View Full Version : Another reason to love france.....NOT!!!


afterhours
04-10-2009, 07:02 PM
Lance: AFLD can keep me out of TourComment Email Print Share Associated Press
AUSTIN, Texas -- Lance Armstrong believes French doping officials may ban him from riding in this summer's Tour de France over a report that he violated protocols during a recent drug test.

"There's a very high likelihood that they prohibit me from riding in the Tour," a somber Armstrong said Friday in a video statement posted on his Web site. "It's too bad. The Tour is something I love dearly."


[+] EnlargeRobert Laberge/Getty Images
Lance Armstrong won the last of his seven Tour de France titles in 2005.
France's anti-doping agency, known as AFLD, has said the American did not fully cooperate with a drug tester when he showed up at Armstrong's home in France to collect blood, urine and hair samples from the cyclist on March 17.

Although no banned substances were found, the dispute revolves around a 20-minute delay when Armstrong went inside the house and took a shower while his assistants checked the tester's credentials.

The seven-time Tour winner said he asked the tester for permission to go inside and it was granted. The AFLD says Armstrong "did not respect the obligation to remain under the direct and permanent observation" of the tester.

According to Armstrong, the tester wrote "no" on the section of the official paperwork that asks if there was anything irregular about the test.

Armstrong has had tense relations with France's anti-doping authorities for years, but had been hoping to coexist with them while he tries for an eighth Tour title in July after coming out of a 3½-year retirement.

"I know we have a lot of history there," Armstrong said. "I know that certainly my comeback wasn't welcomed by a lot of people in France. It's unfortunate."

Armstrong recorded the statement from Aspen, Colo., where he has spent a few days training as he tries to return from a fractured collarbone suffered last month during a race in Spain.

He predicted the dispute will continue to escalate and "we'll see even more antics out of the AFLD in the near future."

Armstrong said the disputed test was his 24th out-of-competition test since his comeback began last September.

A ban from the Tour, a race he dominated with consecutive wins from 1999 to 2005, would be a major blow to Armstrong's cycling plans.

Although he has scheduled another top race, the Giro d'Italia in May, the Tour de France remains cycling's crown jewel.

Armstrong has said the main focus of his return is to continue spreading his anti-cancer message to a global audience. Armstrong was diagnosed in 1996 with testicular cancer that had spread to his lungs and brain.

"The comeback has been important to me for two main reasons: I have a passion for cycling still, but more importantly I have a passion for the global fight against cancer," Armstrong said.

"Certainly we wanted to tell that story in France," he said. "If we can't do, we can't do that. That's really their call. It's their event, their country and their rules."

The video was posted on the same day that the head of world cycling defended Armstrong, accusing the French agency of unprofessional and "disturbing" behavior. The French tests were not under the jurisdiction of the International Cycling Union.

"The fact [is] the test was done and was a matter of fact reported by Lance Armstrong himself on Twitter," UCI president Pat McQuaid told the BBC. "Then the French authorities decided to make up a report on the testing procedure, forward it to the UCI -- knowing that the UCI have no jurisdiction in this case -- and at the same time that report has leaked to the press.

"So I would have to question why is that the case? I would have to say that the French are not acting very professionally in this case."

McQuaid said proceedings between anti-doping agencies and the UCI are supposed to be kept confidential until "a decision to open up the case has been taken."

"But this case, it has leaked to the press and I do find that disturbing," he said.



Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press

striperman36
04-10-2009, 07:35 PM
putain qui se soucie de lance Armstong, de toute façon

Raven
04-11-2009, 04:44 AM
I would think a tour of America would do more to raise MONEY
(awareness) than over there... SCREW them!

the guy who wrote that article can't write for beans

stop the leaks to the press.... it happens way to often

side note:
especially when it comes to national security
even when caught red handed the guilty walk or someone
asks for them to be pardoned and they usually are a #^&#^&#^&#^&...

afterhours
04-11-2009, 05:49 AM
putain qui se soucie de lance Armstong, de toute façon

i do, and so don't a lot cancer survivors. nice, real nice...

MarshCappa
04-14-2009, 12:30 PM
France cracks me up. Who can tell me the winners of the tour since Lance retired? I can't and I am sure no one here could without looking it up. Crazy to think they don't want to bring some positive attention to such a great event.

Raven
04-14-2009, 12:49 PM
all they did lately was to try and steal the thunder and glory of the us navy's ending the latest pirate situation

personally i think...since Somalia's boats are only used for piracy....
we should send in just one helicopter gunship
and pop a bunch of holes in all of them
~
Lance Armstrong's use of natural enhancements of energy food to increase his stamina shouldn't disqualify him or any other cyclist.