Lance Armstrong stripped of Olympic bronze medal

LONDON (AP) - Thirteen years after he stood on the podium in Sydney, Lance Armstrong was stripped of his bronze medal from the 2000 Olympics because of doping.
The International Olympic Committee sent a letter to Armstrong on Wednesday night asking him to return the medal, just as it said it planned to do last month.
The decision was first reported Thursday by The Associated Press.
The IOC executive board discussed revoking the medal in December, but delayed a decision until cycling's governing body notified Armstrong he had been stripped of his seven Tour de France titles and all results since 1998. He then had 21 days to appeal.
Now that the deadline has expired, the IOC decided to take the medal away. The letter to Armstrong was also sent to the U.S. Olympic Committee, which would collect the medal.
"Having had confirmation from UCI that Armstrong has not appealed the decision to disqualify him from Sydney, we have written to him to ask for the return of the bronze medal," IOC spokesman Mark Adams told the AP. "We have also written to USOC to inform them of the decision."
The move was confirmed on the same day that Armstrong's admission of using performance-enhancing drugs - after years of denials - is to be broadcast in an interview with Oprah Winfrey. The timing of the IOC move, however, was not related to the TV interview.
Two months after winning his second Tour de France title in 2000, Armstrong took the bronze in Sydney in the road time trial behind winner and U.S. Postal Service teammate Vyacheslav Ekimov of Russia and Jan Ullrich of Germany.
The IOC opened a disciplinary case in November after a U.S. Anti-Doping Agency report detailed widespread doping by Armstrong and his teammates. The report called it the most sophisticated doping program in sports.
The IOC will not reallocate Armstrong's bronze medal, just as cycling's ruling body decided not to declare any winners for the Tour titles once held by the American. Spanish rider Abraham Olano Manzano, who finished fourth in Sydney, will not be upgraded and the bronze medal will be left vacant in Olympic records.
In August, the IOC stripped Tyler Hamilton, a former Armstrong teammate, of his time-trial gold medal from the 2004 Athens Olympics after he acknowledged doping. In that case, Ekimov was upgraded to gold.
The IOC is also investigating Levi Leipheimer, a former Armstrong teammate who won the time-trial bronze at the 2008 Beijing Games. The American confessed to doping as part of his testimony against Armstrong in the USADA case.
The IOC is looking into the details of Leipheimer's admitted doping, including when the cheating took place, before moving to strip his medal. Finishing fourth behind Leipheimer in 2008 was Alberto Contador, the Spaniard who was stripped of the 2010 Tour de France title after testing positive for clenbuterol.
The International Olympic Committee sent a letter to Armstrong on Wednesday night asking him to return the medal, just as it said it planned to do last month.
The decision was first reported Thursday by The Associated Press.
The IOC executive board discussed revoking the medal in December, but delayed a decision until cycling's governing body notified Armstrong he had been stripped of his seven Tour de France titles and all results since 1998. He then had 21 days to appeal.
Now that the deadline has expired, the IOC decided to take the medal away. The letter to Armstrong was also sent to the U.S. Olympic Committee, which would collect the medal.
"Having had confirmation from UCI that Armstrong has not appealed the decision to disqualify him from Sydney, we have written to him to ask for the return of the bronze medal," IOC spokesman Mark Adams told the AP. "We have also written to USOC to inform them of the decision."
The move was confirmed on the same day that Armstrong's admission of using performance-enhancing drugs - after years of denials - is to be broadcast in an interview with Oprah Winfrey. The timing of the IOC move, however, was not related to the TV interview.
Two months after winning his second Tour de France title in 2000, Armstrong took the bronze in Sydney in the road time trial behind winner and U.S. Postal Service teammate Vyacheslav Ekimov of Russia and Jan Ullrich of Germany.
The IOC opened a disciplinary case in November after a U.S. Anti-Doping Agency report detailed widespread doping by Armstrong and his teammates. The report called it the most sophisticated doping program in sports.
The IOC will not reallocate Armstrong's bronze medal, just as cycling's ruling body decided not to declare any winners for the Tour titles once held by the American. Spanish rider Abraham Olano Manzano, who finished fourth in Sydney, will not be upgraded and the bronze medal will be left vacant in Olympic records.
In August, the IOC stripped Tyler Hamilton, a former Armstrong teammate, of his time-trial gold medal from the 2004 Athens Olympics after he acknowledged doping. In that case, Ekimov was upgraded to gold.
The IOC is also investigating Levi Leipheimer, a former Armstrong teammate who won the time-trial bronze at the 2008 Beijing Games. The American confessed to doping as part of his testimony against Armstrong in the USADA case.
