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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Armstrong again on defensive



 (The Spokesman-Review)
John Leicester Associated Press

FIGEAC, France — Lance Armstrong’s day was far from over when he stepped off his bike after finishing ninth in Thursday’s stage of the Tour de France.

Once again, Armstrong found himself fending off the suspicions that have dogged him since he won the first of his five straight championships after coming back from cancer.

Armstrong said a French TV station tried to get into his hotel room in hopes of finding evidence of doping, and three-time Tour winner Greg Lemond voiced doubts that his fellow American is clean.

“They show up and they ask sporting questions to our face, but as soon as they leave they’re digging in the rooms and looking for dirt,” Armstrong said. “If you left a B vitamin sitting there, that would get on TV and that would be a scandal. That’s what we have to live with every day.”

The 32-year-old Texan said he was concerned the reporter from TV station France 3 might have tried to plant banned substances to frame him. Within his team, there are fears that some in France do not want an American to win a record six Tours.

Armstrong said the television crew tried to persuade hotel staff to let them into his room after he left to go race.

He said the reporter who visited his hotel “has been following us for months and it’s scandalous.”

“The scary thing is, if they don’t find anything and get frustrated after a couple of months … well, who’s to say they won’t put something there and say, ‘Look what we’ve found,’ ” Armstrong said. “They see the sport as a target, an easy target.”

The France 3 reporter, Hugues Huet, said he went to the hotel to do interviews about Armstrong’s teammates and that he chatted to the hotel manager for a few minutes. But he denied he sought access to the champion’s room.

“It’s completely ridiculous,” Huet told the Associated Press. “We do have ethics and we don’t do just anything. … If I played around by searching his room like that, I would be breaking the limits.”

In an interview published Thursday by Le Monde, a French daily that previously leveled claims of drug use by Armstrong, Lemond voiced doubts about his fellow American.

“Lance is ready to do anything to keep his secret,” Lemond told the paper. “I don’t know how he can continue to convince everybody of his innocence.”

Armstrong shrugged off the suspicions.

“Greg Lemond was my idol as I grew up in cycling because he was a great champion and did amazing things on the bike,” he said in a statement. “I’m disappointed and dismayed that for the past four years Greg has continued to question my performances and my character.”

The 11th stage, won by Frenchman David Moncoutie, did not change the overall time gap between Armstrong and his main rival, German Jan Ullrich, still 55 seconds behind.

Saving themselves for the arduous and likely decisive climbs in the Pyrenees, which start today, and the Alps, they did not react when Moncoutie and two other riders surged ahead.

French champion Thomas Voeckler retained the overall lead, still 9 minutes and 35 seconds ahead of sixth-placed Armstrong. But the 25-year-old French rider is expected to lose the lead to top riders in the mountains.