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May 19, 2011 6:31 PM

Ex-Teammate: I saw Lance Armstrong use EPO

By
Overtime Staff
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60 Minutes Overtime

A former teammate of perhaps the world's greatest cyclist, Lance Armstrong, says he used banned performance-enhancing substances with Armstrong to cheat in pro races, including the Tour de France, the sport's ultimate event.

For the first time, former Armstrong teammate Tyler Hamilton reveals details to Scott Pelley never heard in public before of how and when he and some of the former members of the U.S. Postal Service team led by Armstrong used banned substances, including EPO and testosterone, to gain an advantage in races that Armstrong won.

Armstrong on doping claims: Never a failed test

Hamilton's interview is part of a six-month investigation by "60 Minutes" into doping on the cycling circuit and whether Armstrong has used banned substances - which he has steadfastly denied - a matter now under federal investigation.

The Pelley team's report will be broadcast on "60 Minutes" Sunday, May 22 at 7 p.m. ET/PT.

Hamilton, one of Armstrong's closest teammates and a champion cyclist in his own right, has previously denied using banned substances. He came forward to reveal secrets he thought he would harbor for years after he was subpoenaed by the grand jury in the federal investigation and forced to testify. "[Armstrong] took what we all took...the majority of the peloton," Hamilton says, referring to the tight group of bicycles and their riders in a race. "There was EPO...testosterone...a blood transfusion," he tells Pelley.

Hamilton says Armstrong used EPO, a drug that boosted endurance by increasing the amount of red blood cells in his body, to win the 1999 Tour de France, the race he won an astonishing seven times. "I saw [EPO] in his refrigerator...I saw him inject it more than one time like we all did, like I did many, many times."

Another former Armstrong teammate, also a witness in the federal investigation, is Frankie Andreu. He tells Pelley he took banned substances because lesser riders he believed were doping passed him by. "Training alone wasn't doing it and I think that's how...many of the other riders during that era felt, I mean, you kind of didn't have a choice," says Andreu.

The bedrock of Armstrong's denials over the years has been his claim to have never failed one of the hundreds of drug tests he has taken. Hamilton says Armstrong told him he did fail a test in 2001 given during the Tour de Swiss, an important event right before the Tour de France.

That allegation is under investigation by federal authorities.


Add a Comment See all 161 Comments
by BikeMiami June 23, 2011 8:31 PM EDT
Who's fast at the Tour de France? Hamilton, Landis, Ullrich, Basso, Contador, Rasmussen, Virenque and his entire Festina Team, Beltran, and, and,and. Now, guess who tested positive for doping? All of the above.

Mr. Armstrong says he's never tested positive or failed a doping test. First time I heard that I thought that's not a statement of an athlete. That is a statement given to an athlete by his defense attorney. That is legalese for "not yet."

I admire Lance's work for cancer survivors. My mom and aunt died of cancer. We asked friends to contribute to the Livestrong organization in lue of flowers. But I do not admire the bike racer. He is not my role model. If he doped then he was on equal ground with the above mentioned and a bit smarter for never getting caught, yet.
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by grover67 May 24, 2011 2:09 PM EDT
Tyler Hamilton will be rembered as one of the best Pro Cyclists in the past 20 years.He excelled at the thankless but most important jobs in the peloton, and along the way managed to win some races himself Without Tyler lance could,nt have won so many Tour De France titles. It was a joy to watch Tyler do his "job" through the years.I,m sure he believes he,s gonna help clean up the sport, but its not gonna happen. Doping,s been around the sport from the begining, long before he was born. He,s not the first nor will he be the last to confess with good intentions.The drug police can buy more machines, hire more people, impose more sanctions, but as long as thier are races to win, thier will be racers looking for an edge.Good, bad or ugly,it,s the human condition..Lance Armstrong didnt do anything more than 9/10 other guys in the sport did. Lets stop pretending that pro sports will ever be 100& clean. I hope Tyler and the others involved get through this in one piece.Taking away race victories, suspension, and fines will be more than enough punishment. prosecution and jail time would be way over the top.It may be immoral to some, but it,s certainly not criminal.Lets put it in perspective, this is a race/game were talking about.
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by Farrai May 23, 2011 9:52 AM EDT
WHAT was Tyler Hamilton's real motivation for going on 60 Minutes? I'm not convinced money is enough i.e. preemptive marketing for a book. Is it possible that Tyler was forced/encouraged by the Feds as part of his "deal" with the government to appear on 60 Minutes? Tyler avoided Federal pressure for years until finally receiving a subpoena, apparently due to loyalty to Lance. And Tyler did appear pained on 60 Minutes having to tell his story. My question again is about Tyler's motivation for the 60 Minutes interview: Wasn't the subpoena enough? Why did Tyler feel the need to go on 60 Minutes in addition to the subpoena?

