West Ham Cockney Boys

Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
West Ham Cockney Boys


5 posters

    Drug Cheat Cyclist Stripped Of Titles Shocker

    Blakey
    Blakey
    Reserves


    Posts : 1413
    Join date : 2011-02-19
    Location : Norff

    Drug Cheat Cyclist Stripped Of Titles Shocker Empty Drug Cheat Cyclist Stripped Of Titles Shocker

    Post  Blakey Fri 24 Aug 2012, 9:41 am

    [You must be registered and logged in to see this link.]

    Lance Armstrong ends fight against doping charges

    Seven-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong has announced he will no longer fight drug charges from the US anti-doping agency (USADA).

    In a statement, the American, 40, maintains he is innocent, but says he is weary of the "nonsense" accusations.

    USADA says it will ban Armstrong from cycling for life and strip him of his seven Tour de France titles.

    "I refuse to participate in a process that is so one-sided and unfair," said Armstrong of the USADA proceedings.

    USADA chief executive Travis Tygart responded: "It is a sad day for all of us who love sport and our athletic heroes."

    Armstrong retired from cycling in 2005 after the last of his seven successive Tour de France titles, although he returned to the sport between 2009 and 2012 as part of the Astana and then RadioShack teams.

    USADA alleges he used banned substances as far back as 1996, including the blood-booster erythropoietin (EPO), steroid and blood transfusions.

    On Monday, Armstrong failed in his attempt to block the charges in a US federal court.

    The Texan had claimed that the agency was acting beyond its remit and had offered "corrupt inducements" to other riders to testify against him.

    "There comes a point in every man's life when he has to say, 'Enough is enough.' For me, that time is now," Armstrong said in the statement.

    "I have been dealing with claims that I cheated and had an unfair advantage in winning my seven Tours since 1999. Over the past three years, I have been subjected to a two-year federal criminal investigation followed by Travis Tygart's unconstitutional witch hunt.

    "The toll this has taken on my family and my w**k for our foundation and on me leads me to where I am today - finished with this nonsense."

    Armstrong had been given until 06:00 GMT on Friday to decide whether to continue fighting USADA's charges. The agency has said that 10 of Armstrong's former team-mates are prepared to testify against him.

    USADA also accuses Armstrong of being a "ring-leader" of systematic doping on his Tour de France winning teams.

    "If I thought for one moment that by participating in USADA's process, I could confront these allegations in a fair setting and - once and for all - put these charges to rest, I would jump at the chance," added Armstrong.

    Tygart said shortly after Armstrong's statement that his agency would ban Armstrong from cycling for life and strip him of his titles.

    "This is a heartbreaking example of how the win-at-all-costs culture of sport, if left unchecked, will overtake fair, safe and honest competition," he saud. "But for clean athletes, it is a reassuring reminder that there is hope for future generations to compete on a level playing field without the use of performance-enhancing drugs."

    However, Armstrong has disputed that USADA has the power to take away his titles. "USADA lacks jurisdiction even to bring these charges," his statement said.

    The cycling governing body the International Cycling Union (UCI) - which had backed Armstrong's challenge to challenge USADA's authority - has so far made no public comments on the latest developments.

    World Anti-Doping Agency president John Fahey says Armstrong's decision to drop his fight against drug charges, which could have been escalated to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, was an admission the allegations "had substance in them".

    Armstrong, who survived testicular cancer prior to his record-breaking Tour wins, says he will be focusing on the w**k with his cancer charity.

    Suzanne Claret
    Suzanne Claret
    1st Team Bench


    Posts : 2165
    Join date : 2011-04-17
    Age : 56
    Location : London

    Drug Cheat Cyclist Stripped Of Titles Shocker Empty Re: Drug Cheat Cyclist Stripped Of Titles Shocker

    Post  Suzanne Claret Fri 24 Aug 2012, 1:30 pm

    [You must be registered and logged in to see this link.]
    manurewa hammer
    manurewa hammer
    Reserves


    Posts : 1714
    Join date : 2011-04-01
    Age : 74
    Location : Auckland New Zealand

    Drug Cheat Cyclist Stripped Of Titles Shocker Empty Re: Drug Cheat Cyclist Stripped Of Titles Shocker