The IOC is looking into the details of Leipheimer's admitted doping, including when the cheating took place, before moving to strip his medal. Finishing fourth behind Leipheimer in 2008 was Alberto Contador, the Spaniard who was stripped of the 2010 Tour de France title after testing positive for clenbuterol.
He lied & cheated. Others too, lied and cheated. The rules were known. They chose not to follow them. Sure, they were all still amazing athletes, but that does not excuse it. To me, the other good he did in this world is separate from the issue at hand. You can't justify one because of the other. And you can't justify his doping by saying, "well, everyone's doing it".
To bad...I was battling cancer and donated a lot of time and money to the Livestrong Foundation. I still support Lance Armstrong's foundation and will continue to do so. I am so saddened to hear about his being stripped of medals and recognition. He is still a hero to me.
"I would never do..."Â http://abcnews.go.com/US/video/lance-armstrong-doping-denials-18231041
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Oh wait... I didn't say those things. LOL
Such a shame for those who who should have been the winner. He absolutely stole this from them.
@eskimo1 Oh you must mean everyone who is using performance enhancers, who didn't get caught OR come clean... O ya those people OK.
"Spanish rider Abraham Olano Manzano, who finished fourth in Sydney, will not be upgraded and the bronze medal will be left vacant in Olympic records"
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Why not?
I am amazed at how many people are inspired by a cheater.Â
 @Melissa Angevine Not only that.. but apparently have the complete inability to see where or understand how he was cheating. Then lying. Then intimidating. If has done nothing wrong... why is he apologizing?
Is anyone other than me tired of hearing about this crap?
 @Tim Lane Well... you apparently are still engrossed... you read this and commented on it. :-)
I dont give 2 shyts about him losing his BS medals. The guy is still my hero. Take that Naysayers. BOOM WHAAA
if jan beat a doping lance, what the heck was jan taking?
 @dorimonsonfan Jan was doping too. Hard to tell from your comment if you knew that or not.
His new theme song: Remember this one? Pretty appropriate! "Lies, Lies, Lies, ya a...They're gonna get you. Lies, lies, lies ya a" by the Thompson Twins :)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PA43ETEU1Vg
He has done way more good than bad and he should be honored. Â So what if he cheated...he took technology and perfected it...and gave back millions of dollars to people in need. Â A lot of the luxuries we have today are because of liars and cheaters.
 @cyclops So what if he cheated. Here's what genius.
Â
In addition to facing the court of public opinion, Armstrong could also be forced to answer in courts of law. His admission will likely see him hemorrhaging much of the personal wealth he amassed over the past 15 years, via both civil lawsuits filed by SCA Promotions and The Sunday Times, as well as the federal whistleblower lawsuit filed by another former friend and teammate, Floyd Landis, which may soon be backed by the U.S. Department of Justice. Itâs possible Armstrong could face criminal charges, for fraud, over millions of dollars of public sponsorship, and for perjury, after his denials under oath
Â
http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/50493449/ns/sports-cycling/
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I don't expect you to read it... but you should.
 @d_2 Perjury in the court of public opinion?  LOL  Good one.  Big time jail for that.
I could care less about watching other people plays sports and I don't care what they do in their own arena. Â What I do care about is when these people do something admirable with their money. Â Name me one other athlete who has raised a half a billion dollars for charity.
 @d_2 I don't know why you insist on making up stories.....oh wait you are a little bit like Lance though...break the law until you get caught mentality. He has never sat before a grand jury.  What is an oath clown?
 @cyclops Paul Newman.... now go home!  < athlete yes.  Race car driver.  And if you think Armstrong alone raised all of that money... you're scrambled.  Did you read the article?  I'm thinking not.  He lied under oath clown!
 @cyclops So what if he cheated? I see... because he started a Charity, he is given a kitchen pass to break the rules. If that's the case... I'll bet Madoff is rethinking his 100 million dollar contribution to Livestrong. He would be honored and forgiven.Â
Â
Well your Honor... I did rob the bank. I lied for years about it. I stole a million bucks sure... but I donated half of it to worthy charities. Oh.. considering that, you're exonerated and free to go. < fantasy land.
 @d_2 I know people who have cheated death because of todays modern drugs.  It was just a bike race where the one with the best technology wins. Wide receivers who wear sticky gloves are cheaters in my book.
 @d_2 Hard for you to face the truth as it turns out you are just as much a cheater as Lance. Â
 @cyclops That has to be the worst analysis I have seen on here in some time.  Congrats!  Even apples & oranges would be insulted.
 @d_2 If you are speeding you are breaking the law.  The morally right thing to do would be to confess to your crime and pay the consequences. But no...you wish to break the law until you get caught and then pay the fine. Hmmmmm..sounds just like someone named Lance.
