ONTD

5:03 am - 01/13/2013

Lance Armstrong WILL confess to doping to Oprah

testing-1-articleLarge



Lance Armstrong will make a limited confession to doping during his televised interview with Oprah Winfrey this week. The disgraced cyclist, who has long denied doping, will also offer an apology during the interview scheduled to be recorded on Monday night at his home in Austin, Texas, according to an anonymous source.

While not directly saying he would confess or apologise, Armstrong sent a text message to the Associated Press on Saturday saying: "I told her [Winfrey] to go wherever she wants and I'll answer the questions directly, honestly and candidly. That's all I can say."

USA Today, citing an anonymous source, reported that Armstrong plans to admit using performance-enhancing drugs but is unlikely to reveal details of the allegations outlined in a 2012 report by the US Anti-Doping Agency. That report led to Armstrong being stripped of his seven Tour de France titles and banned for life from the sport. Armstrong's representatives declined to comment.

The New York Times reported last week that Armstrong was considering making a confession. The 41-year-old, who denied doping for years, has not spoken publicly about the Usada report. That cast him as the leader of a sophisticated and brazen doping programme on his US Postal Service teams that included use of steroids, blood boosters and illegal blood transfusions.

Winfrey's network said that Armstrong had agreed to a "no holds barred" interview. A confession to Winfrey would come at a time when Armstrong's legal troubles appear to be easing. Any potential perjury charges stemming from his sworn testimony denying doping in a 2005 arbitration fight with a Dallas promotions company over a contract bonus worth $7.5m would fall foul of the statute of limitations.

Armstrong faces a whistle-blower lawsuit filed by his former team-mate Floyd Landis, which accuses him of defrauding the US Postal Service, but the US Justice Department has yet to say if it will join the case.





1 You have yet to respond in detail to the case made against you by the US Anti-Doping Agency which provides overwhelming evidence that you headed a doping programme "more extensive than any previously revealed in professional sports history … a fraudulent course of conduct that extended over a decade". Usada's case against you includes sworn statements from more than two dozen witnesses including 15 professional cyclists and a dozen former members of your teams. How can you deny their case?

2 Past experience of doping confessions suggests that you will claim you had no alternative but to dope because that was the culture of the sport at the time and it was the only way to succeed. Has it ever occurred to you that in 1999, when you won your first Tour de France, the sport was in a state of transition, with a body of riders and teams clearly and publicly committed to change, and that your doping, and that of other US Postal riders in that Tour and those that followed, contributed strongly to the sport being sucked back into the morass of doping? More importantly, did it cross your mind at the time?

3 In the light of the overwhelming evidence of doping against you in the 1999 Tour, have you any words for Christophe Bassons, whom you intimidated during that race over his anti-doping stance? Similarly, have you any thoughts for Filippo Simeoni, whom you bullied out of a possible 2004 stage win after he testified against your trainer Michele Ferrari?

4 What would you say now if you were alone in a room with any of the whistleblowers – Emma O'Reilly, Greg LeMond, Betsy Andreu, David Walsh – who you threatened when they attempted to expose you?

5 Usada's reasoned decision states that you had "ultimate control ... over the doping culture of [the US Postal Service] team ..." that you "required that [your team-mates] adhered to the doping program outlined for them". Was this indeed the case?

6 It is known that you made two substantial payments to the International Cycling Union during your racing career. Why did you make those payments?

7 Could you detail any meetings you may have had at the UCI to discuss doping matters and recall what was said at those meetings?

8 In 2009, you returned to the Tour de France after four years' retirement. Usada claims there is evidence to suggest you used blood doping during that race. Can you confirm or deny that? Either way, why did you refuse your consent for the ICU to supply Usada with its laboratory and collection information from that race for analysis and will you now grant that permission?

9 A cycling fan, who believed in you for many years, asked how people like him could possibly now have faith in any of their heroes. What would you say to him and those in the cancer community who believed in you for so long?

10 In July this year, all the living riders who have raced in the Tour de France in its 100 editions will be in Paris for the finish. Will you take your place among them or do you feel your place is elsewhere?



Oprah-Winfrey-010



America may not, to its occasional twinging regret, have a royal family, but for the past four decades it has had its own regal mother confessor.

When Michael Jackson, the former sprinter Marion Jones and countless less starry but no less remorseful Americans have sought public redemption, they have all turned to Oprah Winfrey. So it is entirely in keeping with this, if not noble then at least long-running tradition that for his first TV interview since the alleged doping scandal, Lance Armstrong has sent, not the Bat Signal, but the Oprah Winfrey Signal. It's a light that bathes the sky in a sudsy, soppy and occasionally saccharine glow.

Yet while Winfrey might not be known as the hardest hitting of interviewers (except, that is, when the interviewee is seeking forgiveness for a wrong they committed against Winfrey herself, as authors James Frey and Jonathan Franzen learned to their cost), to choose Winfrey at all is something of a statement from Armstrong.

News last weekend that Armstrong is "considering making a public confession that he used performance enhancing drugs" sounded to many like a confession in itself; the announcement that he is to kneel at the forgiving feet of Winfrey has the decided smack of a penitent man who has lost the bullying defiance that has long defined his attitude towards allegations of doping.

