It's Official: Lance Armstrong Trying For Another Tour

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JIM VERTUNO | September 9, 2008 10:53 PM EST | AP

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In t his July 24m 2005 file photo, Lance Armstrong, of Austin, Texas, toasts with champagne with Discovery team sports director Johan Bruyneel, left, during the 21st and final stage of the Tour de France cycling race between Corbeil-Essonnes and Paris. If Armstrong is ready to return to cycling, then Astana team boss Johann Bruyneel wants the seven-time Tour de France champ to ride for him. Bruyneel denies having signed Armstrong after it was reported that the cycling great may return at next year's Tour de France. By (AP Photo/Alessandro Trovati)

AUSTIN, Texas — Lance Armstrong is ready to swear off the chips and salsa, climb back on the bike and win an eighth Tour de France. Three years after retiring, the 36-year-old says he'll return to competition and the Tour de France in 2009, giving up relaxed days of a few beers and Tex-Mex food for a self-described monk's life of disciplined training and punishing races.

In a formal statement Armstrong called his comeback an attempt to raise global awareness in his fight against cancer. Just as likely, it's also about his relentless desire to compete and win, especially at the Tour, the race he dominated with a record seven titles from 1999-2005.

Citing the slow pace of last year's Tour and the rush from last month's Leadville 100 race, Armstrong decided it was time to return.

"This kind of obscure bike race, totally kick-started my engine," he told Vanity Fair in an exclusive interview, referring to the lung-searing 100-mile mountain bike race through the Colorado Rockies. "I'm going to try and win an eighth Tour de France."

Armstrong's riveting victories over cancer and opponents on the bike, his work for cancer awareness and his gossip-page romances have made him a modern-day American icon.

Professional cycling and particularly the Tour have missed Armstrong's star power, even though skeptics refused to believe he could win without the help of illegal performance-enhancing drugs.

This time, Armstrong's determined to silence the doubters and try to prove he really is clean.

He's even hired a video crew to chronicle his training for 2009, as well as his drug tests, for a possible documentary.

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"There's this perception in cycling that this generation is now the cleanest generation we've had in decades, if not forever," said Armstrong, who's never tested positive. "And the generation that I raced with was the dirty generation. ... So there is a nice element here where I can come with really a completely comprehensive program and there will be no way to cheat."

And if he has his way, no way to lose.

"We're not going to try to win second place," Bill Stapleton, Armstrong's lawyer and longtime confidant, told The Associated Press.

Diagnosed in 1996 with testicular cancer that had spread to his lungs and brain, doctors gave Armstrong less than a 50 percent chance of survival. Surgery and brutal cycles of chemotherapy saved his life.

From there, it was determination and powerful self-discipline that led him back to the bike and his stunning 1999 Tour win.

Armstrong's goal every year was to win the Tour, and he dominated the Pyrenees and Alps like no other rider ever had. This time, he wants to win for his millions of supporters and more important, the 8 million who will die of cancer just this year.

"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," Armstrong 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."

In a video on his foundation's Web site, Armstrong said details of the comeback _ such as a team and schedule _ will be announced Sept. 24 at the Clinton Global Initiative in New York City.

The 2009 Tour "is the intention," Armstrong's spokesman Mark Higgins told The Associated Press, "but we've got some homework to do over there."

"I think it's great," said longtime teammate George Hincapie, who added he spoke to Armstrong on Tuesday morning. "He's done more than anyone for the sport especially in America and around the world."

But what will he have to do to make a successful comeback?

For starters, he plans to train in Aspen, Colo., in rigorous conditions similar to what he would face in Europe.

Armstrong will be 37 next week. Only one rider older than 34 has ever won the Tour _ 36-year-old Firmin Lambot in 1922. And Armstrong wasn't impressed by the crop of younger riders in the 2008 Tour.

"It's not a secret. I mean, the pace was slow," he told Vanity Fair.

Armstrong noted other athletes in his age range competing at a high level, specifically 41-year-old Olympic medalist swimmer Dara Torres and 38-year-old Olympic women's marathon champion Constantina Tomescu-Dita, of Romania.

"Ask serious sports physiologists and they'll tell you age is a wives' tale," he said.

Torres certainly agrees.

"To hear that he's making a comeback, that just shows what kind of athlete he is and that he doesn't think age is anything but a number," she said from her Florida home.

