The fact remains that Lance Armstrong's feat was impossible, just as
it is presently impossible to withstand modern athletic training
without a little help. I know it is still going on because you
rarely see lasting hamstring injuries.
The protocol is simple. Train to your limit. Use steroids to
recover. Repeat. What would be a multi day recovery cycle becomes a
few hours recovery cycle. That is just what is necessary to mount a
thirty day campaign on the Tour de France.
Training to your limit means blowing your muscles out for days. I
did it once by pushing my limit in the morning and repeating the
process four hours later. I repented for five days and the pain was
excruciating. Remember that. A simple misstep and your tour is over
unless you have meds that save you.
Before steroids, consistency was unlikely. I personally suspect that
is still largely true. What that means is that every athlete has a
powerful incentive to reach competition grade through the application
of steroids and then rely on steroid free conditioning training while
actually in preparation for competition itself when testing is
inevitable.
Lance Armstrong
stripped of seven Tour de France titles: He ‘deserves to be
forgotten’
Julien Pretot
GENEVA—Lance
Armstrong was stripped of his seven Tour de France titles and
banned for life Monday after the International Cycling Union (UCI)
ratified the United States Anti-Doping Agency’s (USADA) sanctions
against the American.
The long-awaited
decision has left cycling facing its “greatest crisis” according
to UCI president Pat McQuaid and has destroyed Armstrong’s last
hope of clearing his name.
\
“Lance Armstrong has
no place in cycling. Lance Armstrong deserves to be forgotten in
cycling,” McQuaid told a news conference as he outlined how
cycling, long battered by doping problems for decades, would have to
start all over again.
“The UCI wishes to
begin that journey on that path forward today by confirming that it
will not appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport and that it
will recognise the sanction that USADA has imposed.
“I was sickened by
what I read in the USADA report.”
On Oct. 10, USADA
published a report into Armstrong which alleged the now-retired rider
had been involved in the “most sophisticated, professionalized and
successful doping program that sport has ever seen.”
Armstrong, 41, had
previously elected not to contest USADA charges, prompting USADA to
propose his punishment pending confirmation from cycling’s world
governing body.
Former Armstrong
teammates, including Toronto’s Michael Barry, at his U.S.
Postal and Discovery Channel outfits, where he won his seven
successive Tour titles from 1999 to 2005, testified against him and
themselves and were given reduced bans by the American authorities.
“It wasn’t until
the intervention of federal agents . . . they called these riders in
and they put down a gun and badge on the table in front of them and
said ‘you’re now facing a grand jury you must tell the truth’
that those riders broke down,” McQuaid added.
Armstrong, widely
accepted as one of the greatest cyclists of all time given he fought
back from cancer to dominate the sport, has always denied doping and
says he has never failed a doping test.
He said he had stopped
contesting the charges after years of probes and rumours because
“there comes a point in every man’s life when he has to say,
‘Enough is enough.’ ”
McQuaid, who faced
criticism from several quarters for his and the UCI’s handling of
the affair, said he would not be resigning.
“Cycling has a
future. This is not the first time cycling has reached a crossroads
or that it has had to begin anew,” he said in front of a packed
room full of journalists and television cameras.
“When I took over
(as president) in 2005 I made the fight against doping my priority. I
acknowledged cycling had a culture of doping. Cycling has come a long
way. I have no intention of resigning as president of the UCI.
“I am sorry we
couldn’t catch every damn one of them red handed and throw them out
of the sport.”
Other issues such as
the potential re-awarding of Armstrong’s Tour titles and the matter
of prize money will be discussed by the UCI Management Committee on
Friday.
Tour director
Christian Prudhomme has said he believes no rider should inherit the
titles given doping was so widespread among the peloton at the time
but McQuaid made it clear the decision rested with his organization,
not the Tour.
USADA charged five
people over the doping ring. Doctors Luis Garcia del Moral and
Michele Ferrari and trainer Pepe Marti have been banned for life
while Armstrong’s mentor Johan Bruyneel has chosen to go to
arbitration along with doctor Pedro Celaya.
Armstrong’s last
hope that the UCI might not ratify USADA’s ruling sprang from
long-running dispute between the two bodies over who should handle
the case.
In statements issued
at the news conference, the UCI continued the feud with USADA despite
ratifying its decision.
“Even apart from any
discussion on jurisdiction, it would have been better that the
evidence collected by USADA had been assessed by a neutral body or
person who was not involved in collecting the evidence and
prosecuting the defendant,” it said.
“This would have
avoided both the criticism of a witch hunt against Mr Armstrong and
the criticism that the UCI had a conflict of interest.”
The UCI also said it
had dope tested Armstrong 218 times and the fact he never tested
positive and “beat the system” means that other organizations
such as the World Anti-Doping Agency should share the responsibility
of accepting the results.
USADA chief Travis
Tygart issued a statement approving of the UCI’s action but warning
that more needed to be done.
“Despite its prior
opposition to USADA’s investigation into doping on the U.S. Postal
Service cycling team and within the sport, USADA is glad that the UCI
finally reversed course in this case and has made the credible
decision available to it,” he said.
“This determination
to uphold USADA’s decision on the U.S. Postal Services case does
not by itself clean up cycling nor does it ensure the sport has moved
past the obstacles that allowed doping to flourish in the age of EPO
and blood transfusions.
“For cycling to
truly move forward and for the world to know what went on in cycling,
it is essential that an independent and meaningful Truth and
Reconciliation Commission be established so that the sport can fully
unshackle itself from the past.”
In recent years the
Tour de France and cycling had looked to be winning the battle
against dopers but when asked if the sport would one day be free of
the scourge, McQuaid answered: “No.”
The International
Olympic Committee (IOC) said it would take its time to digest the
news amid suggestions that Armstrong could be stripped of his 2000
Sydney Olympics time trial bronze.
“We will study UCI’s
response to the USADA report and await to receive their full decision
including further potential sanctions against Lance Armstrong as well
as regarding any ramifications to his case,” an IOC official said.
As a cycling enthusiast, I think USADA is doing good move to persecute those who cheat. But as a friend and fan of Lance, I am deeply saddened.
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