Friday, June 23, 2006

US Postal Doesn't Deliver



IT SIMPLY WON'T END
Like a "B" movie drama gone bad, the saga continues with Lance. As if it's not enough that the man has been cleared by every governing body of the sport imaginable, we're now talking about his performance pre-cancer. In the today's press release courtesy of yet another trash rag from our Franco "allies", it's become quite apparent that we can add Frankie Andreau to the list of former Lance loyalists.

Admittedly, I have often wondered even suspected that Lance may have in fact succumbed to the doping pressure during his Motorola, egotistical days. But, as you read on let us ask ourselves where that line was drawn? Was Frankie miracously performing as he did sans EPO if the entire peloton was dirty? Why aren't we questioning Lemond's wins? Or Delgado's performance in 1986 when he gained 4 minutes on the GC in ONE DAY? The bottom line is that the discussion is a tired one and Lance's critics will simply not rest until they get something period. This July, I can only hope that I'm wrong and it's American cycling that's the real story.

CYCLINGNEWS.COM JUNE 23, 2006
Barely three weeks after the Vrijman report dismissed L'Equipe's allegations that Lance Armstrong used EPO in 1999, the now retired seven-time Tour champion has come under fire from another angle. French newspaper Le Monde is reporting in its Friday edition that Armstrong admitted to using performance enhancing drugs prior to contracting testicular cancer in 1996.

The allegations were made during the SCA Promotions vs. Armstrong trial that is in progress in Lance's home state of Texas. SCA Promotions is an insurance company that paid Armstrong millions of dollars for his Tour wins after the team took out a $420,000 insurance policy in 2001. But following the publication of David Walsh and Pierre Ballester's book, LA Confidentiel, les secrets de Lance Armstrong, which alleged that Armstrong had used illegal drugs, SCA disputed the $5 million payment for the 2004 Tour, saying that it wanted evidence (Armstrong's medical records, for example) that the allegations were untrue.

In court statements obtained by Le Monde, Betsy Andreu, the partner of Armstrong's ex-teammate and friend Frankie Andreu, related her version of events that took place in an Indiana hospital on October 28, 1996, while he was being treated for cancer. "[The doctor] started to ask him banal questions, I don't remember," Le Monde quoted from an excerpt of Betsy Andreu's testimony. "And all of a sudden, bang, have you ever taken doping products? He replied, yes. [The doctor] asked which ones. And Lance replied: EPO, growth hormones, cortisone, steroids, testosterone." Betsy Andreu's statement was made on January 17, 2006, and according to Le Monde, backed up what her husband had said to the court on October 25, 2005. "I don't know how the doctor formulated his question, but the response was that he had taken EPO, testosterone, growth hormones and cortisone," said Frankie Andreu.

But a third person present at the hospital in 1996, Stephanie McIlvain, an employee of Armstrong's sunglasses sponsor Oakley, denied the Andreus' version of events. In her testimony on November 14, 2005, she said that there was no conversation like that between Armstrong and his doctors. But her story has been questioned by Greg Lemond, who recorded a phone conversation with McIlvain on September 21, 2004, where she said, "If I am cited, I'll do it...For I won't lie. You know I was in the room. I heard."

Three others were also in the hospital room: his then girlfriend, Lisa Shiels, his trainer Chris Carmichael, and Carmichael's wife Paige. Neither those, nor the doctors who operated on Armstrong, were called to give evidence by the lawyers of the Texan, nor SCA Promotions.
Lance Armstrong's own deposition, given on November 30, 2005, denied that any doctor had asked him whether he had used performance enhancing drugs. He claimed that Betsy Andreu had a grudge against him, and Frankie Andreu gave the same story to support his wife.

1 comment:

Amanda said...

The French will never stop! they have made up their minds about Lance and won't let the facts confuse them.

Friday, June 23, 2006

US Postal Doesn't Deliver



IT SIMPLY WON'T END
Like a "B" movie drama gone bad, the saga continues with Lance. As if it's not enough that the man has been cleared by every governing body of the sport imaginable, we're now talking about his performance pre-cancer. In the today's press release courtesy of yet another trash rag from our Franco "allies", it's become quite apparent that we can add Frankie Andreau to the list of former Lance loyalists.

Admittedly, I have often wondered even suspected that Lance may have in fact succumbed to the doping pressure during his Motorola, egotistical days. But, as you read on let us ask ourselves where that line was drawn? Was Frankie miracously performing as he did sans EPO if the entire peloton was dirty? Why aren't we questioning Lemond's wins? Or Delgado's performance in 1986 when he gained 4 minutes on the GC in ONE DAY? The bottom line is that the discussion is a tired one and Lance's critics will simply not rest until they get something period. This July, I can only hope that I'm wrong and it's American cycling that's the real story.

CYCLINGNEWS.COM JUNE 23, 2006
Barely three weeks after the Vrijman report dismissed L'Equipe's allegations that Lance Armstrong used EPO in 1999, the now retired seven-time Tour champion has come under fire from another angle. French newspaper Le Monde is reporting in its Friday edition that Armstrong admitted to using performance enhancing drugs prior to contracting testicular cancer in 1996.

The allegations were made during the SCA Promotions vs. Armstrong trial that is in progress in Lance's home state of Texas. SCA Promotions is an insurance company that paid Armstrong millions of dollars for his Tour wins after the team took out a $420,000 insurance policy in 2001. But following the publication of David Walsh and Pierre Ballester's book, LA Confidentiel, les secrets de Lance Armstrong, which alleged that Armstrong had used illegal drugs, SCA disputed the $5 million payment for the 2004 Tour, saying that it wanted evidence (Armstrong's medical records, for example) that the allegations were untrue.

In court statements obtained by Le Monde, Betsy Andreu, the partner of Armstrong's ex-teammate and friend Frankie Andreu, related her version of events that took place in an Indiana hospital on October 28, 1996, while he was being treated for cancer. "[The doctor] started to ask him banal questions, I don't remember," Le Monde quoted from an excerpt of Betsy Andreu's testimony. "And all of a sudden, bang, have you ever taken doping products? He replied, yes. [The doctor] asked which ones. And Lance replied: EPO, growth hormones, cortisone, steroids, testosterone." Betsy Andreu's statement was made on January 17, 2006, and according to Le Monde, backed up what her husband had said to the court on October 25, 2005. "I don't know how the doctor formulated his question, but the response was that he had taken EPO, testosterone, growth hormones and cortisone," said Frankie Andreu.

But a third person present at the hospital in 1996, Stephanie McIlvain, an employee of Armstrong's sunglasses sponsor Oakley, denied the Andreus' version of events. In her testimony on November 14, 2005, she said that there was no conversation like that between Armstrong and his doctors. But her story has been questioned by Greg Lemond, who recorded a phone conversation with McIlvain on September 21, 2004, where she said, "If I am cited, I'll do it...For I won't lie. You know I was in the room. I heard."

Three others were also in the hospital room: his then girlfriend, Lisa Shiels, his trainer Chris Carmichael, and Carmichael's wife Paige. Neither those, nor the doctors who operated on Armstrong, were called to give evidence by the lawyers of the Texan, nor SCA Promotions.
Lance Armstrong's own deposition, given on November 30, 2005, denied that any doctor had asked him whether he had used performance enhancing drugs. He claimed that Betsy Andreu had a grudge against him, and Frankie Andreu gave the same story to support his wife.

1 comment:

Amanda said...

The French will never stop! they have made up their minds about Lance and won't let the facts confuse them.