I support Lance. His remarkable comeback from cancer and all the work he's done to help cancer survivors is more than most athletes have done for a noble cause outside of their sport. Many professional athletes dope, everybody knows that by now. But, I still think the Feds should leave Lance's reputation alone.
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by vlhouk May 23, 2011 9:00 AM EDT
Shame on you .. If this is what Scott brings to evening news... forget it
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by morales414 May 23, 2011 1:22 AM EDT
Maybe this is a better way to spot a lier.

http://youtu.be/r8zlDhbEfE8
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by morales414 May 23, 2011 1:10 AM EDT
Check this video on Youtube and tell me if this guy is lying or telling the truth about Lance Armstrong. http://youtu.be/E3PAW7zjgPw
He has all of the tell tale signs of a bold face liar. I don't buy it.
Reply to this comment
by thekell May 23, 2011 10:17 AM EDT
did you actually watch the 60 minutes story last night? in context, anyone can see that it was painful for Tyler to expose the truth he'd hidden for a decade. he was backed into a corner by the feds. not pretty. and not lying.
by thekell May 22, 2011 10:18 PM EDT
Remember, Tyler Hamilton said NOTHING for over a decade until forced to do so by the FEDS. That's called loyalty. That's called, self-sacrification (yeah, it's not a word, yet).

Meanwhile he's throwing his own legacy under the bus. Not just the Olympic gold medal. What about Tyler's epic 2003 tour, the epitomy of toughness and drama, never mentioned on 60 minutes:

In the 2003 Tour de France Hamilton cracked a collarbone in the first stage, and stayed to finish the tour. That year, he rode one of the Tour's ...most memorable feats. He won Stage 16 with a 142 km solo breakaway, and placed fourth overall. For his stage win, Hamilton was awarded the Coeur de Lion (French for Heart of the Lion) prize, as the most daring racer of the stage.

The storylines aren't so black & white, people! No devils. Just athletes going 100%.
Reply to this comment
by thekell May 22, 2011 10:09 PM EDT
Hamilton, remember, said NOTHING for over a decade until he was was subpoenaed by the Feds. By any other name that's called loyalty; that's called self-sacrification (yes, I know that's not a word in the dictionary - yet).

Tyler has his own legacy he just threw under the FED/60 minutes bus. And it's not just Tyler's Olympic gold medal. In the 2003 Tour de France, Hamilton cracked a collarbone in the first stage, and stayed to finish the tour. That year, he rode one of the Tour's ...most memorable feats. He won Stage 16 with a 142 km solo breakaway, and placed fourth overall. For his stage win, Hamilton was awarded the Coeur de Lion (French for Heart of the Lion) prize, as the most daring racer of the stage.
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by pathamilton1236 May 22, 2011 9:10 PM EDT
You know the really sad thing in all this that not one person has mentioned. How does all this negitive talk about Lance affect his kids? They are bound to be hurt by all the mean, dirty things being said about their Dad. Does not matter if you like or dislike him, have some compassion for the children. And lets all move on and get a life that is not focused on all the things not proven.
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by Lehmann108 May 22, 2011 8:36 PM EDT
Looks like Lance and his attorneys have hired people to flood this site with negative comments. So transparent. Greg Lemond was right all along when he insisted that Lance was doing PED. I'm curious what Lance is going to do when he's called to testify before the grand jury. I'm sure he'll plead the 5th because he has no other choice unless he's planning to perjure himself. Ultimately this will be good for cycling.
Reply to this comment
by thekell May 22, 2011 10:05 PM EDT
yeah, posts for hire are everywhere.
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