Sports/Olympics / Motor Racing

Angry Armstrong blasts "sensationalism"
(AFP)
Updated: 2006-09-13 16:10

Seven-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong angrily dissociated himself from doping admissions by two former teammates and called the article citing them "sensationalism".

"Today's article in the New York Times was a blatant attempt to associate me and implicate me with a former teammate's admission that he took banned substances during his career," Armstrong said.

"The recycled suggestion that former teammates took EPO with my knowledge or at my request is categorically false and distorted sensationalism."

The New York Times reported that Frankie Andreu, a retired captain of the US Postal Service team, and another rider who did not want his name disclosed both admitted taking the banned endurance-booster EPO in preparing for the 1999 Tour de France, when Armstrong began a run of seven straight Tour triumphs.

Armstrong has already fought off claims that an updated test of a 1999 sample applied by a French laboratory showed the US cycling star was positive.

Armstrong, who retired last year and will turn 35 next week, reiterated his denial that he had ever used any performance enhancing drugs.

"My cycling victories are untainted," Armstrong said in a statement issued Tuesday. "I didn't take performance enhancing drugs, I didn't ask anyone else to take them and I didn't condone or encourage anyone else to take them.

"I won clean."

Both Andreu and his unidentified teammate told the newspaper they never saw Armstrong take any banned substance.

But Andreu's wife, Betsy, told the Times she blamed Armstrong for pressuring teammates to use drugs, saying her husband "didn't use EPO for himself, because as a domestique, he was never going to win that race. It was for Lance."

Armstrong said the allegation that he encouraged teammates to dope was counter to testimony Andreu himself gave under oath in an arbitration proceeding in Texas.

Armstrong noted that he won that case, in which he was paid a five million-dollar bonus for winning his sixth straight Tour title, which SCA Promotions had tried to withhold because of doping allegations.

"The allegations re-run today are not new and I defeated them in court," Armstrong said. "The implication that drug use was common knowledge on the Postal team is untrue.

"In a recent arbitration in Dallas, I proved I never used, asked or encouraged anyone to take drugs."

Armstrong made an amazing recovery from life-threatening cancer to become the greatest champion in Tour history and a symbol of hope for those with cancer, but he has fought numerous doping allegations during his reign.

"With success comes skeptics, detractors, and attacks of guilt by association, particularly in today's climate," Armstrong said. "I raced and won clean."

Floyd Landis, who succeeded Armstrong as Tour de France champion this year, is enmeshed in a doping fight of his own after testing positive for unusual levels of testosterone during the 2006 race.