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Half of Tour de France winners say Lance Armstrong should get his seven titles back

Dutch newspaper polls former champions – results show generational split

More than half of the winners of the Tour de France who are still alive believe that Lance Armstrong should be reinstated as winner of the seven editions of the race between 1999 and 2005.

All but two of the surviving 25 champions responded to a poll by Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf, which asked them whether the American, banned for life in 2012 and stripped of his seven victories, should have them given back to him, reports Telegraph.co.uk.

Tour de France organisers ASO now show a blank space in the list of winners of the race for the seven editions where Armstrong stood on the top step of the podium in Paris, declining to award the victories to the runners-up, almost all of whom have been sanctioned for doping at some point.

Among those who said Armstrong should be reinstated was Ireland’s Stephen Roche, who won the yellow jersey in 1987, the same year he won the Giro d’Italia and world championship.

He said: “Armstrong should stay on that list [of winners]. In the 100-year history of the race you can't not have a winner for seven years. Doping has been part of sport, not only for cycling, for decades. Who tells me Jacques Anquetil won clean? Should we take his victories away? Or why does Richard Virenque get to keep his polka dot jerseys?"

Older riders tended to believe that Armstrong should be given the titles back, while those who won the race more recently said he should not, including the winners of the last three editions – Cadel Evans, Sir Bradley Wiggins and Chris Froome, who said: "Those seven empty places symbolise an era. We should leave it like it is."

There were exceptions though, with Oscar Pereiro, champion in 2006, and Andy Schleck, awarded the 2010 victory when Alberto Contador was stripped of it in 2012, the only two winners from recent years to say that Armstrong should be viewed as winner of those seven editions.

Schleck said: “Who remembers who was second place in those races? I wouldn't know myself. You can't have seven races without a winner, so just leave Armstrong on the list."

Other riders who backed the former US Postal rider’s reinstatement included Felice Gimondi, Jan Janssen and Joop Zoetemelk, who said: "They should never have erased Armstrong from the list. You can't change results 10 years later. Of course it's not good what he did but you can't rewrite history."

Race director Christian Prudhomme made it clear that ASO would not be reconsidering its position. "You ask the people along the route," he explained. "It's clear, his name will not be on the list again. Period."

When in October 2012 former UCI president Pat McQuaid ratified the sanctions imposed by the United States Anti-Doping Agency, he opened the press conference by saying, “Lance Armstrong has no place in cycling.”

He too seems to have changed his view, telling journalists at the Tour de France on Tuesday’s rest day, “I don't necessarily think the same now. Armstrong is the victim of a USADA witch hunt" – words used repeatedly by Armstrong’s own defence team until he finally confessed in January last year.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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daddyELVIS | 9 years ago
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Indurain
Indurain
Indurain
Indurain
Indurain
Riis
Ullrich
Pantani
no winner
no winner
no winner
no winner
no winner
no winner
no winner

Joke!!!

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mattsccm | 9 years ago
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"This article doesn't say anything other than half of the surviving Tour de France winners are a bit thick. Just because they have won the Tour de France, doesn't mean that they are good judges of morality or sportsmanship. It means that they are strong climbers and time triallists, etc."

Ex winner are you? Doubt it so mind your own business. No right to comment about someone who was there. If your views are valid so are theirs. You can't have it your way only.
I have no liking for the bloke. I was one of his very few "haters" when he was winning so I was right then! (sticks tongue out)
Point is you cannot have a competition without a winner. Its politics. He was still irst over the line. Just disqualified afterwards.
the bullying issue is different. One mans bullying is another just getting his way.
Just like many of the posters here. If anyone disagrees they get shouted down. How about a collective noun to describe them? Armstrongs.

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Joelsim | 9 years ago
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A stroke of luck that you are a cycling fan and your surname's Peyresourde, Colin.

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Colin Peyresourde replied to Joelsim | 9 years ago
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Joelsim wrote:

A stroke of luck that you are a cycling fan and your surname's Peyresourde, Colin.

