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

Landis regrets doping lies

Says he should have come clean about cheating sooner

Landis
Neil Frankland Associated Press

MELBOURNE, Australia – Disgraced cyclist Floyd Landis says he waited almost four years to reveal his doping because he knew once he’d admitted lying, he would not be believed about the widespread use of performance enhancing drugs in the sport.

After years of denials, Landis – stripped of the 2006 Tour de France title because of doping – admitted in May to using performance-enhancing drugs and accused others, including former teammate and seven-time Tour winner Lance Armstrong, of doping. Armstrong has vehemently denied the accusations and his attorney has described Landis as a “serial liar.”

Landis, speaking at an Australian conference on the eve of the road cycling world championships, said Tuesday that until more people come forward about the issue, cycling will continue to have a problem with drug cheats.

“Until I can sit here, and a lot of other people can sit down and talk about how it came to be that way, it’s going to be hard to find a solution,” he said. “If I can be a catalyst for that, so be it. I don’t care to take any credit for it because part of why I’m doing what I’m doing is for my own conscience and my own well being.

“As much as it hurts to sit and tell my mom I lied, and to tell other people that I lied, it’s better than the alternative.”

The American acknowledged he waited too long before coming clean.

“I knew that having defended myself in the beginning, and having lied about never having doped, that no matter when I changed the story and no matter when I decided to tell the details of what I’d done, the argument was always going to be the same. It was going to be that I shouldn’t be believed now,” Landis said.

“It took me longer than it probably should have.”

Landis’ allegations prompted an ongoing and wide-ranging U.S. federal probe centering on Armstrong and his associates.

The investigation is being pursued by U.S. prosecutors and Food and Drug Administration agent Jeff Novitzky.

Landis said doping was endemic in cycling when he was caught.

“There were plenty of good people in cycling who made the same decisions I did,” he said. “And it was never their intention to cheat anybody. It was never their intention to hurt anybody, it’s just that it was so commonplace that you could rationalize it in your mind that you weren’t hurting anybody.”