joe_papp said:
Biggest, hubris-driven mistake he ever made was to come back to competition. He made the perfect getaway after 2005 - a truly impressive reign followed by a magnificent escape - and he threw it all away with this stupid "You Can't Catch Me! nahnahnahnahnaaanahhh...attitude."
Joe, put yourself in his position for a second. Armstrong has built a reputation and a fortune on being the "Golden Boy" of American sport.
He took it corporate, and the message became "anyone who wants to defy the odds and come out on top has only to put their "Lance Face On" and go at it".
That in and of itself is an incredibly compelling message, especially here in the states where the mantra is 'hardest worker wins". And wasn't Lance always the hardest working man in the peloton according to those Trek commercials?
But the ugly underbelly of that contrived notion is the willingness to cheat is tacitly accepted as as a virtue-win at all costs, as long as you win. Cheat, just don't get caught doing it.
He is insulated by the "cancer survivor/warrior" facade built on bags of transfused blood, steroids and HGH.
And he has a whole apparatus to support him, from the President of the UCI down to every screaming, rabid fanboy who thinks one day they too can grow up to be like Lance.
His fans remind me of those suburban football fanatics who disappear into their man caves every Sunday rooting for their home teams and playing fantasy football. Ask any of them about steroids and to a man they'll tell you-"As long as steroids are ingested by guys on THEIR team, then YEAH BABY!!! GO GIANTS!!!"
So Armstrong is sitting at home, jogging with Matthew McConaughey and diddling every anorexic dingbat who looks like his mother. He looks up and sees Carlos Sastre winning the Tour and says, "I can still beat these guys with one needle tied behind my back". And then he dreams up this cancer awareness thing as a reason to do it.
For more money, more power and the prestige of having won 8 Tours.
He already had the apparatus in place to do this-a team with great domestiques, the same director sportif who knows the drill, the whole doping system ready to go, the UCI in his pocket and a legion of fanboy zombies.
I'm sure he thought two things-one, no one who knows would ever rat him out, and even if they did he would be insulated from any accusation because there is no proof as far as failed tests are concerned, and two, anyone who would dare could easily be marginalized.
I believe he never thought for one second that his ex-domestiques would jeopardize their collective futures to come together as a group and say, "Yes, we all doped and we did it together. And this is how we helped Lance win his 7 Tours".
He even counted on disgraced riders like Tyler Hamilton would just shut up and go away, despite all he knows and is unwilling to tell. But Floyd changed all that. He has been discredited and marginalized, but if others come forward none of that will matter.
The only thing we can do now is wait and see if anyone else steps up. The more people come forward, and I'm talking about riders who helped him win his Tours and most certainly doped alongside him, the less Armstrong's camp will be able to vilify Floyd Landis.