Are you a genius? It's a nom de plume.  24

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bikerforever68 | 9 years ago
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Doesn't matter if the record book shows he won or not,the fact is whatever your opinion,he did win 7 seven times,I was lucky to watch all 7 tours and got into cycling because of this fantastic era of cycling.yes he cheated just like the other 20 podium riders in thoses seven years.im not condoning drugs,but we all know it's part of out sport.but the fact that everyone is still talking about him,just confirms his status in the cycling world

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pmr replied to bikerforever68 | 9 years ago
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bikerforever68 wrote:

Doesn't matter if the record book shows he won or not,the fact is whatever your opinion,he did win 7 seven times,I was lucky to watch all 7 tours and got into cycling because of this fantastic era of cycling.yes he cheated just like the other 20 podium riders in thoses seven years.im not condoning drugs,but we all know it's part of out sport.but the fact that everyone is still talking about him,just confirms his status in the cycling world

He DID NOT win 7 times, at the time it seemed that way, and you might not like to think that all that inspiration you got was in actual fact a great big fraud but you need to get over it.
What he did was cheat, plain and simple, the same as if you take a short cut or cling on to a car all day, he broke the rules and cheated deliberately, consistently, and maliciously. In hindsight we can say that he did not win because he cheated.
If you choose to believe that EVERY SINGLE rider that was going for GC was cheating, and that they ALL had the EXACT same level and access to the same drugs and doping that he did, then you are truly deluded. Without the above being true you cannot even say he was best of the dopers, all you can actually give him him credit for, is having the best doping program.
And if you are the type of person that gives someone credit for that then well, I wont say anymore.
Just get over it, there's no point clinging on to this false idol.

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Leviathan replied to pmr | 9 years ago
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pmr wrote:

He DID NOT win 7 times,

I'm pretty certain I saw him wearing a yellow jersey and drinking champagne in Paris. The fact is the blank space is there, we all know who fits into that blank space. Unless they reassign the tours he won't disappear, evidenced by the void where his name should be. You know why we can't reassign the titles so why complain. He is a CHEAT and a WINNER, just like Diego Maradona. The two cannot be separated.

The way I look at it now is a drama (or soap opera if you will) that is still exasperating, shocking and entertaining as it ever was, and it will continue for many years to come.

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Kadenz | 9 years ago
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Just to clarify - my reply was to the post by mattsccm.

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minnellium | 9 years ago
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This article doesn't say anything other than half of the surviving Tour de France winners are a bit thick. Just because they have won the Tour de France, doesn't mean that they are good judges of morality or sportsmanship. It means that they are strong climbers and time triallists, etc.

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eschelar | 9 years ago
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Of course half of the TDF riders think he should be entitled to his medals. Half of the TDF riders *are doping* and won't be found out for several years. So of course they think that wins with cheats count. Otherwise, their wins would mean nothing too.

Eventually doping will become so prevalent that there will be zero credibility and the entire sport will become irrelevant.

Oh wait, hasn't that already happened?

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Wrongfoot | 9 years ago
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Nice article. Now I know which of the current riders and teams to boycott because they STILL DON'T GET IT!  14

It'll only be a tiny bit of consumer power but bringing cash into it changes things. If cheating costs Armstrong enough of his previous earnings in the pending court cases you can bet that the pros will re-assess the value of cheating pretty damn quick.

As to the old guard attitudes, anyone with a skeleton in their closet will be feeling that their earnings and reputations are vulnerable so of course they'll want to make Armstrong's actions look more reasonable. Humans mostly do what's in their own interest after all.

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Colin Peyresourde | 9 years ago
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The LA PR machine seems in over-drive. A lot of stuff coming out about him all over the shop. Seems very cynical.

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crazy-legs | 9 years ago
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Quote:

' I don't mind LA as a person at all actually'

Seriously?

I don't mind him as a rider too much.

Sorry, that's kind of what I meant. Next time I'll try typing without trying to watch the tour highlights at the same time!

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andyp | 9 years ago
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' I don't mind LA as a person at all actually'

Seriously?

I don't mind him as a rider too much. The doping doesn't bother me particularly given the state of professional sport (and not just cycling).

The destruction of others' lives, reputations etc...that's the bad stuff. Or not, depending on whether you have morals or not, I guess.

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Esper | 9 years ago
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Lance was quite happy to portray himself as 'Cycling Jesus' and pity those who couldn't believe.

Well, just like Jesus he's now being made a scapegoat for the sins of professional cycling.

It's all very poetic.

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crazy-legs | 9 years ago
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Quote:

I've been watching the Armstrong Lie - not finished yet - but one of the things that I'm not quite buying is his statement that they began doping as a group because they were getting comprehensively kicked by other teams, week in week out, while he was wearing the rainbow jersey. So, you won the Worlds clean, but get routinely battered every week? What, the rest of the peloton thoughts the Worlds wasn't worth doping for?

That's actually backed up by Emma O'Reilly's book and by various other snippets of information. American cycling was nowhere close to what the Europeans were doing at that time - not even on the radar. So while good Americans could win races clean (or by buying off their opponents which is an accusation levelled at Lance in one of his early domestic US victories), you'd go to Europe and while it's easy enough to survive a One Day Classic or a few days Tour clean, it becomes a different kettle of fish when you do a 3-week race and Europeans and especially the eastern-bloc countries have relatively advanced doping programmes, you're clean and you get your arse handed to you.

