Armstrong back in the firing line
Lance Armstrong's reported admission to Oprah Winfrey that he used
performance-enhancing drugs means he will go down in history as the most
brazen drug cheat the sport has ever seen.
The disgraced American cyclist's admission, reported Monday by USA
Today, rewrites 14 years of deception and repeated denials that he used
performance-enhancing drugs to win scores of international races,
including the Tour de France seven times.
His years of dominance in the sport's greatest race raised cycling's
profile in the United States to new heights and gave Armstrong a
platform to promote cancer awareness and research.
But the Texan's world caved in further after his admission and he
must now face the legal and financial consequences as well as the
backlash from the cancer community and his own Livestrong charity, to
which he apologized prior to the interview with talkshow diva Oprah
Winfrey.
Richard Pound, the former head of the World Anti-Doping Agency, said
he would have liked to see Armstrong face a proper interrogation panel
and that the confession could backfire if critics aren't satisfied with
the platform he chose.
"I would have preferred he did it in front of 'Face The Nation' or
'Meet the Press' and get some hard questions from people," Pound told
AFP from his home in Montreal, referring to prominent US Sunday
television talkshows.
"What he risks if he gets a softball outcome is people will be even
more put off. His effort to redeem himself will have fallen on the
rocks." Once a symbol of perseverance in the face of incredible odds,
cancer survivor Armstrong sensationally conceded defeat in his fight to
contest the doping charges against him in August.
The US Anti-Doping Agency published a damning report late last year
that laid bare his guilt, claiming Armstrong was at the heart of "the
most sophisticated, professionalised and successful doping programme
that sport has ever seen."
"He was not just a part of the doping culture on his team," said
USADA. "He enforced and re-enforced it." International Cycling Union
president Pat McQuaid told reporters he was "sickened" by the
revelations, adding: "Lance Armstrong has no place in cycling."
The decision to reportedly confess to Winfrey leaves Armstrong's
sporting legacy in tatters but for all his detractors, there remains
some admirers, especially among his American fans.
For Armstrong's supporters, the doping allegations pale in comparison
to his battle with life-threatening cancer and the work of his
charitable foundation, which he founded to help others living with the
disease.
Now, however, the cyclist is left with the tough task of explaining
to those who stuck with him for many years why he lied to them for so
long.
Doctors had given Armstrong a less than 50 percent chance of survival
when he was diagnosed in 1996 with testicular cancer that had spread to
his lungs and brain.
He persevered through surgery and chemotherapy and returned to
cycling but was little known in his homeland when he won his first Tour
de France title in 1999. The Lance Armstrong Foundation has raised
almost $500 million since it was created in 1997.
But in the aftermath of the allegations, several top sponsors dropped
Armstrong, forcing him to quit as chairman of Livestrong.
Even in his glory days of cycling, many were sceptical of his powers.
In 1999, a trace amount of a banned corticosteroid was found, which
cycling officials explained by saying Armstrong was authorised to use a
small amount of cream containing the drug to treat saddle sores. After
his 2000 Tour triumph, French authorities probed his US Postal Service
team but brought no charges.
Critics seized on the sportsman's friendship with Italian doctor
Michele Ferrari, who was banned by Italian authorities over doping in
2002.
AFP
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