You don't go to Winfrey just to confess: you go to Winfrey to confess, cry and beseech public sympathy (and hopefully to pry open leeway to some kind of post-scandal career). Going by past examples, Winfrey probably won't be too tough on Armstrong, disappointing his angry former fans. But she will, guaranteed, wring tears out of him, however genuine they might be.

It is not difficult to fathom how Winfrey has carved this deified role for herself. The woman positively quivers with warmth and empathy. She's soft, but exudes a starry, even regal aura, which in turn flatters her guests who feel that, OK, they might have been strong-armed into riding the redemption train, but at least they're going first class with a billionaire.

Yet while many miserable masses have huddled on Winfrey's sofa, Armstrong's decision to turn to Winfrey is a huge coup for her. This interview will not be on the easily accessible TV channels where her hugely successful show ran for a quarter of a century until 2011, but on Winfrey's cable network, OWN, and her website.

The network has had a shaky first 18 months, with some Winfrey fans complaining they can't actually find it. But even if Winfrey's blue chip quality has suffered, she is still – when it comes to flawed celebrities – the first-class option and, arguably most importantly, the soft and safe choice.





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isntdaveone 13th-Jan-2013 05:31 am (UTC)
allfourone 13th-Jan-2013 05:31 am (UTC)
God I miss Oprah (the show)

That's all I have to contribute
myhipusername 13th-Jan-2013 06:46 am (UTC)
same :(
_xxtom 13th-Jan-2013 05:32 am (UTC)
SMH
CACKLING @ the original ONTD post with all those stupid cows defending him. Some of yall are so naive sometimes.
noon 13th-Jan-2013 05:33 am (UTC)
lmao i was surprised by how many people defended him in that post tbh
yoshiyuki_ly 13th-Jan-2013 05:37 am (UTC)
I lurked there for a long time. Couldn't believe my eyes.
saltireflower 13th-Jan-2013 05:51 am (UTC)
Ikr? Like we were supposed to believe that the one guy who totally wasn't doping somehow kept beating all the guys who were.
dancedallnight 13th-Jan-2013 05:57 am (UTC)
lol mfte
for_serious13 13th-Jan-2013 02:32 pm (UTC)
lololol mte
eaglefan2011 13th-Jan-2013 06:09 am (UTC)
ia
lovefifteen 13th-Jan-2013 07:16 am (UTC)
lol yeah

i expect ppl to start with the tired excuse that he had no choice because everyone else was doing it!!!
winonaforever 13th-Jan-2013 09:03 am (UTC)
HAHA. THIS.

"It's a witch-hunt". Rme

Edited at 2013-01-13 09:03 am (UTC)
oblika_farika 13th-Jan-2013 05:34 am (UTC)
who even cares anymore
syzygy09 13th-Jan-2013 05:36 am (UTC)
the people who are clinging to their Livestrong wristbands
bollyhood 13th-Jan-2013 05:39 am (UTC)
the athletes he bullied out of the sport for refusing to dope
the magazines and newspapers he sued when they speculated he doped
the US postal service teammates and staff who either confessed or testified an have been threatened and called liars by him and his team will care.
grammaire 13th-Jan-2013 05:44 am (UTC)
mte

Plenty of people care, and they have good reason to. This asshole made MILLIONS off of being a cheating bastard.
ritzyroxie 13th-Jan-2013 05:34 am (UTC)
This poast makes zero sense, omw.
bollyhood 13th-Jan-2013 05:39 am (UTC)
ritzyroxie 13th-Jan-2013 05:41 am (UTC)
I need a film/stage/television adaption of these photos rfn
manicpixiegirl 13th-Jan-2013 05:43 am (UTC)
who is she talking to?
diggingtrouble 13th-Jan-2013 05:48 am (UTC)
this never fails to make me laugh
blrocks 13th-Jan-2013 06:04 am (UTC)
I would love to know what she's talking about and with who. So intense.
_xxtom 13th-Jan-2013 06:44 am (UTC)
this is one of my fav things on the internet
hearthecity 13th-Jan-2013 05:35 am (UTC)
What does he get out of doing this?
emerald_lights 13th-Jan-2013 05:44 am (UTC)
Penance?
bollyhood 13th-Jan-2013 05:47 am (UTC)
He probably thinks he's going to get a Tiger Woods welcome back hug. He forgets that Tigers indiscretions had nothing to do with golf.
bollyhood 13th-Jan-2013 05:48 am (UTC)
Oh and he wants his lifetime ban reduced to four years so he can do triathlons.
nomoneyfun 13th-Jan-2013 06:05 am (UTC)
Ugh. What a fucker. He can ride a bike, swim, and run on his own damn time. No one is entitled to compete in athletic competitions.
rkt attention13th-Jan-2013 05:59 am (UTC)

pulmesic 14th-Jan-2013 12:31 pm (UTC)
I dont get it either... he should just stick to lying instead.
misscrystal 13th-Jan-2013 05:35 am (UTC)
Is it too crass to make a joke about it taking a lot of balls to confess?
spillvegas 13th-Jan-2013 05:57 am (UTC)
on ontd - yes
anywhere else - no
misscrystal 13th-Jan-2013 06:15 am (UTC)
LOL. I wasn't sure if I'd end up getting shit from some moron who happened to reblog a few social justice posts today.
muzicnem 13th-Jan-2013 04:11 pm (UTC)
lmao
esearcher 13th-Jan-2013 06:08 am (UTC)
LOL!! Not too crass, I think it's funny.
in_my_tree 13th-Jan-2013 05:35 am (UTC)
Photobucket
michelleantonia 13th-Jan-2013 09:43 am (UTC)
best part of the movie
twowaymirrrors 13th-Jan-2013 05:35 am (UTC)
Do people seriously even care that much?
madmike91 13th-Jan-2013 05:46 am (UTC)
i'm a person and i don't
vampireweekend 13th-Jan-2013 05:36 am (UTC)
read the title as will confess to doping oprah

obv out of it
yoshiyuki_ly 13th-Jan-2013 05:36 am (UTC)
Boo hoo.
peachie_ego 13th-Jan-2013 05:38 am (UTC)
Dope doesn't make you win 7 times idc what anybody say
esearcher 13th-Jan-2013 06:13 am (UTC)
You're kidding, right? I don't see how anyone could get through that, with those times, without using steroids (especially for their anti-inflammatory properties), infused, oxygenated blood and blood boosters. If doping was the pervasive culture at the time, someone who didn't dope would be at an incredible disadvantage. So of all the dopers (all the cyclists, basically), lance was the best doped cyclist. In my eyes, it's still fair win, albeit via a warped culture. But to think he won 7 - or any- titles as an anti-doping cyclist in a doping culture lacks common sense.
likeparenthesis 13th-Jan-2013 06:22 am (UTC)
idt that's what she's saying tho... she's saying it wasn't JUST the dope, that he had to have true talent to win 7 against other dopers
bollyhood 13th-Jan-2013 06:17 am (UTC)
Even if HE says it? They all doped. Thats why no one is getting his titled. Because they ALL did it.
popartpistol 13th-Jan-2013 06:24 am (UTC)
lol. Yes, yes, it does. Those 7 wins while he was doping are the evidence.
michelleantonia 13th-Jan-2013 09:45 am (UTC)
no, dope surely doesn't. DOPING, on the otherhand.....
cabernet 13th-Jan-2013 02:46 pm (UTC)
lol mte, I could do it and not even place
myxwill 13th-Jan-2013 05:39 am (UTC)
I don't understand. Weren't they testing the cyclers before they raced all these years ago? I'm sure they all dope if there weren't any testing system in place.
bollyhood 13th-Jan-2013 05:42 am (UTC)
The most basic technique outlined in the report, based on affidavits from some of Armstrong’s former teammates, was simply running away or hiding.

To facilitate out-of-competition testing, professional cyclists are required to inform their national antidoping agencies of their locations at all times. Riders who receive three warnings in an 18-month period for either not providing their whereabouts accurately or not filing the information at all can be punished as if they had had a positive drug test.

The simplest was pretending not to be home when the testers arrived. As long as they were in the city they had reported as their locations, the riders found they would not receive a warning for not answering the door.

The doping agency also found that Armstrong often stayed at a remote hotel in Spain where he “was virtually certain not to be tested.”

When the testers could not be avoided, Armstrong and his teammates turned to drug masking, the report said. It indicated that during the 1998 world championships, testers were diverted to other riders on the United States team while one of Armstrong’s doctors “smuggled a bag of saline under his raincoat, getting it past the tester and administering saline to Armstrong before Armstrong was required to provide a blood sample.”

syzygy09 13th-Jan-2013 05:49 am (UTC)
Thank you for posting this, as you just answered the question that I was about to post.

I'm familiar with the doping agencies/policies when it comes to professional tennis, and it seems cycling is very similar.

It seems exhausting, but avoiding it seems even more exhausting.
myxwill 13th-Jan-2013 05:57 am (UTC)
this doesn't seem very efficient to me. I wonder how other sports, such as swimming, handle doping and testing.
pikapika217 13th-Jan-2013 05:44 am (UTC)
Fun fact - I have won the same amount of Tour De France's as Lance Armstrong.
nomoneyfun 13th-Jan-2013 06:07 am (UTC)
LOL.
eaglefan2011 13th-Jan-2013 06:10 am (UTC)
lol
kiwitanga 13th-Jan-2013 06:16 am (UTC)
lmao
shanny_w 13th-Jan-2013 06:26 am (UTC)
:)
adriqj46 13th-Jan-2013 06:44 am (UTC)
HAHA
supernature_971 13th-Jan-2013 07:56 am (UTC)
Cackling irl !
winonaforever 13th-Jan-2013 09:06 am (UTC)
lol irl
evilgmbethy 13th-Jan-2013 01:25 pm (UTC)
lmao
madmike91 13th-Jan-2013 05:46 am (UTC)
i would tell oprah anything
sarahfer 13th-Jan-2013 06:48 am (UTC)
she should be honoured to have you ja'mie

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