Doping doesn't make you fast - I mean I could take all the EPO and blood transfusions going, I'd still be shit. What it does allow you to do is train much harder and recover much better, it's that which makes you fast. The rider still needs to put the work in and have the raw talent and ability to make it count.

LA was obviously extremely talented (in much the same way that Pantani was obviously a superb climber way before he started doping) but more than that, LA was lucky. 7 Tours and no major crashes or injuries or illness is incredible when you look at it recently and see how easy it is for favourites (Wiggins/Vinokourov in 2011, Froome/Contador in 2014) to crash out or otherwise get injured (Geraint Thomas riding with a fractured pelvis for example). And luck counts for an awful lot, especially in one-day races which are far less predictable than a 3-week Tour.

Removing Lance's titles was a political thing - there's no other explanation for it when you also have people like Riis still in there as a winner and still managing a team. I'm not sure that the argument about reinstating them actually achieves much. I don't mind LA as a person at all actually, what bugs me is the fact that cycling refuses to move on - it all comes back to Lance this, Lance that and the legacy of mistrust that he's left - every stage win pored over, every performance looked at for evidence of doping. It's taken away the spectacle of the sport.

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Colin Peyresourde replied to crazy-legs | 9 years ago
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crazy-legs wrote:

Doping doesn't make you fast - I mean I could take all the EPO and blood transfusions going, I'd still be shit. What it does allow you to do is train much harder and recover much better, it's that which makes you fast. The rider still needs to put the work in and have the raw talent and ability to make it count.

This is a weird reading on doping. Sure, if you EPO up a donkey then you'll just get a faster donkey. But we are talking a cocktail of steroids, HGH and EPO. The Postal teams budget was off the scale. You put all those things into your donkey and actually get a thoroughbred, and it won't look like a donkey so you'll never know what it would have been.

Yes, the drugs do have a different effect on different people, and yes, you do need to train, but that doesn't make Lance great, because the truth is we don't know what was his natural state, and if he wanted to train as much as he liked, he'd pop some steroids.

Chances are we will never know when he really started popping drugs. If I was a betting man I would say he was doing steroids back in high school because that's the sort of man he is. High steroid use, of course, being a cause for testicular cancer....

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ch | 9 years ago
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The attitude part of the war on doping may be at high tide, but the technical part of being able to detect EPO usage is not. Micro dosing can still be used without detection. Micro dosing just enough to prevent hemoglobin levels from falling during the tour (as would be natural) would not trigger a blood passport alert.
I am not accusing anybody but think this technical problem should be addressed.

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Kadenz | 9 years ago
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That tells you all you need to know about their attitude to drugs.

And the fact that it was the most recent winners - Evans, Wiggo and Froome - who don't think Armstrong should be given those titles back suggests that some progress is being made in the anti-doping war. Well done to them.

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farrell | 9 years ago
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I'd love to be a mediocre also ran if mediocre also ran meant being a national triathlon champion as a teenager and clocking up a few decent wins including a Tour stage in my early 20s.

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pwake replied to farrell | 9 years ago
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 13

farrell wrote:

I'd love to be a mediocre also ran if mediocre also ran meant being a national triathlon champion as a teenager and clocking up a few decent wins including a Tour stage in my early 20s.

It's that Colin bloke showing his ignorance again; last week he thought Dave Brailsford was a Director Sportif.
Oi, Colin. Do some research!

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andyp | 9 years ago
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'So, you won the Worlds clean'

No. No he didn't.

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Colin Peyresourde | 9 years ago
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I think part of the problem about Armstrong is that the scientific aspect of his wins seems so large. Evidence suggests that Armstrong was a regular pro-peloton doper before his cancer (Betsy Andreu's bedside comments withstanding) and at that point he was just an ordinary rider in the scheme of things. Basically by pushing the envelope of drug taking he won seven titles. It's not just that he doped, but the extent to how he doped - he would otherwise have been a nobody, an also-ran. So you cannot tell me that he was just like all the others. What he did probably risked his and other peoples lives.

We could also go on about self-serving lies, manipulation and bullying but that's just the nasty side of LA.....