    Post  manurewa hammer Sat 25 Aug 2012, 3:53 am

    I don't think Armstrongs decision to stop the legal fight is an admission of guilt at all. He is just pissed off with all the shit, and is prepared to let the world judge him. This is a managed witchhunt, and consider this, the bloke never gave a postive test! IMHO
    Sir Ian
    Sir Ian
    Academy


    Posts : 643
    Join date : 2011-02-22
    Age : 50
    Location : London

    Drug Cheat Cyclist Stripped Of Titles Shocker Empty Re: Drug Cheat Cyclist Stripped Of Titles Shocker

    Post  Sir Ian Sat 25 Aug 2012, 8:07 am

    ran out of bovvered years ago
    JulianDicksLeftKnee
    JulianDicksLeftKnee
    Reserves


    Posts : 1601
    Join date : 2011-02-18
    Age : 54
    Location : SE London now days

    Drug Cheat Cyclist Stripped Of Titles Shocker Empty Re: Drug Cheat Cyclist Stripped Of Titles Shocker

    Post  JulianDicksLeftKnee Sat 25 Aug 2012, 6:25 pm

    I remember his brother, Stretch.
    Blakey
    Blakey
    Reserves


    Posts : 1413
    Join date : 2011-02-19
    Location : Norff

    Drug Cheat Cyclist Stripped Of Titles Shocker Empty Re: Drug Cheat Cyclist Stripped Of Titles Shocker

    Post  Blakey Sun 26 Aug 2012, 6:16 pm

    manurewa hammer wrote:I don't think Armstrongs decision to stop the legal fight is an admission of guilt at all. He is just pissed off with all the shit, and is prepared to let the world judge him. This is a managed witchhunt, and consider this, the bloke never gave a postive test! IMHO


    [You must be registered and logged in to see this link.]


    Identifying the precise moment when the fall from grace began for Lance Armstrong, once the world's greatest cyclist, is not easy.

    Did the fatal moment occur two years ago, when Floyd Landis – disgraced 2006 Tour de France winner and Armstrong's former team-mate – met a special agent of the US Food and Drugs Administration, Jeff Novitzky, to describe how he had seen the seven-times Tour champion doping in his own apartment?

    Or were the seeds of his downfall sown far earlier than that – in 1999, the year of Armstrong's first Tour win, when he is said to have "bullied" a young French cyclist, Christophe Bassons, telling him "he would be better off going home" after Bassons criticised doping on the Tour, effectively ending his career?

    Or was it eight years ago, when the French anti-doping laboratory decided to conduct retrospective research using its new test for the blood agent erythropoietin (EPO) on samples taken from riders during the 1999 Tour? The lab identified six positive results from a batch of 15 that the sports newspaper L'Equipe matched to blood-sample records Armstrong and the world cycling federation had agreed to supply to the newspaper.

    Its subsequent article – "The Armstrong Lie" – would set in train a sequence of events that culminated on Friday with the decision by the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) to ban the Texan for life and recommend the stripping of all his awards, after Armstrong refused to defend himself against allegations of cheating.

    Armstrong explained his decision himself thus: "Over the past three years, I have been subjected to a two-year federal criminal investigation followed by Travis Tygart's unconstitional witch hunt … It's an unfair approach, applied selctively, in opposition to all the rules. It's just not right."

    The suspicion had always been there – alluded to in the French media, and made explicit by Pierre Ballester and David Walsh in their French-published book LA Confidentiel, which baldly asserted that Armstrong was a cheat.

    Now Armstrong has been found guilty by virtue of a "non-analytical positive" – not a blood test, but the testimony of witnesses: the same way that former US sprint champion Marion Jones was stripped of her of her medals.

    Now a competition that, through its long history, has been tainted with substance-abuse scandals – from the brandy and strychnine taken by early riders to the steroids and complex compounds of later times – is in the spotlight again.

    Since the scandalous 2007 Tour, the UCI, cycling's ruling body, has made stronger efforts to tackle drugs cheats. That year saw the entire Astana and Cofidis teams withdraw after pre-race favourite Alexander Vinokourov was caught blood doping, and Bradley Wiggins's Italian teammate Cristian Moreni was arrested after testing positive for elevated levels of testosterone. And despite Armstrong's repeated claims of innocence, it was during the 1990s and 2000s – the most notorious doping – that he ruled the sport.

