Whilst Lance Armstrong has not admitted anything wrong. His failure
to fight the allegations against him has condemned him to history as a drugs
cheat. The UCI is
yet to confirm whether they will follow suit with the ban imposed on him in the
US as well as them stripping him of his 7 Tour de France Tour victories.
This has been a
long running campaign to catch Armstrong and it finally seems to have caught
its man. What I cannot help feeling is what good it will now do? An
interesting point was made on Channel 4 news, that out of 7 years he won the
Tour de France only 8 other riders appeared on the podium with Armstrong and of
those only one has not be subsequently caught up in a doping scandal.
The question needs
to be asked, rightly or wrongly is. If the sport was never clean is it
wrong to condemn history. Yes we need a clean sport now, but that was
then, Team Sky have proven that hard work, planning an team work can win out so
going forward we are in good shape. Do we really need to drag it all up
and ruin the reputation of a sport in full flight?
You also get a
sense of witch hunt? When most riders seem to have been taking drugs at
the time why has Lance been singled out in such a way? The answer is it
makes news! High profile enough to make the Anti drugs campaign feel important.
I have never been
a lover of Lance Armstrong as regards to the way he went about his business of
riding. He has however, despite the incredible pressures on him managed
to amass a huge charity now worth over $450million. Now in risk of losing
substantial support unless his name drops to the background for a while.
The UCI may yet
decide that the USADA has no right to strip Armstrong of any titles so the
story may yet rumble on and what seems to be a calculated risk by Armstrong may
well pay off. It will however end his recent attempts to take over the
Iron man world. But hey maybe that’s a small price to pay for him to have
the matter put to bed? For now anyway.
Can we now get
back to the real cycling? Drugs will never really disappear in cycling
especially as the potential rewards are likely to become even greater.
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