 @cyclops What is your point? If I speed down the road and get pulled over... I am not going to lie about it. What's the use? If I do the crime.. I'll do the time/money. How is this relevant? How is this stealing money? < this should be interesting. I'll wait...
 @Northend  @cyclops ? Others have been stripped of their medals too. Did you not know that? He is not singled out by any stretch. And... you know for a fact that ALL (100%) of competition cyclist dope up? Interesting.
 @d_2 If you drive your car over the speed limit, do you drive directly to the court and pay your fine?  Cheater.  You are just stealing money from our city or county government. And I'm sure you would never use your cell phone while driving.  That would really rack up some bills.
 @d_2  @cyclops Against the rules yes. That I understand. But they ALL dope up so why is he singled out?Â
 @cyclops Not against the rules... the gloves that is. Cheated death is a phrase genius. Doping and blood transfusions or whatever Armstrong did is/was against the rules. Is it really difficult to understand?Â
 @d_2  @cyclops Madoff was a thief. What did Armstrong steal? Who did he personally hurt by doing this?Â
 @d_2 Only in a court of law.
 @cyclops It may be an option. Perjury is a crime. Stay tuned.
 @d_2 He would be in jail if he did something illegal now wouldn't he instead of helping people crippled with cancer.Â
 @Upgrayedd LOL  Yeah should have gone to another racer that wasn't as good at doping. Â
@Northend @d_2 @cyclops ....What did Armstrong steal??? Well, lets see, how bout the 7 titles and bronze medal that should have gone to someone else. People who did it honestly just got cheated. In this case, cheating is akin to stealing. Not that you're likely to get it, living in your, 'the ends justify the means' world.
 @Northend Wouldn't expect you to understand this. Cheat/Steal. Both illegal get it now? Splitting hairs... but hey.. if it works for you.
 @Northend Armstrong gave.  He also showed how to make a human the ultimate endurance machine through technology.
 @cyclops Can we assume you're being sarcastic? If you're not, you seem to be in favor of totally abandoning morality as long as it results in "giving back" and developing new technology.
 @stratoonist Ok then ...just throw out half of your stuff because somewhere down the line someone did something immoral when bringing products to the market.
 @cyclops I don't even have a response because I can't comprehend where you're coming from. Seriously. Good luck with your philosophy of life.
 @stratoonist He did nothing illegal.  Doping is part of cycling and has been for years.  They should just let everyone do it because most do anyway. Â
 @stratoonist  @cyclops Morality? LOL
Will someone please explain to me why using performance enhancing drugs is bad. Why are these any different than other drugs such as those for blood pressure, etc? I really don't get what the issue is.  I can take all the steroids there are but it won't make me an athlete.Â
 @Northend This is entertaining! Please give us more of your unique perspective.
 @Northend Seriously? You don't see that competition is amongst equal individuals. Steroids and drugs give an unnatural competitive edge. This is why race cars race equally. Turbo vs non-turbo. Naturally aspirated vs fuel injected. Just examples. Familiar w/ baseball? Steroids... Bonds, McGwire, Sosa... etc. While drugs will not give you any additional ability to put the bat on the ball.. it sure impacts the strength to yard one out of the park. Tell me why we haven't seen 70hr seasons since then? Do you think Armstrong would have won 7 tours w/o drugs? I will tell you this.... he sure didn't.
@d_2-I agree with you 100%. I am not an athlete by any definition of the word, but I go to the gym and I do my best. I don't search out "illegal" means in which I can excel at running or biking or lifting weights. If I can't do it on my own then I don't do it. Perhaps it's because I don't have sponsors and millions of dollars at stake or perhaps it's because I do have a sense of what is right and wrong. And to make matters worse, he consistently lied about using! I think his lying overshadows more of his charity work than the actual doping, itself.Â
 @d_2 We don't know do we? Sadly he didn't think he could. Yes, i know all about Bonds, etc. and yet again, taking them won't make you a MLB player, or win you a medal. I highly doubt others are NOT taking anything. If everyone is so concerned about it, why aren't competitors, players, etc tested regularly? If there's a random test for everyone they are less likely to take anything. I just don't think he should be stripped of his medal, etc. He isn't Vick (who's still in the NFL) who committed a felony.Â
 @Northend Yup, convicted and did his time in prison. If 90% of them are doing it... the 90% should be banned. Just because they are doing it doesn't mean you are allowed. If people are looting and stealing... you should be allowed to as well because they are? Your sense if right & wrong needs to be evaluated.
 @d_2 No but Vick was charged and sentenced for committing a felony.  I do not see how it's unfair if 90% of them are doing it.Â
 @Northend Vick broke zero NFL rules. Armstrong broke all sorts of cycling rules. There is no question that drugs is not going to make you an athlete. It only enhances performance. < unfair advantage. Does this really need to be explained to you?