Showing posts with label Oprah Winfrey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oprah Winfrey. Show all posts

Monday, 28 September 2015

Lance Settles 10 Year Case


Lance Armstrong has settled a 10-year dispute with an insurance firm over the repayment of $10m (£6.6m) paid to the cyclist before he admitted to doping.

The American, 44, received the money from SCA Promotions Inc in relation to his seven Tour de France victories.

He was ordered to pay it back after losing a lawsuit in February.

"I'm pleased to have this matter behind me and I look forward to moving on," said Armstrong, who also apologised to the Dallas-based company.

Armstrong has not revealed how much he has paid SCA as part of the settlement.

SCA initially refused to pay out money covering the bonus for Armstrong's sixth Tour de France win in 2004.

The cyclist won an arbitration hearing against the company in 2005, after the contract between the parties stipulated the insurance money would be payable if Armstrong was the "official winner" of the Tour.

He was awarded $2.5m (£1.65m) in damages and costs, in addition to the $7.5m (£4.94m) of payments he received from SCA.

SCA demanded repayment in 2013, after Armstrong was stripped all seven of his Tour de France titles and issued with a life ban by the United States Anti-Doping Agency.

During a 2013 television interview with American talk-show host Oprah Winfrey, Armstrong confessed he used banned performance-enhancing drugs throughout much of his cycling career.

After settling the dispute, Armstrong said: "I do wish to apologise to SCA, and its chief executive Bob Hamman, for any misconduct on my part in connection with our dispute and the resulting arbitration."


Friday, 13 September 2013

Armstrong Returns Sydney Medal


Lance Armstrong has handed back the bronze medal he won at the Sydney Olympics in 2000.

Armstrong has given the medal to US Olympic officials, who will return it to the International Olympic Committee.

The IOC requested the return of the time-trial medal in January, in the same week the American admitted he had used performance-enhancing drugs.

The 41-year-old was stripped of his seven Tour de France titles and banned from cycling for life in October 2012.

That came after the US Anti-Doping Agency (Usada) produced evidence of widespread doping by him and his former team-mates.

However, he did not admit to cheating until he confessed during an interview with chat show host Oprah Winfrey in front of a worldwide television audience.

"The 2000 bronze is back in possession of US Olympics and will be in Switzerland as soon as possible to the IOC," Armstrong said on Twitter.

US Olympic Committee spokesman Patrick Sandusky confirmed the organisation had received the medal.

Russia's Viacheslav Ekimov won the men's time trial at the Sydney Games, with German Jan Ullrich second.


Enhanced by Zemanta

Wednesday, 24 July 2013

Armstrong Urges US Ban Dismissal

Getty Images
Lance Armstrong has called for a federal lawsuit by the US government against him to be dismissed.

The suit argued that the 41-year-old defrauded the public by insisting he was not using drugs during his seven Tour de France wins.

He was stripped of the titles last year and admitted doping this year.

However Armstrong has accused his government of overlooking allegations because his team were sponsored by the US Postal Service.

"Although the government now pretends to be aggrieved by these allegations, its actions at the time are far more telling," Armstrong's motion states.

Armstrong, who was riding for the US Postal Service team at the time relating to the lawsuit, ended years of denial in January during an interview with chat show host Oprah Winfrey in which he described doping as part of the process of winning the Tour.

The Texan rider asked an American judge to dismiss the justice False Claims Act lawsuit on Tuesday.

"Did it suspend the team pending an investigation? Did it refer the matter to its phalanx of lawyers and investigators at the Department of Justice for review? It did not," his motion continued.

"Rather than exercise its right to terminate the sponsorship agreement, it instead renewed its contract to sponsor the team.

"The rationale behind the government's decision is obvious. Armstrong had recently won the 2000 Tour de France. The government wanted a winner and all the publicity, exposure, and acclaim that goes along with being his sponsor. It got exactly what it bargained for."

Armstrong has also argued that the government's case is too old to move forward because it is barred by the six-year statute of limitations.

The American rider, who won the Tour a record seven times between 1999 and 2005, was last year exposed as a serial drug user in a US Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) report that plunged cycling into crisis.

The cancer survivor, who insisted for years that he did not take performance-enhancing drugs, was stripped of his Tour titles and banned from the sport for life.

Armstrong also said he was not shocked by a French senate inquiry’s findings that the top two in the 1998 Tour de France took the banned blood booster EPO because “virtually all of us broke the rules, and lied about it”.

“I am not surprised,” the disgraced Tour winner said: “As I have said, it was an unfortunate era for all of us.”

The French senate inquiry, published on Wednesday, named him as testing positive for EPO in 1999.

The American called for cycling to address its doping past in a “collective and co-operative manner”.

He said: “If we don’t come together, have the conversation and draw a line in the sand and then move on, we’re all screwed.”

In January, Armstrong admitted having taken performance-enhancing drugs and it came after he was stripped of the Tour titles he won from 1999 to 2005 in October 2012, when the United States Anti-doping Agency (Usada) said it had uncovered a sophisticated doping programme.

The Italian Marco Pantani, who won the Tour in 1998 and died of a drug overdose in 2004, and Jan Ullrich of Germany, who finished second in 1998, were among those named in the 918-page report compiled by a parliamentary group, who called for a “truth and reconciliation” commission to be created to lift the veil of silence on illegal practices.

Since Armstrong confessed to doping to Oprah Winfrey on her show in January, he has called for a truth and reconciliation programme on several occasions.

Wada, the World Anti-doping Agency, the International Cycling Union(UCI) and national federations have been wary of the suggestion, although the UCI presidential candidate Brian Cookson has appeared open to the suggestion of Armstrong sharing his past.

Armstrong continued: “I have not been contacted by anyone. I suspect in many ways they (Wada) are afraid of a truth and reconciliation commission as it would fly in the face of the now famous talking point ‘the most sophisticated doping programme in the history of the world’.”

Asked if the senate’s findings would benefit the sport, Armstrong added: “I don’t know. I really don’t. I’d like to think that there is some good in all this but, from my perspective, sitting here today, there has been nothing but damage done to the sport.
Enhanced by Zemanta