ZitatOriginal geschrieben von BigCountry:
really? war der radsport 2009 so clean, dass er ungedopt mit 38 dritter bei der tour werden konnte?
Lance Armstrong lied to Oprah Winfrey says the boss of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency
Travis Tygart will make a second appearance on '60 Minutes' to counter the disgraced Tour de France champ's claims from his sit-down interview with Oprah last week. The USADA boss says Armstrong needs to come clean if he hopes to have lifetime ban lifted.
http://www.nydailynews.com/spo…d-oprah-article-1.1247699
ZitatAlles anzeigenThe CEO of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency tells "60 Minutes" in a segment to be broadcast Sunday that Lance Armstrong lied about his doping past during his interview with Oprah Winfrey last week.
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Despite finally admitting that he doped during his Tour de France dominance from 1999-05, Armstrong has contradicted several key issues from USADA's report, including Tygart's recent claim on "60 Minutes Sports" that an Armstrong representative attempted to make a $250,000 "donation" to USADA in 2004.
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"He confessed to doping in an interview with Oprah Winfrey last week, but U.S. Anti-Doping Agency CEO Travis Tygart, says the evidence proves Lance Armstrong withheld the truth and lied to Winfrey on key issues," reads the "60 Minutes" blurb. "Tygart tells Scott Pelley that if the disgraced cyclist wants his lifetime ban lifted, he will have to tell all."
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Armstrong also told Winfrey that he never doped after his 2005 Tour de France victory — the record seventh consecutive Tour title, all of which were eventually stripped from Armstrong by USADA — and that he was clean during his comeback when he rode in the 2009 and '10 Tour de France races.
But those claims are a direct attack on the credibility of the USADA report, which states that Armstrong's blood samples from those two years suggest he continued to use banned substances.