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http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/200....ap/index.html
FIGEAC, France (AP) -- Lance Armstrong confronted off-bike worries Thursday at the Tour de France, claiming that a reporter seeking "dirt" sought to rummage through his hotel room and facing whisperings himself of doping from a former Tour winner. The five-time champion said he was scared that banned substances could be planted to frame him. Within his team, there are fears that some in France do not want an American to win a record six Tours. Armstrong said a French television crew sought to access his room after he left to race in Thursday's 11th stage through central France, which was won by Frenchman David Moncoutie. "After we left, a TV crew from France 3 was going to the hotel, the reception, to the owner, asking for our room, trying to get in our room," said Armstrong. "They show up and they ask sporting questions to our face, but as soon as they leave they're digging in the rooms and looking for dirt," he said. "If you left a B vitamin sitting there, that would get on TV and that would be a scandal. That's what we have to live with every day." Thursday's race did not change the overall time gap between Armstrong and his main rival, German Jan Ullrich, still 55 seconds behind. Saving themselves for the arduous and likely decisive climbs in the Pyrenees, which start Friday, and the Alps, they did not react when Moncoutie and two other riders surged ahead. The stage win was Moncoutie's first in five Tours and the third by a French rider at this edition. "To win a Tour stage is fabulous," said Moncoutie, who comes from the rural region crossed Thursday. "It was one of my dreams." A herd of six cows trotting along the 164-kilometer (102-mile) trek from Saint-Flour to Figeac momentarily held up the pack. After a first week of cold and rain, blazing sun baked riders. "We're tired and really cooked," Armstrong said afterward. He finished ninth in a group which included Ullrich, rivals Iban Mayo, Tyler Hamilton and Ivan Basso, 5 minutes and 58 seconds behind Moncoutie's mark of 3 hours, 54 minutes and 58 seconds. French champion Thomas Voeckler, also in that group, retained the overall lead, still 9 minutes and 35 seconds ahead of sixth-placed Armstrong. But the 25-year-old French rider is expected to lose the lead to top riders in the mountains. Armstrong has been cheered by French fans waving the Stars and Stripes. But others bristle at the prospect of a Texan overtaking the four other five-time champions, who include Frenchmen Jacques Anquetil and Bernard Hinault. One roadside cardboard sign Thursday read, "Lance Go Home." Within his team, aides are concerned that fans or reporters might spike his Tour -- even recalling the stabbing of American tennis star Monica Seles. Armstrong travels with bodyguards during the three-week race. "Nothing against the French but in France they're after us and they're after the sport of cycling," Armstrong said. "It's not just the Ministry of Sport, it's the media." He claimed that the France 3 reporter who visited his hotel "has been following us for months and it's scandalous." "The scary thing is, if they don't find anything and get frustrated after a couple of months ... well, who's to say they won't put something there and say 'look what we've found,"' he added. "They see the sport as a target, an easy target." The France 3 reporter, Hugues Huet, said he went to the hotel to do interviews about Armstrong's teammates and that he chatted to the hotel manager for a few minutes. But he denied that he sought access to the champion's room. "It's completely ridiculous," Huet told The Associated Press. "We do have ethics and we don't do just anything ... If I played around by searching his room like that, I would be breaking the limits." Armstrong has often had testy relations with some sections of the French press. He has also raised cycling fans' hackles by focusing on winning the Tour, neglecting lesser races. Some also feel that he has not always respected Tour traditions. Armstrong himself acknowledges he was sometimes brash in his early days but says he's become a Tour fan. "I have a lot more appreciation now," he said last week. "It's an epic event and I don't think there's much that compares to it. As I've said dozens of times, it's something that I'll sit around the TV and watch in 10 years or 20 years." Allegations of doping have also clouded his image. Armstrong says he has never taken banned drugs to enhance his performance. In an interview published Thursday by Le Monde, a respected French daily that previously leveled claims of drug use by Armstrong, three-time Tour winner Greg Lemond voiced doubts that his fellow American is clean. "Lance is ready to do anything to keep his secret," Lemond was quoted as saying. "I don't know how he can continue to convince everybody of his innocence." Armstrong shrugged off the suspicions. "Greg Lemond was my idol as I grew up in cycling because he was a great champion and did amazing things on the bike," he said in a statement. "Many of his performances were so incredible especially his remarkable return to form and win at the '89 Tour. I'm disappointed and dismayed that for the past four years Greg has continued to question my performances and my character." |
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#2
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![]() Churchill wrote: A herd of six cows trotting along the 164-kilometer (102-mile) trek from Saint-Flour to Figeac momentarily held up the pack. After a first week of cold and rain, blazing sun baked riders. It's getting like some bizarre reversal of Broadcast News now. What CyclingNews prints, comes out in real life. |
#3
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![]() "Stewart Fleming" a écrit dans le message de ... Churchill wrote: A herd of six cows trotting along the 164-kilometer (102-mile) trek from Saint-Flour to Figeac momentarily held up the pack. What were the cows' finishing times ? |
#4
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trg wrote:
"Stewart Fleming" a écrit dans le message de ... Churchill wrote: A herd of six cows trotting along the 164-kilometer (102-mile) trek from Saint-Flour to Figeac momentarily held up the pack. What were the cows' finishing times ? Their hopes of a stage win were dashed when a countryman of David Moncoutie locked them in a field. Scandalous, just scandalous. ![]() -- the black rose GO LANCE GO!!! proud to be owned by a yorkie http://community.webshots.com/user/blackrosequilts |
#5
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"Churchill" wrote in message
... The five-time champion said he was scared that banned substances could be planted to frame him. Within his team, there are fears that some in France do not want an American to win a record six Tours. It was on TV and he never said he was "scared". He said that when the TV crew gets tired of finding nothing maybe they'll get frustrated and plant something themselves. |
#6
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=v= I've heard it said that Lance's urine is probably the
most drug-tested substance in the world. How the heck could he be doping? _Jym_ |
#7
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On 17 Jul 2004 09:07:27 -0700, Jym Dyer wrote:
=v= I've heard it said that Lance's urine is probably the most drug-tested substance in the world. How the heck could he be doping? He couldn't, but when there's no news to report, the newscreeps will invent something...or turn a piece of non-news into a story by inverting it. "Hey, Lance Armstrong tested negative for drugs again today, should we run a story probing why he never gets caught doping?" These are the same jerks who ask "Do you still beat your wife?" -- Typoes are a feature, not a bug. Some gardening required to reply via email. Words processed in a facility that contains nuts. |
#8
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"Jym Dyer" wrote in message
... =v= I've heard it said that Lance's urine is probably the most drug-tested substance in the world. How the heck could he be doping? Introductory note: I'm not saying Lance is doping. Do not respond with flames. The whole purpose is to gain an advantage without getting caught. The promise of BALCO, Dr. Ferrari, and the like is that they have a "system" so you can achieve this. I'm sure systems have evolved well beyond the "use somebody else's urine" stage, but I also imagine it's still an arms race in which new tests are continually needed to counteract new ways to get around the tests. |
#9
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![]() "Werehatrack" wrote in message ... On 17 Jul 2004 09:07:27 -0700, Jym Dyer wrote: =v= I've heard it said that Lance's urine is probably the most drug-tested substance in the world. How the heck could he be doping? He couldn't, but when there's no news to report, the newscreeps will invent something...or turn a piece of non-news into a story by inverting it. You can't test for anterior pituitary peptides. |
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