Cycling looks to the future after Armstrong affair

Agence France-Presse

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Cycling sought to move on from the Lance Armstrong doping scandal, as leading riders urged fans not to give up on the sport and Tour de France organizers unveiled the race route for its historic 100th edition

PARIS, France – Cycling on Wednesday, October 24, sought to move on from the Lance Armstrong doping scandal, as leading riders urged fans not to give up on the sport and Tour de France organizers unveiled the race route for its historic 100th edition.

Two days after world cycling authorities wiped clean Armstrong’s results back to August 1998, including his record seven Tour wins from 1999 to 2005, details of a gruelling 3,360km course were announced of the race the disgraced US rider dominated.

Next year’s Tour, which starts for the first time on the Mediterranean island of Corsica, includes a twin climb of the monster Alpe d’Huez and an unprecedented sunset finish on the sweeping Champs Elysees boulevard in Paris.

The glitzy presentation of the race, however, was dominated by the fall-out from the Armstrong scandal that has left cycling fighting to save its reputation and future from a doping-scarred past.

Race director Christian Prudhomme, who is against re-awarding Armstrong’s Tour titles and is seeking the repayment of the rider’s nearly 2.95 million euros ($3.8 million) in winnings, said cycling needed a “real cultural shift” to move forward.

He urged professional teams to join the “clean cycling” union the MPCC (Mouvement Pour un Cyclisme Credible), which has strict rules over the use of banned substances.

“The only way in which to change the culture (in cycling) is to apply draconian rules such as those that members of the MPCC apply,” he told reporters.

“Doping is the enemy, not cycling and even less so the Tour.”

Next steps

Prudhomme’s call indicates a growing recognition that cycling needs to change, given the damage done to its reputation by the Armstrong affair and questions about the credibility of the sport’s authorities’ handling of the scandal.

The International Cycling Union (UCI) is due to meet on Friday, October 26 to discuss the next steps, after its president described the Armstrong affair as sport’s “biggest crisis” ever and led to one major sponsor pull out, calling the sport “sick” to its core.

Armstrong, meanwhile, could lose another honor after the mayor of the commune d’Huez in the French Alps announced on Wednesday that he wanted to strip the Texan’s name from two corners named after him on the legendary Tour de France climb.

The Alpe d’Huez is probably the most famous climb of the Tour comprising 21 corners over 14km and an altitude of 1,850 metres. Each corner carries the name of stage winners, including Armstrong, who won there twice in 2001 and 2004.

Denials

Elsewhere, the Italian sports doctor accused of playing a key role in Armstrong’s elaborate doping programme denied in a new book that he had had any professional dealings with the American since October 2004.

Michele Ferrari — already banned for life by the US Anti-Doping Agency that compiled the devastating dossier against Armstrong — also rejected claims that he had seen other US riders who accused him of overseeing the use of banned substances.

In Australia, 2011 Tour de France winner Cadel Evans added his voice to other big names who have insisted that despite the headlines and focus on Armstrong’s fall from grace, major doping scandals were largely thing of the past in cycling.

The sport had learnt from the past and there was now “a level playing field where the hard work, meticulous equipment preparation and natural ability are winning the big beautiful prestigious races”, the rider said on his website.

“For those who are disappointed with the situation right now: do not despair, do not abandon us now we are in our best years, preparing things for our most important moment yet — the future…” – Agence France-Presse

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