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notfastenough replied to Colin Peyresourde | 9 years ago
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Colin Peyresourde wrote:

I think part of the problem about Armstrong is that the scientific aspect of his wins seems so large. Evidence suggests that Armstrong was a regular pro-peloton doper before his cancer (Betsy Andreu's bedside comments withstanding) and at that point he was just an ordinary rider in the scheme of things. Basically by pushing the envelope of drug taking he won seven titles. It's not just that he doped, but the extent to how he doped - he would otherwise have been a nobody, an also-ran. So you cannot tell me that he was just like all the others. What he did probably risked his and other peoples lives.

We could also go on about self-serving lies, manipulation and bullying but that's just the nasty side of LA.....

I've been watching the Armstrong Lie - not finished yet - but one of the things that I'm not quite buying is his statement that they began doping as a group because they were getting comprehensively kicked by other teams, week in week out, while he was wearing the rainbow jersey. So, you won the Worlds clean, but get routinely battered every week? What, the rest of the peloton thoughts the Worlds wasn't worth doping for?

At the time, I was kind of on the fence with regards Lance, but it was nothing to do with denials or "never failed a test" etc. In those 7 tour wins, he never crashed, never had a mechanical (other than punctures or whatever), everything was so organised, these guys were into marginal gains before it was trendy. Contrast that with how amateur many teams are reputed to be, and the potential gap seemed vast. Then incidents like Joseba Beloki crashing and Lance just sucking it up and coming out the other side after a spell of mountain biking just seemed to illustrate that actually, this guy really can ride a bike. Ho hum, hindsight and all that.

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JeevesBath replied to Colin Peyresourde | 9 years ago
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Colin Peyresourde wrote:

I think part of the problem about Armstrong is that the scientific aspect of his wins seems so large. Evidence suggests that Armstrong was a regular pro-peloton doper before his cancer (Betsy Andreu's bedside comments withstanding) and at that point he was just an ordinary rider in the scheme of things. Basically by pushing the envelope of drug taking he won seven titles.

But if he was just a mediocre rider previously, why did his team choose him to be the 'the one'? If your objective is to win as much as possible, surely enhancing an already good rider would be more likely to produce the results (while also drawing less suspicion). Was Pantani a brilliant rider who didn't know the right drugs? If so, why wasn't he getting the advice that Armstrong got instead.
The truth is, nobody knows what constituted a level playing field or to what level people were being chemically assisted in those days.

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Colin Peyresourde replied to JeevesBath | 9 years ago
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JeevesBath wrote:

But if he was just a mediocre rider previously, why did his team choose him to be the 'the one'? If your objective is to win as much as possible, surely enhancing an already good rider would be more likely to produce the results (while also drawing less suspicion). Was Pantani a brilliant rider who didn't know the right drugs? If so, why wasn't he getting the advice that Armstrong got instead.
The truth is, nobody knows what constituted a level playing field or to what level people were being chemically assisted in those days.

He was a good time trialist, not amazing. But we have no concrete data as to when Armstrong first doped. From all things I've read and heard about I wouldn't be surprised if he was doing steroids back in high school - that's not an exaggeration either. What took Armstrong to the next level was Dr Michele Ferrari, a man who was at the forefront of doping. As I said Armstrong was doping before he got cancer. From what I've read he was pretty much the lead on that at Postal. So if he was getting results because of his doping he would look better than Frankie Andreu and others who didn't.

Pantani was a different kettle of fish. Evidence suggests that he was getting some assistance from Conconi I believe. The difference between the two riders was partly about advice and partly about application. Pantani's 'romantic' style meant that he did not have the aptitude for time trialling which is a more scientific approach to cycling that the 'gorilla' which is the mountains.

The problem is that doping has different effects on riders, so it could give you more of an advantage for less product than another rider. It's also the cocktail of drugs that makes a difference. A blend of steroids and EPO/blood bags is going to keep you fit, healthy and on the bike and make you strong as an ox. Things like HGH help with keeping your power up. As Tyler Hamilton says in his book, "it was about having the best chemist and we had the best around".

What I don't doubt is that Armstrong wanted it more than others. But that ruthlessness spilled over into everything. He was psychopathic. He was inhumane about it. The logical extension of where he was taking things was that riders needed to be doped to the eyeballs and take as many risks with their lives as was necessary to beat their opponents.

But even when that happened he seemed to do whatever to beat them. One of the layered messages in the Tyler Hamilton book is the suspicion that Armstrong was sabotaging Hamilton - the call from Verbruggen to discuss bloods, operation Puerto tip off. Obviously nothing is proven....but I think Hamilton looks back at these events differently because of subsequent events. He was spooked by the phone tapping and suspicion he was being followed in the run up to the USADA decision.