Armstrong also must line up a team. His U.S. Postal Service and Discovery teams were loaded with top lieutenants, such as Hincapie, when he won his previous titles.

On Monday, the cycling journal VeloNews reported on its Web site that Armstrong would compete with the Astana team in the Tour and four other road races _ the Amgen Tour of California, Paris-Nice, the Tour de Georgia and the Dauphine-Libere.

Armstrong's close friend and longtime team director, Johan Bruyneel, now with team Astana, sent a text message to the AP declining comment.

But there are no guarantees Astana will race the 2009 Tour. Race officials kept the team out this year because of previous doping violations. Tour director Christian Prudhomme did not return messages seeking comment on Armstrong's decision.

If Armstrong and his team aren't invited in 2009, he plans to appeal directly to French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

"I've already put a call in to him," he said.

Off the bike, the Lance Armstrong Foundation has raised hundreds of millions of dollars for cancer awareness and survivorship programs. Its yellow "Livestrong" wristbands that started selling in 2004 are still seen everywhere _ with many copycats.

After he retired Armstrong took on cancer as a political issue, lobbying federal and state lawmakers and co-hosting televised forums with presidential candidates. He can rally millions of his "Livestrong Army" through his Web site to support cancer causes.

He was instrumental in persuading the 2007 Texas Legislature to pass a $3 billion fund for cancer research.

"This is a damn war for me. It's nothing other than that," Armstrong told The Associated Press in 2007.

His social life has done just as much to keep him in the spotlight.

After his divorce from wife Kristin, the mother of his three children, Armstrong has had high-profile relationships with rocker Sheryl Crow, fashion designer Tory Burch and most recently, actress Kate Hudson.

___

Associated Press Writer Jerome Pugmire in Paris and AP Sports Writer Beth Harris in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

AUSTIN, Texas — Lance Armstrong is ready to swear off the chips and salsa, climb back on the bike and win an eighth Tour de France. Three years after retiring, the 36-year-old says he'll return ...
AUSTIN, Texas — Lance Armstrong is ready to swear off the chips and salsa, climb back on the bike and win an eighth Tour de France. Three years after retiring, the 36-year-old says he'll return ...
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- lioness39 I'm a Fan of lioness39 46 fans permalink
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Another tour of what? Sheryl Crow? Kate Hudson?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:22 PM on 09/11/2008
- sammy50 I'm a Fan of sammy50 4 fans permalink

He's got balls to come out of retirement. Well, ball, anyway.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:35 PM on 09/11/2008
- Harrier I'm a Fan of Harrier 10 fans permalink

One of the major reasons why Armstrong left the tour was after his many wins, he thought the following year there would a lot of riders who hand challenged him in that past that where improving to the point to where he thought he would definitely lose the follow years. The year after he left, the major contenders, including the one he was most concerned would beat him, were all caught cheating and banned. The following year, even more. In truth, I'm sure if Armstrong knew that all these riders would be banned, I'm sure he never would have retired and would have won the Tours since his retired. However, some years have passed since then, Armstrong is now 37 years old and has not been in serious training for 3-4 years, his old teammates have been caught doping themselves, moved onto other teams and retired. Armstrong has been great for the sport, US cycling; but the real question is if Armstrong can re-attain the fitness necessary to do well or win in the future. I genuinely would love to see Armstrong to it, but the statistics show, at his age, he may have been away from the sport to long. He maybe shooting for the title for the oldest person to win the tour.

I wish him luck-Everyone enjoys seeing another turn back the hands of time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:55 AM on 09/11/2008
- Lion24 I'm a Fan of Lion24 83 fans permalink
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Come on, Lance. Leave us alone, will ya?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:32 PM on 09/10/2008
- cae I'm a Fan of cae 3 fans permalink

Well, good luck to him. Maybe he'll pedal himself to exhaustion to the point where he'll have some humility in his private life. THAT would be something!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:13 PM on 09/10/2008

Mance had better get his teroid regimen going. He has no time to lose.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:33 PM on 09/10/2008

Stop all this cancer talk. His money is running out. There endorsements are tailing off and nobody cares what he thinks or says. And even when he comes back what he says or does will not matter except to uniballers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:58 AM on 09/10/2008
- Merckx I'm a Fan of Merckx 19 fans permalink
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Your name says it all.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:26 AM on 09/10/2008

U are definitely a uniballer

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:23 PM on 09/10/2008
- robbor I'm a Fan of robbor 7 fans permalink
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He's not having much luck with the ladies so he might as well pump a bike

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:28 PM on 09/09/2008
- KCFreedom I'm a Fan of KCFreedom 16 fans permalink

We need to put him on a bicycle generator and power the city of Austin

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:19 PM on 09/09/2008

Good to have him back.
I just hope they will let him and his Team race in the Tour in 09.

