question, accuse the French and/or the French press of being on a vendetta against Armstrong. There was a seed of truth to that, but only a seed. If anything, press leaks about Armstrong's lab results served to undermine any campaign against Armstrong, not strengthen it. Late in this whole affair, Armstrong tried to learn enough French to be able to give interviews in the French press and otherwise represent himself effectively in the language of the country that hosted most of his success. Doing that apparently extinguished at least 95% of any open hostility towards Armstrong in the French press. I think the term is "r'approchement"? At any rate, there were no Frenchpersons claiming to have been present when he doped or helped him to dope or so on. Those accusers were Americans. Which makes it rather difficult to blame the French. The French press had been often eager to give too much play to reports and rumors, until Armstrong launched his "charm offensive" and learned their language. I imagine our press here would be similarly aggressive if some Frenchman who doesn't speak English suddenly became the best pitcher and hitter in Major League Baseball.

I follow with a very bemused eye the return of Vinokourov from his suspension for flagrant (and extremely foolish) doping. He seems to be leading an exemplary competitive cycling life now. I even find myself rooting for him fairly often, which was unimaginable not very long ago. I pray it is not misguided to believe he is reformed.

What bothers me most about accusations about Armstrong and doping is that it keeps making it ever harder for a person to believe that George Hincapie was not also doing it at the same time. Which has been included in some of the allegations. If doping by anyone had never existed, then Hincapie's reputation as the greatest superdomestique of all time is assured. Who knows what sort of star he would have been if he had been brought up as a team leader? His modesty and diplomacy are also exemplary, and we are told that he is one of the very most popular and respected riders in the professional peloton for many years now. (Hats off also to the great Jens Voigt and the great Fabian "Spartacus" Cancellara.)

Greatest professional cyclist so far in the 21st century? Hard to say. But it is not Lance Armstrong, in my humble and ignorant opinion. Those who sincerely compare him to Merckx or even Coppi or Bindi do a disservice those three greats. I'd like to point out that even Pantani (RIP) can point to being perhaps the last man ever to win both the Giro and the Tour de France in the same year. Of course, Pantani's own history with drugs is extremely problematical. I suspect he was far more guilty of recreational drug abuse that probably hurt his performance rather than whatever guilt he may or may not have had with doping. I am very generous with my favor and have a very long list of riders who are my favorites, from many countries, including the U.S.A. Lance Armstrong has never been one of them, although I do think he has done things and has exhibited traits that I greatly respect and even admire. Guilt or innocence aside, his dedication and training, and his influence on the sport, are undeniable.

To believe that any ...

... athlete worthy mention on the international level (or on national level in countries with more than 10 million of citizens) is not using some kind of performance enhancing drug - is at least very naive.
Just compare current qualifying results with 20 year old world records. And everything becomes clear. It's battle of pharmasuitical companies with "anti doping agencies" filtering out users of outdated drugs.
Current outlash against Armstrong just means that he preferred outdated blood transfusion rather than some new drug and pissed off some giant company.
(And yes, They are gonna get only paranoics like me ;-) )

Mysterious !

It seems hard to believe that an athlete accused of doping
should be dope tested over 500 times and has not shown a positive
result.Surely,if he was guilty of using banned substances then in
500 tests something would show up unless he was very clever or very lucky.
To me,he will always be an incredible athlete.

ALISON

Oh, indeed.

Puddintane's picture

According to the investigator hired by the Union Cycliste Internationale, Emile Vrijman, the handling of the tests was so sloppy that it was difficult to say whether they could be relied upon to prove anything. That being the case, one might as well cast lots, or perhaps read Tarot cards, and the conclusions seem almost certain to reflect a basic attitude rather than any particular correlation with facts.

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Cheers,

Puddin'

A tender heart is an asset to an editor: it helps us be ruthless in a tactful way.
--- The Chicago Manual of Style

Oh I hope not

kristina l s's picture

Just on pure principle I would hate to see him found guilty of this. But I remember well being really impressed with one Marion Jones at the Sydney 2000 Oly Games, she was gorgeous and intense, damn quick and won a bunch... and 7 years later she got tossed on her ear for doping.

Sigh, sad if true.... I just hope not, romantic notions of honour and such I guess.

Kris

I don't know Armstrong, but...

Puddintane's picture

...one of his most vocal critics later turned up as a sport reporter, and had the extreme bad taste to refer to Armstrong, who had battled life-threatening testicular and other cancers, as a "cancer in cycling," as well as embarking on a "journalistic" career with the Sunday Times, the notorious tabloid newspaper based in the UK which raised the art of muckraking to new heights of overall sleaziness. One can't help but wonder if the accusations are meant to gin up readership, and at least some of the accusers motivated by either personal animus or an eye on one's planned career as a gossip columnist. Perhaps both.

By all reports, Armstrong is not a particularly likable guy, and his history as a serial philanderer doesn't impress me at all, but many of his accusers are doing so under so-called "plea agreements" with prosecuting attorneys, in which persons already under suspicion for illegal activities are offered heavy bribes (usually couched as "leniency") in return for "coming up with the goods" on prominent figures who will make a flashier case, possibly leading to a Judgeship in the future.

Unsurprisingly, when offered a "get out of jail free" card, many potential jailbirds have come up with amazing stories, because one of the agendas of some prosecutors, like that of the Sunday Times, is to gin up controversy. Unfortunately, prosecuting attorneys can't be sued for libel, so they have their own "get out of jail free" cards, a rather nasty holdover from the concept of "sovereign immunity," under which theory a King, chosen by God, can do no wrong.

I personally don't much care for anyone who enjoys infallibility, or is granted special immunities that ordinary people don't possess. Looked at objectively, a "plea agreement" is just a euphemism for "subornation of perjury," however much one desires to overlook the implication.

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Cheers,

Puddin'

A tender heart is an asset to an editor: it helps us be ruthless in a tactful way.
--- The Chicago Manual of Style

Armstrong

My feelings is it seems that some group has vindata with all are sports players that do good. as someone else said with all the drug testing that these players go thru. I think that it is bull. He went thru a Cancer problem and he probally had alot of shots for that. Being he was on top for so long, and the way the press hounded him, I just don't think these charges should happen, Period

Richard

Sorry...

But "vindata" made my day :-)
I currently favoring dry red wines from Moldova vintage 2008 and 2006. Close second are wines from Azerbaijan, vintage 2008 and 2010. French wines vintage 2003 are extremely good but quite rare now and very expensive.
:-)