It's the combination of his lying and domination of a sport through that lie which is awful. If sport is a reflection of life what does this tell us? Take no prisoners, crush your enemies and do whatever it takes to win.

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Cyclist replied to Colin Peyresourde | 9 years ago
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Quote:

It's the combination of his lying and domination of a sport through that lie which is awful. If sport is a reflection of life what does this tell us? Take no prisoners, crush your enemies and do whatever it takes to win.

The British Empire / Gaius Julius Caesar / Genghis Khan / Alexander the Great / The Roman Empire / Sparta / Conan the Barbarian.

Mongol General: What is best in life?

Conan: To crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and to hear the lamentation of their women.

He will win whose army is animated by the same spirit throughout all its ranks.
He will win who, prepared himself, waits to take the enemy unprepared.

Sun Tzu: Art of War. Whose strategies are used by sports coaches.

"Serious sport has nothing to do with fair play. It is bound up with hatred, jealousy, boastfulness, disregard for all rules and sadistic pleasure in witnessing violence: in other words it is war minus the shooting."

George Orwell.

This can go on and on and on, sport is just a microcosm of life and to the very best, in their world it is war.

And do be honest if you don't like it, take up knitting. Ask yourself if you are so pure that your shit smells of lavender, I doubt it.

People need to grow up and lose the romanticised version of sport/cycling, I can imagine all the people who are so personally injured by LAs action (never ever meeting him) wear Rapha and drool over the Rapha videos wearing rose tinted glasses and cooing quietly to themselves why drinking an Espresso and nibbling on a pain-au-chocolat.

Can't find a smiley for it. So )))))YAWN((((( going to watch the TdF recording, and watch elite sportsmen push themselves to their limits over a few big mountains, because I love the sport, the ups and downs, the good and bad characters, the good and the bad stuff, that's what makes it so great.

And if you were a fan during LAs time and you thought it was clean then you were/are a mug, maybe that's why you are so upset  24

Lance Armstrong 7 times TdF winner.

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Colin Peyresourde replied to Cyclist | 9 years ago
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Cyclist wrote:
Quote:

It's the combination of his lying and domination of a sport through that lie which is awful. If sport is a reflection of life what does this tell us? Take no prisoners, crush your enemies and do whatever it takes to win.

The British Empire / Gaius Julius Caesar / Genghis Khan / Alexander the Great / The Roman Empire / Sparta / Conan the Barbarian.

Mongol General: What is best in life?

Conan: To crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and to hear the lamentation of their women.

He will win whose army is animated by the same spirit throughout all its ranks.
He will win who, prepared himself, waits to take the enemy unprepared.

Sun Tzu: Art of War. Whose strategies are used by sports coaches.

"Serious sport has nothing to do with fair play. It is bound up with hatred, jealousy, boastfulness, disregard for all rules and sadistic pleasure in witnessing violence: in other words it is war minus the shooting."

George Orwell.

This can go on and on and on, sport is just a microcosm of life and to the very best, in their world it is war.

And do be honest if you don't like it, take up knitting. Ask yourself if you are so pure that your shit smells of lavender, I doubt it.

People need to grow up and lose the romanticised version of sport/cycling, I can imagine all the people who are so personally injured by LAs action (never ever meeting him) wear Rapha and drool over the Rapha videos wearing rose tinted glasses and cooing quietly to themselves why drinking an Espresso and nibbling on a pain-au-chocolat.

Can't find a smiley for it. So )))))YAWN((((( going to watch the TdF recording, and watch elite sportsmen push themselves to their limits over a few big mountains, because I love the sport, the ups and downs, the good and bad characters, the good and the bad stuff, that's what makes it so great.

And if you were a fan during LAs time and you thought it was clean then you were/are a mug, maybe that's why you are so upset  24

Lance Armstrong 7 times TdF winner.

Oh, so you think cheating is acceptable? Bringing justice to bear is hardly a bad thing. I think you need to grow up if you do not think justice has any place in life and is a joke in sport. This isn't a crime about cycling. This is a crime about the truth, about unlevel playing fields. We can all accept that life deals us a different stack of cards, but when we are cheated, treated like idiots, robbed of the truth or bullied no one likes it. I don't kid myself that the riders are clean. I just look for a day when sport can be.

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andyp | 9 years ago
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'I think we all feel so strongly about Armstrong because he has been portrayed as a total bully and a control freak.'

He's been *portrayed* as that? So he never did any of it? Get your head out of the sand.

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Beaufort | 9 years ago
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By the time Armstrong has his titles back officially, they'll be the least of his worries. He's going to be put though the mincer in American courts, will have nothing left. He even had to sell his private jet !

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