Race Radio said:There is more to this story. PDM pushed Greg to dope. When he resisted they started calling him un-professional. Later Greg left a note on the sun shade of Harry's car
Wow. Did Greg speak out about this at the time?
Race Radio said:There is more to this story. PDM pushed Greg to dope. When he resisted they started calling him un-professional. Later Greg left a note on the sun shade of Harry's car
Totilas said:What a peculiar moment to hand this 25 years old document to a journalist.
Before I opened this thread, I didn't realise Lemond was that year in the PDM team.
Lemond must have felt like he was living in a nightmare, by the sounds of it.86TDFWinner said:Ethanks for the link, good read. It was in 89 that Greg broke contract, as I said earlier, he was still out of the 88 tour recovering from the hunting accident.
Besides, this should further cement proof Greg has never doped. He raced clean, and remained steadfast on that, thats why he's such a class act and SHOULD be hailed as a hero imo.
After my two years with La Vie Claire, then after Toshiba had dumped me after my hunting accident, I had a two-year contract with PDM that my dad had negotiated on the day of my second operation in 1987. One of the conditions in the PDM deal was that I had to be racing by the end of 1987 but, if you knew what had happened to me, that was insane. My way around it was to show up to a criterium in Belgium at the end of the season and do one lap. That was it. I pretended that I had a flat tyre.
With PDM, I was supposed to earn US$200,000 in 1988 and double that in 1989. Unfortunately I started horribly in ’88 and injured my tendon. They then put me in a cast. To me that didn’t sound like the right thing to do, so I took it upon myself to call an orthopedic surgeon, who confirmed my suspicion. I then went home in June and went on anti-inflammatories for six weeks. I couldn’t pedal. Finally, on July 12th, they made an incision into my tendon and I was back on the bike in tennis shoes the next day, and with my cycling shoes three weeks later.
I’d now had almost two years without any racing, but PDM wanted to throw me right back in at the Tour of Holland. I lasted two days, and that’s when the trouble with the team really started. To my mind the problems stemmed from Gert-Jan Theunisse’s positive test, or more specifically my reaction to it, which was to tell the management that whoever had given him the drugs should be fired and the same applied to Theunisse. I liked Gert but I didn’t want to be associated with any kind of doping.
Of course this was never made public, which gave them the license to start rumours about me bad-mouthing the other riders and asking for a pay-raise. They were all saying 'How dare he ask for a pay-raise when he’s had no results and he never trains?'
It became clear to everyone at this point that it wasn’t going to work, so I started quietly asking around at other teams, knowing that it’d suit all parties if I could leave PDM. I went to Fagor to do a VO2 Max test and scored 77 or 79, with zero training and the iron stocks in my body totally depleted by the accident. My right lung was also collapsed. But they weren’t interested. They said I didn’t have the potential to win another Tour.
Bat Man said:I can see why Armstrong resented the way LeMond immediately talked publicly upon learning about his connection to Dr Ferrari, but kept his own team's doping out of the media when he was riding.
Bat Man said:I can see why Armstrong resented the way LeMond immediately talked publicly upon learning about his connection to Dr Ferrari, but kept his own team's doping out of the media when he was riding.
ultimobici said:A little different, don't you think? One was actively doping, the other was being pressured to dope. The former carried on doping, lying etc for a decade or more, the latter removed himself from the situation and carried on riding clean.
1) LeMond didn't out Armstrong, he commented on a story that was already out there.Bat Man said:You're comparing the two individual's behavior on doping, which is a different point. I'm refering to omerta. LeMond did not raise the red flag while he was riding. He kept the doping of his team quiet within the sport. But he immediately outed Armstrong years later. I can see why Armstrong resented this.
hrotha said:1) LeMond didn't out Armstrong, he commented on a story that was already out there.
2) IIRC he did actually speak out against PDM at the time.
Bat Man said:You're comparing the two individual's behavior on doping, which is a different point. I'm refering to omerta. LeMond did not raise the red flag while he was riding. He kept the doping of his team quiet within the sport. But he immediately outed Armstrong years later. I can see why Armstrong resented this.
“When Lance won the prologue to the 1999 Tour I was close to tears, but when I heard he was working with Michele Ferrari I was devastated. In the light of Lance’s relationship with Ferrari, I just don’t want to comment on this year’s Tour. This is not sour grapes. I’m disappointed in Lance, that’s all it is.”
Bat Man said:What did he say about PDM's doping program at the time?
ultimobici said:A little different, don't you think? One was actively doping, the other was being pressured to dope. The former carried on doping, lying etc for a decade or more, the latter removed himself from the situation and carried on riding clean.
It's in another of the LeMond threads. Use the Search feature.Bat Man said:What did he say about PDM's doping program at the time?
Aleajactaest said:And we know this how? Serious question.
Now that we have clear evidence that doping occurred in his era, how do we know who did and who did not?
The reason Armstrong resented it was because it was true and Greg was right.Bat Man said:You're comparing the two individual's behavior on doping, which is a different point. I'm refering to omerta. LeMond did not raise the red flag while he was riding. He kept the doping of his team quiet within the sport. But he immediately outed Armstrong years later. I can see why Armstrong resented this.
Bat Man said:What did he say about PDM's doping program at the time?
Fortyninefourteen said:Before you make a bigger fool of yourself, read this excerpt from a Velonews essay Grewal wrote.
The fear of doping hit me for real the day I dropped into the continental professional scene. From day one with Panasonic-Raleigh it was made known that “The Program” was the high and holy way, salvation open to all, and required of all to survive and win. Faux doctors like Ruud Bakker, no more than pseudo-credentialed soigneurs, introduced me to the gospel of champions. That all of them said and took the Holy Vow. Team director Peter Post, as the high priest, intoned that I must listen to the “doctor” and submit to the “Preparation.” Our syringes came gift wrapped in the morning and evening during stage races, and in the 2007 Tour de France one of my former roommates sat behind the wheel of a team car pulling feathers out of his hair.
pmcg76 said:I know for some people it's hard to grasp the difference between the attitudes towards speaking about doping pre-Festina and post-Festina. A lot of people only have come to sport in the last 10 years so it's hard to imagine what it was like before.
Before Festina, speaking about doping was automatic career suicide primarily because there was no real significant fact's out there that showed doping was common even though it was obvious in the EPO years.
Bat Man said:Interesting. Sometimes people present Armstrong as an exceptional bully in the peloton that took omerta to new levels. But you say it was actually a lot worse before his time. Maybe someone should tell the mainstream media.
pmcg76 said:In fairness Armstrong did take bullying to new levels, I never witnessed any of the bullying Lance demonstrated pre-Festina. Anyone who spoke was usually ridiculed as bitter but few athletes took it upon themselves to actively destroy people like Lance did. Very few of them had the power, time or the money to do so.
How come you didn't take back the things you said before and which have been proven wrong, and instead you just keep trying to come up with ways to smear LeMond?Bat Man said:Interesting. Sometimes people present Armstrong as an exceptional bully in the peloton that took omerta to new levels. But you say it was actually a lot worse before his time. Maybe someone should tell the mainstream media.