Sports/Olympics / Newsmaker

Floyd Landis: Stigma 'may never go away'
(AP)
Updated: 2006-07-28 20:12

Paris- Hours after his stirring Tour de France comeback win was cast into doubt Thursday by news of a high testosterone test, American cyclist Floyd Landis said he expects to prove his innocence.

That could happen if Landis' backup, or "B" sample, tests clean - meaning the entire test is considered negative. But even if Landis keeps the title, he expects the disgrace of doping will follow him for a long, long time.


Tour de France winner Floyd Landis leaves the doping control caravan in Paris, July, 23, 2006. [AP]

"I think there's a good possibility I'll clear my name," Landis said. "Regardless of whether this happens or not, I don't know if this will ever go away."

The Switzerland-based Phonak team will ask for the "B" sample analysis in the next few days, manager John Lelangue said. It was not clear exactly when that will occur, but the International Cycling Union says it must be within 10 working days of the request.

In the meantime, Landis will wait.

"All I'm asking for is that I be given a chance to prove I'm innocent," he said Thursday via teleconference from Europe. "Cycling has a traditional way of trying people in the court of public opinion before they get a chance to do anything else."

Landis said he has no idea what may have caused his positive test for high testosterone following the Tour's 17th stage last week, in which he made his comeback charge.

Phonak suspended Landis after the ICU notified it Wednesday that he had an "unusual level of testosterone/epitestosterone" when his test was taken last Thursday, the day he staked his comeback in the Alps.

"My immediate reaction was to look for the alcohol bottle," joked Landis, who's known to enjoy a beer on the Tour and said he drank whiskey with teammates to bury their sorrows after Landis nearly fell out of contention the day before his stage 17 charge.

Landis wrapped up the Tour win Sunday, keeping the title in US hands for the eighth straight year. Lance Armstrong, who won the previous seven, was himself dogged for years by doping allegations that he vehemently denied - and were never proven by a positive test.

Armstrong was riding in RAGBRAI, an annual trek across Iowa that attracts thousands of bike riders. After finishing his ride Thursday, Armstrong said would wait to see what happened when his former US Postal Service teammate got the results from his second sample.

"Until that happens," Armstrong said, "I don't have anything to say."

Second-place finisher Oscar Pereiro, who would become champion if Landis is not cleared, said he was in no mood to celebrate.

"Should I win the Tour now it would feel like an academic victory," Pereiro told The Associated Press at his home in Vigo, Spain. "The way to celebrate a win is in Paris, otherwise it's just a bureaucratic win."


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