    The reality – as Walsh told the BBC in an interview last week– is that many had suspected for years that something was rotten at the very heart of cycling: a rottenness in which not only cyclists and team managers were complicit, but the administrators themselves.

    In the end, it appears the unravelling of the Armstrong myth, and the uncovering of what some have called the greatest doping conspiracy in sport, occurred because USADA had accumulated so much testimony – including from 10 former team-mates, some unsullied by accusations of cheating.

    The extent of Armstrong's surrender is underlined by the knowledge of what he has previously said about the "guiding principles" taught to him by his single mother Linda: that "to give up was to give in". Armstrong reiterated that view in his first autobiography, It's Not About the Bike, written in 2000. "Pain is temporary," he wrote then. "If I quit, however, it lasts forever." And quit is what Armstrong did on Friday.

    As World Anti-Doping Agency chief John Fahey said on the day it happened, Armstrong's decision added up to nothing less than an admission of guilt.

    While it is not clear what pressure was brought to bear on those former teammates who gave evidence to USADA investigators – after a US federal case examining whether Armstrong's US Postal Service (USPS) team had "misused federal funds" was dropped – it has been suggested that some faced threats of perjury proceedings if they did not speak.

    Perhaps what has been most extraordinary about the whole saga is the extent to which suspicions about the American champion had been documented for so long yet never properly investigated, as Armstrong used the force of his personality – and legal challenges – to shut down all criticism.

    That included even the testimony of those such as Armstrong's team masseuse – a woman with no real axe to grind – who insisted that she had heard team officials discussing how to get round Armstrong's positive test for steroids, and described how she was asked to travel to Spain to deliver "material" across the French border.

    But it has been the USADA finding that has been the most damaging, not least because it stands unchallenged by a man who has long insisted that he is the victim of a witch-hunt.

    USADA said its evidence came from more than a dozen witnesses "who agreed to testify and provide evidence about their first-hand experience and/or knowledge of the doping activity of those involved in the USPS conspiracy".

    The unidentified witnesses said they knew or had been told by Armstrong himself that he had "used EPO, blood transfusions, testosterone and cortisone" from before 1998 until 2005, the year of his seventh Tour victory, and that he had previously used EPO, testosterone and human growth hormone until 1996, USADA said. Armstrong also allegedly handed out doping products, encouraged banned methods – and, USADA says, even used "blood manipulation including EPO or blood transfusions" during his 2009 Tour comeback.

    For his part, Armstrong has tried to characterise the investigative process against him as tantamount to bribery – offering those willing to give evidence the promise of more lenient sanctions if they admitted their part.

    Certainly in the last two years the net has tightened very quickly around Armstrong. After Landis's meeting with federal investigators, they spoke to Tyler Hamilton, another former teammate, who has admitted to doping.

    "It really wasn't until the last few months [that] we were able to reach out to all the witnesses we believed had information," said Travis Tygart, USADA's chief executive. "They all agreed to testify truthfully."

    In a separate interview, Tygart added: "I think Mr Armstrong also knows the truth and decided that instead of a fact-by-fact, piece-by-piece coming-out in open court under oath, he decided his better move at this stage was just not to contest and hold on to baseless soundbites about witch hunts and vendettas."

    All of which leaves some serious questions still unanswered: such as whether cycling's administrators turned a blind eye to Armstrong's behaviour, particularly when he was patron of the Tour, its leader by virtue of his victories.

    That is the view of Italian rider Filippo Simeoni, who clashed with Armstrong in the 2004 Tour after giving evidence in an Italian court that Armstrong's trainer, Dr Michele Ferrari – also named in the USADA doping allegations – had advised the Italian to take EPO and testosterone in the late 1990s.

    "When I protested, [Armstrong] was in charge of cycling and nothing was done," he told an Italian radio station. "I paid for things that weren't just. I only told the truth."

    There will be more fights and scandal ahead. Others accused in the affair have opted – unlike Armstrong – to fight their case in the Court of Arbitration for Sport. The UCI has also not yet accepted USADA's judgment, and its own officials may take up cudgels for Armstrong's cries of "injustice".

    Sponsored content


    Drug Cheat Cyclist Stripped Of Titles Shocker Empty Re: Drug Cheat Cyclist Stripped Of Titles Shocker

    Post  Sponsored content


      Current date/time is Tue 07 May 2024, 8:41 pm