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September 17, 2005

Lance Armstrong rules out comeback; too busy clearing his name

CHICAGO (AP) - Lance Armstrong won't be getting back on his bike after all.
After recent hints he might return to the Tour de France next summer to "yank the chains" of the French, the seven-time champion said Thursday that defending his reputation against allegations of doping during his 1999 win had soured any thoughts of returning to the event he dominated.

CHICAGO (AP) - Lance Armstrong won't be getting back on his bike after all.

After recent hints he might return to the Tour de France next summer to "yank the chains" of the French, the seven-time champion said Thursday that defending his reputation against allegations of doping during his 1999 win had soured any thoughts of returning to the event he dominated.
"I'm sick of this," Armstrong said during a late-afternoon conference call.

"Sitting here today, dealing with all this stuff again, knowing if I were to go back, there's no way I could get a fair shake - on the roadside, in doping control, or the labs," he said.

A moment later, Armstrong added, "I think it's better that way. I'm happy with the way my career went and ended and I'm not coming back."

Armstrong spoke with reporters hours after a nasty tug of war broke out between the bosses of the international cycling union and the World Anti-Doping Agency over who leaked documents used by the French newspaper L'Equipe to accuse him of using performance-enhancing drugs.

During a 45-minute question-answer session, the cyclist and his handlers left little doubt whom they believed was responsible: WADA chief Dick Pound.

It was the Canadian Pound who set off another round of charges and counter-charges earlier Thursday by accusing cycling union boss Hein Verbruggen of supplying documents used by a French newspaper to charge that Armstrong used the blood-boosting drug EPO during his first tour win in 1999.

Armstrong, who has repeatedly denied ever using banned drugs, said he was the victim of a "witch hunt" after the report came out last month in L'Equipe, France's leading sports daily.

Armstrong said he was concerned Pound might be seeking revenge for an open letter he sent to newspapers and the WADA chief several years ago, defending his sport against the widely held notion that cycling was rife with performance-enhancing drugs.

"I was not trying to say that Dick was bad guy or a crook," Armstrong said of his letter, "but I might want to say that today. ... He's trying to divert attention from the serious ethical issues involving WADA and himself."

His agent and attorney went even further, accusing Pound of smearing Armstrong in public without conclusive proof or due process. They also said Pound had a hand in ensuring that an identifying code was included with the results of tests for EPO conducted by a French lab on Armstrong's urine samples six years after they were taken.

If true, that would violate WADA's own protocol requiring that any tests be done strictly for purposes of research.

Calls seeking comment from Pound at both his WADA office and home in Montreal were not immediately returned Thursday.

Earlier Thursday, Pound said he received a letter from Verbruggen acknowledging the cycling union, known as UCI, had provided L'Equipe's reporter with forms indicating Armstrong had doped during his first Tour victory.

"Mr. Verbruggen told us that he showed all the forms of Mr. Armstrong to L'Equipe and that he even gave the journalist a copy of one of the documents," Pound said during a conference call from Montreal.

"I don't understand why they're not stepping up to that and saying, 'Well, I guess we do know how the name got public, we made it possible,"' he said.

But Armstrong said that he himself had authorized releasing the forms to L'Equipe. He said the request from the newspaper was to check whether the UCI had granted him any medical exemptions during competition, not to find out if the numerical code used by race official to identify Armstrong matched the one attached to the urine samples.

Last Friday, the UCI said it had not received enough information to make a judgment on the doping accusations.

It also criticized L'Equipe for targeting Armstrong and Pound for making public statements on the "likely guilt of the athlete" without knowing all the facts.

Pound countered by saying, "It's ... quite clear the only way there could have been a match between the code numbers and a particular athlete was on the basis of information supplied by the UCI."

He then questioned the UCI's willingness to fully investigate L'Equipe's accusations and wondered whether the cycling body was merely looking for a "scapegoat."

If so, Armstrong suggested Pound should look in a mirror.

"Is Dick Pound a vindictive person and somebody who holds grudges?" he said. "Perhaps."

Posted by admin at September 17, 2005 04:53 PM

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