MALIBU, Calif., May 19, 2007

Landis Defends His Tour Win

American Cyclist Denies Doping Charge; Admits Manager Called LeMond

  • Play CBS Video Video Shocker In Landis Doping Trail

    A hearing into doping allegations against Tour de France champ Floyd Landis took a shocking turn, as American cyclist Greg LeMond claims he was threatened by Landis' team. Hattie Kauffman reports.

  • Cyclist Floyd Landis stands next to a slide display during a break in the arbitration hearing on the doping allegations against the 2006 Tour de France champion at Pepperdine University in Malibu, Calif., May 14, 2007.

    Cyclist Floyd Landis stands next to a slide display during a break in the arbitration hearing on the doping allegations against the 2006 Tour de France champion at Pepperdine University in Malibu, Calif., May 14, 2007.  (AP)

  • Photo Essay Tour Turmoil

    Floyd Landis' win in the Tour de France is called into question after failed drug test.

(AP)  Floyd Landis took the stand in his arbitration hearing Saturday, repeatedly denying he'd ever taken testosterone, saying it "wouldn't serve any purpose for me to cheat and win the Tour."

For 75 riveting minutes, Landis gave a detailed breakdown of his career, then outlined the strategy he used for his riveting comeback in Stage 17 of last year's Tour de France — a plan hatched over dinner and whiskey the night before.

"It helps with the tactical plan," Landis said, drawing laughs.

Speaking under oath, he said the only banned substance he has taken during his career has been cortisone — medicine he used to treat his injured hip, which had been approved for his use by cycling authorities.

Landis, who is accused of using synthetic testosterone, tested positive after that 17th Tour stage.

He also spoke about allegations that Greg LeMond made two days earlier, acknowledging he was in the room when his former manager, Will Geoghegan, made the call to LeMond threatening to reveal the three-time Tour champion's secret that he had been sexually abused as a child.

"I knew there was a problem," Landis said of his reaction upon realizing Geoghegan had made the call. "I was traumatized having him tell me that story in the first place. There are very few things I can imagine would happen to a person that are worse than that. To make light of that, I can't even put words to it."

Landis spoke in a conversational, matter-of-fact tone, never raising his voice or breaking down. His parents and wife, Amber, watched from behind the defense table — his mom smiling ever so slightly and Amber fiddling with her watch.

The rest of the hearing room was rapt, finally getting a chance to hear Landis speak under oath about the allegations he has denied since news of his positive "A" sample was leaked 10 months ago.

At the end, attorney Howard Jacobs asked him why the three arbitrators who will decide his fate — whether he becomes the first Tour de France winner stripped of the title for a doping offense — should believe him.

"They should believe me because people are defined by their principles and how they make their decisions," Landis said. "To me, bicycle racing was rewarding for the pure fact that I was proud of myself when I put the work into it. As long as I know I earned what I got, that was satisfactory. Obviously, it's fun to win. It's a matter of who I am. It wouldn't serve any purpose for me to cheat and win the Tour because I wouldn't be proud of it. That wasn't the goal to begin with."

Landis described being massively confused when word of the positive test first came out last summer, which led to a debacle of a news conference in Spain.

At that appearance, he explained his positive test came not because of testosterone use but was, rather, something that was produced "by my own organisms."

"I still don't know what that means," Landis testified. "I regret it. It was confusing at that point. I shouldn't have taken the advice of those lawyers. I didn't know what I was doing. As you can see, those guys aren't here today writing statements."

© MMVII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by cmhbob May 20, 2007 6:19 AM EDT
Here's a couple of questions I've never seen addressed:
1 - What where his levels on all of the prior tests? Was this a normal level for him?
2 - When would he have had to take the testosterone for it to show up at the level it did? Would taking it at that time, whenever it was, have given him the boost in power he supposedly got?
Reply to this comment
by bloggerbud May 20, 2007 3:38 AM EDT
Big money!

Where there is big money there will be big cheaters. It doesn't matter what we're talking about.
Reply to this comment
by incog-nito May 20, 2007 3:30 AM EDT
abc222001:

But of course you still love your American baseball, where cheating is never a problem, right?
Reply to this comment
by imarltool2u May 20, 2007 2:02 AM EDT
We need more people like Floyd Landis. He won the race without cheating. Who in their right mind would believe a French testing agency that had someone who didn't know what she was doing to test the sample, knew whose sample it was when it was supposed to be secret and then broke the chain of title for the sample? Unfortunately, the anti-doping nuts probably are in on the contamination of the sample. How else can they perpetuate their existence better than corrupting the sample in a conspiracy with the French who don't like AMericans winning a French race.
Reply to this comment
by abc222001-2009 May 20, 2007 12:54 AM EDT
Floyd,

Please Just Go Away!

The sport of road bicycle racing has been ruined by you, Lance, Hamilton, Pantani, Ulrich and the rest. I will never again watch the Tour de France. You have all wasted too much of my time and energy.
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