Go get 'em Lance...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:47 PM on 09/09/2008
- djreedps I'm a Fan of djreedps 11 fans permalink

Great for Lance.

However, I question why Lance Armstrong has kept close ties to the Republican Party, even appearing at functions with George W. Bush. When I lived in Texas a year or two ago, there was an item on our ballot to provide funding for a Lance Armstrong Cancer Research Center. The measure passed.

However, opposition to Lance Armstrong's cancer center came from Republicans who posted signs and ads about raising our taxes. It was obvious that those Republicans would rather see people die from cancer than have to pay taxes. I found those Republicans' actions to be very vulgar and demented.

So maybe Lance has decided that he would rather stick with cycling than go into politics where his "friends" in the GOP hate both his own initiatives and the value of human life after someone is born.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:19 PM on 09/09/2008
- huffnpuffn I'm a Fan of huffnpuffn 8 fans permalink

The 2009 Tour will be above politics. I take Lance at his word that he's doing this not for himself but for what he stands for, namely, the end of cancer.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:53 PM on 09/09/2008
- tbrnotb I'm a Fan of tbrnotb 18 fans permalink

Just when we though he had ridden into the sunset to become Matthew McGonahey's wing man, he comes back.

Now he joins Michael Jordan, Brett Favre, Barry Bonds and a host of other self centered athletes who just can't live without the limelight.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:39 PM on 09/09/2008
- comacoma I'm a Fan of comacoma 15 fans permalink

Perhaps it's that he just loves the sport and the competition....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:49 PM on 09/09/2008
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Until a great athlete fails do they finally figure out its time to go. I think Bonds is a separate case since no one wants him. But Brett the Jet, Jordan, Willie Mays (my all time hero), Aaron, Unitas, Marino, etc. had or have to have a really bad season, before they finally let go. John Elway was one of the few who retired at the top of his game, but I've read that even then he had difficulty with depression. I think a big ego is natural for an athlete at the top of their game, and I think Armstrong will have to fail before he can finally accept retirement.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:53 PM on 09/09/2008
- billreef I'm a Fan of billreef 3 fans permalink

Hey, did you see that pass "old man" Brett Favre threw this weekend. Everyone got kinda quiet.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:22 PM on 09/09/2008
- lioness39 I'm a Fan of lioness39 46 fans permalink
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It was great.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:24 PM on 09/11/2008
- linux I'm a Fan of linux 4 fans permalink

Why is it so hard for an athlete to retire gracefully.... and stay retired?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:15 PM on 09/09/2008
- Merckx I'm a Fan of Merckx 19 fans permalink
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Why do armchair critics insist any athlete stay retired. I think all humans should pursue their muse as long as they can. If he wants to race masters 75+, more power to him.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:42 PM on 09/09/2008
- wadenelson1 I'm a Fan of wadenelson1 224 fans permalink
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There will be nothing sadder than watching this former titan trounced by younger men, despised (and quite likely abused) by the peloton, perhaps even sabotaged by some of his teammates, and sent home in bitter defeat.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:14 PM on 09/09/2008
- comacoma I'm a Fan of comacoma 15 fans permalink

You apparently don't know much about Armstrong or cycling.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:50 PM on 09/09/2008
- McCainWho I'm a Fan of McCainWho 5 fans permalink
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Can the United States cope with a Sitting President with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder? WOW! This is really a national security issue that must be addressed by our Law Makers. PTSD is a major concern for our Nation's war-time Vets both young and old. Just look at the definition of PTSD on Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PTSD.Post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is an anxiety disorder that can develop after exposure to one or more terrifying events that threatened or caused grave physical harm. It is a severe and ongoing emotional reaction to an extreme psychological trauma.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:13 PM on 09/09/2008
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