DOPING Lance lashes latest critics
The Tour de France director says the tests have been proved.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Lance Armstrong went on the offensive Wednesday, saying it was "preposterous" for the Tour de France director to say that the legendary cyclist "fooled" race officials and the sporting world by cheating his way to seven straight titles.
Comments by Tour director Jean-Marie Leblanc appeared in the French sports daily L'Equipe on Wednesday, a day after the newspaper reported that six urine samples provided by Armstrong during the 1999 Tour tested positive for the red blood cell-booster EPO.
"I actually spoke to him for about 30 minutes and he didn't say any of that stuff to me personally," Armstrong said, referring to Leblanc.
"But to say that I've fooled the fans is preposterous. I've been doing this a long time. We have not just one year of only 'B' samples; we have seven years of 'A' and 'B' samples. They've all been negative," he said during a conference call from Washington, D.C.
The Tour did not respond Wednesday to a request by The Associated Press to interview Leblanc.
Convinced
Leblanc, sounding convinced that Armstrong is guilty of doping, said "we were all fooled" and the seven-time champion owes an explanation for "proven scientific facts" from a newspaper report alleging he cheated to win cycling's most prestigious event.
"For the first time -- and these are no longer rumors, or insinuations, these are proven scientific facts -- someone has shown me that in 1999, Armstrong had a banned substance called EPO in his body," Leblanc said.
Armstrong denies all
It was the first time since doping whispers began to swirl around Armstrong that Leblanc spoke critically of him.
Leblanc has expressed admiration for Armstrong -- while acknowledging that the Texan's methodical training regimen took some of the European-style romance out of the Tour.
While Leblanc seemed convinced of Armstrong's guilt, fellow cyclists came to his defense.
"Armstrong always told me that he never used doping products," five-time winner Eddy Merckx told Le Monde newspaper. "Choosing between a journalist and Lance's word, I trust Armstrong."
L'Equipe is owned by the Amaury Group whose subsidiary, Amaury Sport Organization, organizes the Tour de France and other sporting events.
The paper has often raised questions about whether Armstrong has ever used performance enhancing drugs. On Tuesday, the banner headline of its four-page report was "The Armstrong Lie."
No tests in 1999
EPO, formally known as erythropoietin, was on the list of banned substances at the time Armstrong won the first of his seven Tours, but there was no effective test then to detect it.
The allegations took six years to surface because EPO tests on the 1999 samples were carried out only last year -- when scientists at the national doping test lab outside Paris opened them up again for research to perfect EPO screening, with the blessing of the World Anti-Doping Agency.
Another five-time Tour champion, Miguel Indurain, said he couldn't understand why scientists would use samples from the '99 Tour for their tests.
"I feel the news is in bad taste and out of place, given that it happened six years ago after his first Tour victory, and after he won six more," Indurain wrote in the Spanish sports daily Marca. "With the little I have to go on, it is difficult to take a position, but I think at this stage there's no sense in stirring all this up."
Jan Ullrich, the 1997 Tour champion, said he did not have all the details and did not want to be too quick to judge.
"But clearly I would be very disappointed if the story were true," he wrote on his Web site.
Could still be good samples
Arne Ljungqvist, chairman of the International Olympic Committee's medical commission, said the urine samples from 1999 still could produce legitimate EPO test results.
"I believe they may well, if they have been properly stored -- without access to outside people so they cannot be tampered with. Also in a refrigerator or deep frozen," Ljungqvist said Wednesday in a phone interview with The Associated Press. "If not in such a situation -- there's no guarantee they have not been subjected to undue temperatures."
L'Equipe's investigation was based on the second set of two samples used in doping tests. The first set were used up in 1999 for analysis at the time. Without that first set of samples, any disciplinary action against Armstrong would be impossible, French Sports Minister Jean-Francois Lamour said.
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