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View Full Version : Lance on the chopping block six years later


hammertime
08-24-2005, 06:01 PM
PARIS (AP) - The director of the Tour de France claims Lance Armstrong has "fooled" the sports world and that the seven-time champion owes fans an explanation over new allegations he used a performance-boosting drug.

Tour director Jean-Marie Leblanc's comments appeared in the French sports daily L'Equipe on Wednesday, a day after the newspaper reported that six urine samples provided by Armstrong during the '99 Tour tested positive for the red blood cell-booster EPO.
"For the first time - and these are no longer rumours, or insinuations, these are proven scientific facts - someone has shown me that in 1999, Armstrong had a banned substance called EPO in his body," Leblanc told L'Equipe.

"The ball is now in his court. Why, how, by whom? He owes explanations to us and to everyone who follows the tour. Today, what L'Equipe revealed shows me that I was fooled. We were all fooled."

On Tuesday, Leblanc called the latest accusations against Armstrong shocking and troubling.

Armstrong, a frequent target of L'Equipe, vehemently denied the allegations Tuesday, calling the article "tabloid journalism."

"I will simply restate what I have said many times: I have never taken performance-enhancing drugs," he said on his website.

Armstrong, who retired from professional cycling after winning the Tour a month ago, was not immediately available for comment regarding Leblanc's latest remarks.

EPO, formally known as erythropoietin, was on the list of banned substances at the time Armstrong won the first of his seven Tour's, but there was no effective test then to detect it.

The allegations surfaced six years later because EPO tests on the 1999 samples were carried out only last year - when scientists at a lab outside Paris used them for research to perfect EPO testing. The national anti-doping laboratory in Chatenay-Malabry said it promised to hand its finding to the World Anti-Doping Agency, provided it was never used to penalize riders.

Five-time cycling champion Miguel Indurain said he couldn't understand why scientists would use samples from the 1999 Tour for their tests.

"That seems bizarre, and I don't know who would have the authorization to do it," he told L'Equipe. "I don't even know if it's legal to keep these samples."

L'Equipe's investigation was based on the second set of two samples used in doping tests. The first set were used in 1999 for analysis at the time. Without those samples, any disciplinary action against Armstrong would be impossible, French Sports Minister Jean-Francois Lamour said.

Lamour said he had doubts about L'Equipe's report because he had not seen the originals of some of the documents that appeared in the paper.

"I do not confirm it," he told RTL radio. But he added: "If what L'Equipe says is true, I can tell you that it's a serious blow for cycling."

The International Cycling Union did not begin using a urine test for EPO until 2001, though it was banned in 1990. For years, it had been impossible to detect the drug, which builds endurance by boosting the production of oxygen-rich red blood cells.

Jacques de Ceaurriz, the head of France's anti-doping laboratory, which developed the EPO urine test, told Europe-1 radio that at least 15 urine samples from the 1999 Tour had tested positive for EPO.

Separately, the lab said it could not confirm that the positive results were Armstrong's. It noted that the samples were anonymous, bearing only a six-digit number to identify the rider, and could not be matched with the name of any one cyclist.

However, L'Equipe said it was able to make the match.

On one side of a page Tuesday, it showed what it claimed were the results of EPO tests from anonymous riders used for lab research. On the other, it showed Armstrong's medical certificates, signed by doctors and riders after doping tests - and bearing the same identifying number printed on the results.

L'Equipe is owned by the Amaury Group whose subsidiary, Amaury Sport Organization, organizes the Tour de France and other sporting events. The paper often questioned Armstrong's clean record and frequently took jabs at him - portraying him as too arrogant, too corporate and too good to be real.

"Never to such an extent, probably, has the departure of a champion been welcomed with such widespread relief," the paper griped the day after Armstrong won his seventh straight Tour win and retired from cycling.

Leblanc suggested that in the future, urine samples could be stashed away for future testing as detection methods improve - another possible weapon in the fight against doping.

"We're so tired of doping that all means are good as long as they are morally acceptable," he told L'Equipe.

megale3
08-24-2005, 07:26 PM
You know there are people that still believe that Elvis is alive and is living here in Oregon. I know that when someone or group works hard enough that they will soon find a thread that will unravel the finest fabrick of its integrety and funtionality. Lets just move on to the next champion and let their herassment begin.

AC
08-24-2005, 08:47 PM
A class B sample kept who knows where for 7 years.

However, in the current "steroid environment", any accusation is treated with hysteria. I'm curious why they didn't test a 2005 sample immediately after the race and await the results before awarding the trophy? In the Olympics, Ben Johnson was stripped of his medal within days.

Cheeze
08-24-2005, 10:14 PM
How long do they keep biology samples from professional athletes? I just can;t believe that a sample from 1999 was still in someone's refrigerator!

Man when I was in college we cleaned out the ice box at least once a year. Just think if the French Press had put that much energy into creating world peace or riding the world of hunger..........

Cheeze

hammertime
08-25-2005, 12:32 AM
All I did when I read that report was shake my head. Seriously, WHO CARES if an athletes takes drugs in this day and age? They ALL take drugs. Heck, even baseball players are taking them!!!!

Now, if a heart surgeon or brain surgeon or pilot or school bus driver were caught, I'd REALLY be in a panic.

Hmmm. I wonder if they ventilated the room prior to opening that jar. :shock:

megale3
08-25-2005, 11:54 AM
They ALL take drugs. Heck, even baseball players are taking them!!!!


Hmmm. I wonder if they ventilated the room prior to opening that jar. :shock:

LOL
Good God NO!!! Not baseball players! that is just too much to handle in one day.
M
I want a bourbon, I want a shot -want a beer.....

raptor
08-26-2005, 02:56 AM
I believe Lance. (Did you see him on Larry King?)

He's probably the most-tested athlete in the world, and the test they ran on the old sample was suspicious. AND he was beating pro triathletes at age 17.

Lynn

Cheeze
09-09-2005, 01:03 AM
So is he POed enough to ride the tour in 2006? If the Crowe/Armstrong wedding get's scheduled for August 2006 you know he's back.

Cheeze

Patrick
09-11-2005, 11:27 PM
I have to doubt he will return to Le Tour, but I'm even more certain that he misses the “roar of the crowd and the smell of the greasepaint (chamois cream).” If he is no longer wanted by Italian law enforcement, I would bet on the Giro if he returns to European stage racing.

megale3
09-12-2005, 12:15 PM
“roar of the crowd and the smell of the greasepaint (chamois cream).”
Wear enough of this stuff and you can block out any roar :shock:
Patrick why does this diaper lube discription give me the willies??? :D
Megale

Patrick
09-24-2005, 06:40 PM
:lol: