Lance Armstrong

Just saw the below on RTE site.
Lance Armstrong will come out of retirement and attempt to win the Tour de France for an eighth time, according to a report.

VeloNews cited anonymous sources in reporting that Armstrong, who turns 37 on September 18, will join the Astana team and compete in five road races.

He will compete in the Amgen Tour of California, Paris-Nice, the Tour de Georgia, the Dauphine-Libere and the Tour de France, racing for no salary or bonuses.

VeloNews reported Armstrong’s comeback will be the focal point of a story in the upcoming issue of Vanity Fair, to be published later this month.

Diagnosed with testicular cancer in 1996, Armstrong overcame the disease to win the Tour de France in seven straight years from 1999 to 2005. In 2002, Sports Illustrated named him Sportsman of the Year.

Since his retirement, Armstrong has run in a pair of the New York City Marathons along with the Boston Marathon.

If he does come back and if he rides for Astana then he’ll have done his reputation in the sport absolutely no good whatsoever. That would be astonishing.

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Conflicting stories coming out. Bruynell denied knowing anything about it as did Leipheimer. Below is a story from velonews which suggests he will. I think Armstrong will come back myself. Hard to know who will be team leader with Astana though.

Lance Armstrong will come out of retirement next year to compete in five road races with the Astana team, according to sources familiar with the developing situation.

Armstrong, who turns 37 this month, will compete in the Amgen Tour of California, Paris-Nice, the Tour de Georgia, the Dauphine-Libere and the Tour de France — and will race for no salary or bonuses, the sources, who asked to remain anonymous, told VeloNews.

Armstrong’s manager, Mark Higgins, did not respond to questions.

However sources close to the story have told VeloNews that an exclusive article on the matter will be published in an upcoming issue of Vanity Fair, expected later this month.

Rumors of Armstrong’s return swirled at last week’s Eurobike trade show in Germany and this week’s Tour of Missouri.

The rumor speculates that Armstrong will reunite with former team manager Johan Bruyneel at Team Astana — a viable option given Armstrong’s long-lasting relationships not only with the Belgian director but also Trek, Astana’s bike sponsor.

According to sources, the Texan will post all of his internally tested blood work online, in an attempt to establish complete transparency and prove that he is a clean athlete.

The rumor, which has been rampant for nearly a month, gained legs when former Discovery Channel team director Dirk Demol signed with Astana for 2009.

“I am excited to be reunited with Johan Bruyneel," Demol said. "What Johan has been able to do this year with Team Astana is quite special and admirable and I look forward to being a part of his program once again. It will be a new team with some familiar faces, but I know the winning philosophy and structure have remained the same.”

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Other rumors are that Armstrong will continue to pursue mountain bike racing, and may try his hand at cyclocross as well.

Should Armstrong return with Astana, it would bolster a squad that arguably boasts the sport’s best stage-racing team.

In Missouri, Columbia rider George Hincapie, a close friend of Armstrong’s and the only man to ride on all seven of the Texan’s Tour winning teams, simply smiled when asked what he’d knew about the rumor, saying, “I don’t know anything.”

Armstrong re-enrolled himself into the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency’s out-of-competition testing pool prior to August’s Leadville Trail 100 mountain bike race, where he finished second to Dave Wiens, said USA Cycling chief operating officer Sean Petty.

USADA rules state that any athlete who wishes to come out of retirement must enroll in the USADA out-of-competition testing program for at least six months in advance of regaining eligible status.

A return to racing would no doubt bring large crowds to American races, and could perhaps save the Tour de Georgia, which is struggling to land a title sponsor.

Petty said that should Armstrong wish to return to racing, “it would be one of most exciting things to happen to American racing since he won his seventh Tour. Depending on his plan, if that is what he wanted to do, it would be tremendously exciting and would generate a tremendous amount of attention on the sport, and on what he’s doing. People would be very interested to see how he would do in a comeback.”

The last big-name rider to return from retirement was Italian Mario Cipollini, who signed with Rock Racing and competed at this year’s Amgen Tour of California after three years away from the sport. Cipollini failed to win a stage, but took third in a field sprint and said, “This finish means as much to me as any victory.” Following the race Cipollini had a contractual dispute with Rock team owner Michael Ball, and left the team.

I must say I was shocked when I heard this first but can see his logic now. Come back and prove to those begrudging Europeans that he is still clean and can whup ass even after 3 years off.

I finally got around to reading David Walsh’s book about doping and while a lot of the evidence is circumstantial, if true it would make you want to puke. Of course the question is would Astana get a tour invite next year?

Money talks of course.

It’d be crazy to come back, but he strikes me as the kinda guy who doesnt know what to do with himself if he’s not in the saddle.

He’s risking an awful lot by coming back, it cant be worth it.

Just checked odds on Paddypower and he is 16/1 to win it next year. Though Astana have denied knowing anything about the story Armstrong himself has yet to comment. I think there is something in the story and 16/1 is generous odds.

It’s well worth a few bob at that price.

Lance Armstrong has confirmed that he will indeed be part of the peloton in 2009, citing cancer awareness as the motivation for an unlikely return to the sport. Winning an eighth Tour de France is the goal for the Texan, who will be 37 years of age on September 18.

“I am happy to announce that after talking with my children, my family and my closest friends, I have decided to return to professional cycling in order to raise awareness of the global cancer burden,” he said in a statement released to The Associated Press. “This year alone, nearly eight million people will die of cancer worldwide. … It’s now time to address cancer on a global level.”

Armstrong retired from the sport on the day he won a record seventh consecutive title in the Tour, and said at the time that he was done with professional racing. After running several marathons, he competed in the Leadville 100 mountainbike event in August, placing second there.

According to AP, Armstrong’s aim will be success in the biggest race in cycling. The Tour “is the intention,” his spokesman Mark Higgins said, “but we’ve got some homework to do over there.”

“We’re not going to try to win second place,” said Bill Stapleton, Armstrong’s lawyer.

Higgins said that the team he will ride with remains undecided, but Johan Bruyneel has said that if Armstrong does decide to come back, it will most likely be with Astana.

In an interview with Vanity Fair, Armstrong seemed rather more confident. “I’m going back to professional cycling. I’m going to try and win an eighth Tour de France.”

When questioned over his age he said, “Ultimately, I’m the guy that gets up. I mean, I get up out of bed a little slow. I mean, I’m not going to lie. I mean, my back gets tired quicker than it used to and I get out of bed a little slower than I used to. But when I’m going, when I’m on the bike – I feel just as good as I did before.”

That’s gas. I’d say Lance Armstrong is a complete mentalist and is finding it very hard to readjust to civilian and “only” doing a few poxy marathons every year.

I read his books, and like millions of others I have complete and utter respect for him. I haven’t read Walshe’s book but even if Armstrong was doped to the gills, which is unlikely, he is truely a freak of a human being (and not freak as in jugs).

Its 05 since his last win, which will mean a 4 year gap come next summer. A big ask, I think he has a great shout though.

That man as ball(s) - or has he? I can’t remember.

delighted to see him back, fair play to em.

Odds on him winning Tour have shrunk to 9/2. At 37 it would be a huge ask of him but margins of his victories in his 05 win was very big. Still think he may have had an advanage of being on better PED’s then some of his competitors then. Likelihood of him having a similar advantage in 09 with the new testing procedures is doubtful. Still will be entertaining to see him back and is good news for the spor.

If he can come back after a three year layoff and win the Tour after having only raced in six odd races beforehard then cycling is easy. It won’t say much for the current top men if that is the case. But on the other hand, Landis, Basso, Vino, Rasumussen are all gone (though Basso is coming back in a well prepared team). Assuming he goes to Astana, Contador will be his team mate. Sastre won’t win the tour again and Andy Schleck will shit himself if he goes head to head with Lance. Let’s get Hamilton and Ullrich back as well and make a real Celebrity death match out of it!

Unreal that this is happening. I have huge doubts over the man’s integrity but in fairness to him all the other big names over his career (Ullrich, Vino at the end, Pantani, Riis) were doping so it’s likely he’d have been as successful anyway. Doesn’t mean he’s not tainted though and any evidence that suggests he was doping seems to suggest he was at the very sophisticated end of things.

Anyway there’s a big hole in the sport now just waiting for someone to dominate. Evans had his chance to win this year but I can’t see that coming around again. Sastre did well to get his win because that won’t come again and was hugely dependent on the Schleck threat. Whether Andy has it in him yet is doubtful. Valverde is impossible to read, Ricco is gone, Contador and Basso both look more than capable but neither have much proven form in Le Tour of late.

This is the thing, the best man should still be the best assuming all are having the same level of preparation (ahem). But where the doping has messed the sport up is in giving average riders or domestiques the ability to maintain a high pace even in the mountains. How many times did we see Discovery/Postal burning everybody through a high pace and suppress all attacks? Even Hincapie won a mountain stage FFS. No one attacked. I actually stopped watching the Tour for quite a few of the Lance years because it was so boring. On the other hand, the last few tours have been harder to control by any one team, 2006 in particular.

Yeah bang on the money.

I read alot of criticism of this year’s tour elsewhere and couldn’t believe it. While L’Alpe wasn’t as explosive as I hoped the rest of it was brilliant and it’s been the same in recent years and mainly because you haven’t had a crew of talentless US Posties just surrounding some poor unfortunate who had the misfortune to be talented. It was heartbreaking supporting Ullrich and watching his team-mates disappear one by one until there was Ullrich, some out and out climber, Armstrong and then Hincapie, Leipheimer, a Colombian Postie and some other randomer all just sitting nice and comfortable. And poor Ullrich just didn’t have the acceleration to do anything about it.

I thought there was some great racing in this years tour, especially in the first week. I was always an Ullrich fan as well, from when I saw him win the World Amateur in 93 the same day Lance won the Pro title. He had a decent sprint on him that day.

It looks like he is joining Astana, which will make them unstoppable next year. An Astana 1-2-3 wouldn’t be out of the question.

Which all makes next year’s Tour - after this years pretty excellent one - almost unbearable. One dominant team, and a peloton brimming with people who can’t be trusted led by a surly yank, Armstrong, who I find impossible to believe didn’t dope, and the likes of Basso, Kloden, Valverde etc. Shit might as well throw Vino, Rasmussen and Landis back in their as well, lets really destroy any progress made this year…

Are Astana guaranteed an ASO invite for Le Tour next year?

Clearly they’ll be under huge commercial pressure anyway particularly with Armstrong back on board but I’d love for them to assemble a cracking team and then get overlooked anyway.

It would be a huge step backwards alright to have Basso, Kloden and Amrstrong back in the same year. What’s happened to Kloeden anyway, he’s really gone backwards at Astana.

Money talks. L’ Equipe will sell shitloads with Lance back. It wouldn’t really be fair to ban Astana and leave worse teams like Liquigas take part anyway, Astana isn’t the same team it was a couple of years back.

Kloden is the perfect example of what happens when you go cold turkey. The dudes way down in Spain. You can put Cunego and Valverde in that category as well. http://www.thefreekick.com/board/public/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/wink.gif

The only good news is how well Nicolas Roche and Daniel Martin are doing these days. In general Columbia is doing very well with a very young team, which is good because they along with Garmin are properly the cleanest out there.

But he DS of Astana is now Bruyneel. I don’t see that as an improvement on a couple of years ago.