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Dublin: 9 °C Friday 24 May, 2013

This statistic about how many Tour de France riders were doping is the only defence Lance Armstrong has left

It wasn’t about the bike for most of the peloton.

Armstrong on the Champs ELysee after winning his seventh Tour title.
Armstrong on the Champs ELysee after winning his seventh Tour title.
Image: PETER DEJONG/AP/Press Association Images

THE 202-PAGE report on the Lance Armstrong doping scandal that the US Anti-Doping Agency dropped yesterday is damning.

It makes the case that Armstrong used performance-enhancing drugs to in every major event he has ever competed in.

More damningly, it paints Armstrong as the driving force behind a sophisticated, worldwide doping ring involving riders, coaches, and trainers.

At this point, there is only one argument left for Armstrong to make: everyone was doing it. Specifically, 20 of 21 top-3 finishers from 1999 to 2005 were doing it, and 36 of 45 top-3 finishers from 1996 to 2010 were doing it. Take a look at this paragraph (which was slipped into the introduction of the report without much comment) in the USADA report:

Twenty of the twenty-one podium finishers in the Tour de France from 1999 through 2005 have been directly tied to likely doping through admissions, sanctions, public investigations or exceeding the UCI hematocrit threshold. Of the forty-five podium finishes during the time period between 1996 and 2010, thirty-six were by riders similarly tainted by doping.

So in a 15-year period, there were only nine riders who managed to succeed without cheating, according to the USADA.

It’s fair to say that in that period, doping was a competitive element of the sport. You could argue that no one got an unfair advantage by doping because everyone was competing on the same (albeit outlawed) chemical playing field.

What do you think?

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Comments (5 Comments)

  • That is not a ‘defence’, it is an unfortunate statistic, but has no bearing on Armstrong’s own guilt or innocence.

    Reply
  • Steve 11/10/12 #

    “You could argue that no one got an unfair advantage by doping because everyone was competing on the same (albeit outlawed) chemical playing field.”

    No you couldn’t argue that because if the report suggests 9 podium riders remain untainted then clearly not *everyone* was competing on same playing field.

    Reply
  • i agree – Armstrong should be a man and not a mouse and admit to his wrong doings … ive always thought though what a steroid olympics would be like … not just for cycling ;)

    Reply
  • Bottom line. Best Tour de France cyclist out of all the cheaters. Nobody else has been hunted down like this guy. Why? Only one not caught. Why? Who knows! Was he clean? Who knows! All the evidence is from testimonies of cheaters & that’s a piss take.

    Reply

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