iafrica.com,
AFP, 17 Jan 2013
The
International Olympic Committee (IOC) on Thursday asked disgraced American
cyclist Lance Armstrong to return the Olympic bronze medal from the time-trial
event at the 2000 Games in Sydney.
The IOC had
written to Armstrong late Wednesday to ask him hand back the medal, IOC
spokesman Mark Adams told AFP.
The IOC had
to wait for world cycling's governing body to sanction Armstrong, which it did
on December 6, and the following three weeks in which the Texan had recourse to
appeal at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS).
The US
Olympic Committee, to which Armstrong must theoretically return the medal, has
also been informed, Adams added.
Armstrong
was stripped of his seven Tour de France titles and banned from the sport for
life in October after the US Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) produced evidence of
widespread doping by him and his former team-mates.
The
time-trial in the 2000 Games was won by Armstrong's ex-US Postal Service
teammate Viasheslav Ekimov of Russia, now general manager of the Katusha team
whose ambivalent stance on doping cost them a place in the elite ProTeam list
for this season.
The silver
medal went to one of Armstrong's great rivals, Jan Ullrich of Germany, who was
caught up in the Operation Puerto doping probe and eventually served a two-year
ban for doping.
Abraham
Olano of Spain came home in fourth and may be set to inherit the bronze vacated
by Armstrong.
Other
notable results in the race held in Sydney were by American Tyler Hamilton, a
former teammate of Armstrong at US Postal who finished tenth and went on to win
gold at the 2004 Athens Games before testing positive for doping.
British
rider David Millar finished 16th and is still currently on the circuit after
serving his own two-year ban from 2004.
The
International Cycling Union (UCI) late last year effectively erased Armstrong
from the cycling history books when it decided not to appeal sanctions imposed
on the Texan rider by the USADA.
In his
first interview since Armstrong was shorn of his Tour titles, recorded Monday
with Oprah Winfrey and due to be broadcast on Thursday and Friday, the chat
show host confirmed that the Texan admitted using performance-enhancing drugs.
Related Articles:
Lance Armstrong: US insurance firm ready to file $12m lawsuit
Lance Armstrong 'sick' and tearful in second Oprah Winfrey interview
Masseuse rejects Armstrong apology
'One big lie,' Armstrong says of 7 drug-fueled Tours
Lance Armstrong: US insurance firm ready to file $12m lawsuit
Lance Armstrong 'sick' and tearful in second Oprah Winfrey interview
Masseuse rejects Armstrong apology
'One big lie,' Armstrong says of 7 drug-fueled Tours
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.