Lance Armstrong: Doping, Cycling & His Life Journey

2024 ж. 22 Мам.
29 641 Рет қаралды

Lance Armstrong joins us in person from Austin, Texas to talk his cycling career, his doping ban and his life since the 2013 admission. Lance talks about the interactions he's had in recent years, both positive and negative and where he sits with his decisions. Lance also talks about his podcasts, investments and his favorite memories involving cycling. Enjoy!
(00:00) - Intro
(10:58) - Lance Armstrong
(17:00) - Public perception
(22:30) - Doping ban
(30:45) - Possibility for redemption?
(38:20) - Being a father
(42:00) - Lance Armstrong's physiology
(47:10) - Cycling gamesmanship
(54:27) - Relationship with Jan Ullrich
(59:45) - Love of cycling
(1:01:40) - Cancer diagnosis
(1:09:00) - Drinking at altitude
(1:15:30) - Swimming and triathlons
(1:22:15) - Cycling injuries
(1:26:00) - Lance's relationship with cycling today
Listen to the Full Episode on Apple Podcasts and Spotify:
podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast...
open.spotify.com/show/06jeyfm...
HELLO, Locals! Green Light Podcast is hosted by Chris Long and is joined weekly by Kyle Long, Macon Gunter, Beau Allen, Stanford Steve + other many more athletes and celebrity guests.
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#lancearmstrong #tourdefrance #cycling #usacycling

Пікірлер
  • Chris, I clicked on the show BECAUSE it's Lance Armstrong.

    @Shelbyj13@Shelbyj132 ай бұрын
    • Me too!

      @gainknowledgeandinsight@gainknowledgeandinsight2 ай бұрын
  • The only reason I clicked was because of Lance. The greatest of all time: even playing field.

    @bretzky9261@bretzky92612 ай бұрын
    • Not everyone doped. He wouldn’t have won without doping. Check his measurables. Look at his VO2 max. He was a middle of road rider at start.

      @mitchhorton9178@mitchhorton91782 ай бұрын
    • Even playing field? That statement alone demonstrates your absolute ignorance of the subject.

      @billstevenson8142@billstevenson8142Ай бұрын
    • @@mitchhorton9178 True...but it's also true that same could be said of whoever might have won in his place. Pretty hard to find any top GC rider who has "not" been caught or strongly implicated in doping at one time or another. Hence the even playing field sentiment.

      @neologian1783@neologian1783Ай бұрын
    • @@billstevenson8142 I'm not sure that's actually the case. Which is to say, I don't think it demonstrates ignorance to express the understanding that doping at the time (and probably still to this day) was so prevalent that participating was, in a rather odd (and yet still unethical) way, a kind of leveling of the playing field. Even if only in the sense that it provided Lance with all the same artificial advantages as virtually all of his serious rivals (if not the majority of the peloton). It seems a failure to account for that fact demonstrates more ignorance than taking it into account. Or did I misunderstand your post?

      @neologian1783@neologian1783Ай бұрын
  • Lance is an ultimate athlete

    @sskraba22@sskraba22Ай бұрын
  • I clicked on because I'm a huge fan of Lance Armstrong

    @amarishakur7480@amarishakur7480Ай бұрын
  • Lance changed my life after I read his book "Its not about the bike". Regardless of the controversy that follows him, he is still a human being that achieved such great things on two wheels and inspired so many people. He grew the Trek brand to where it is today and made a huge contribution to charity. What I'm trying to say is for me his balance sheet still remains positive to this day. Thanks for sharing.

    @raykleiner3151@raykleiner31512 ай бұрын
    • So cheating is okay? It doesn't matter the means but the results-winning? Wrong dude.

      @tomporter3295@tomporter3295Ай бұрын
  • Yes, Lance doped like they all did, he trained the hardest, had the best gear, best teammates. He brought cycling to the US like no others did, I still wear his yellow wrist ban anytime I go for a ride. I still don't know how they ride the TDF without doping.

    @davidswanson6837@davidswanson68372 ай бұрын
    • A lot of them did dope, not all of them!

      @capoislamort100@capoislamort1002 ай бұрын
  • Lance is more of a hero to me now with overcoming the rise,the fall,and the reinvent than ever. Truly an amazing life and an inspiration. People are not really looking for a super hero but for a super human with the ability to overcome the good the bad and the ugly. Lance is that man.

    @kshirshun@kshirshun8 күн бұрын
  • Im here for the Lance material....I have never seen your channel before so there is that.

    @craigmcallahan@craigmcallahanАй бұрын
  • Great crossover pod for me. Big fan of The Move, especially when the tour comes around in the summer. Probably could have listened to another hour and a half of you two. Awesome questions throughout!

    @alecfriend5112@alecfriend51122 ай бұрын
  • watched this and found your channel (go birds!) because it was Lance. Yes, Lance doped. But so did everyone in the pro cycling peloton at the time. They all denied it until they couldn't deny it anymore. Love listening to Lance talk about anything.

    @eleven24@eleven242 ай бұрын
  • Best days of cycling

    @user-ib5gv8kb3c@user-ib5gv8kb3cАй бұрын
  • Great interview Chris! Always take the chance, you're great at this.

    @jordancusick8433@jordancusick84332 ай бұрын
  • This got better the longer I watched.

    @TimSleppy@TimSleppy2 ай бұрын
  • its such bs hating on lance, everybody in cycling was on something, he helped with cancer, thats what counts imo

    @birgermunter5638@birgermunter5638Ай бұрын
  • The Green Light Intro, Take, Explanation is nearly as good as the sit-down..

    @FUNGRLLINZ@FUNGRLLINZ2 ай бұрын
  • Great introduction and summary before the actual interview. 👍

    @fmtien@fmtien17 күн бұрын
  • Great decision and great pod Chris!

    @peterbparis@peterbparis2 ай бұрын
  • Lance if forever the man. I was a fan back then and it did blemish all the hard work but it doesn’t mean he wasn’t a monster of his time all while never backing down from cancer

    @cynthiamaloney8559@cynthiamaloney8559Ай бұрын
  • Chris and the team have done a great job with this interview. Whether you like Lance Armstrong or not doesn't matter, but to consider doing this interview and then doing it was right on. The approach Chris took was great, he reminded us what Lance was then what he became and didn't glamourise Lance Armstrong. I thought the approach Chris took was honest and upfront. I enjoyed this interview and think Chris Long has a talent in the interview world. I'll continue watching Green Light. One of the best pods out there.

    @davidcrawford1551@davidcrawford15512 ай бұрын
  • Still one of the greatest cyclist of all time. If you remove his Tour wins remove all the others…!!!

    @Michael-lu3kt@Michael-lu3kt2 ай бұрын
    • No he’s not. It’s not even close.

      @juanitoblanco1133@juanitoblanco11332 ай бұрын
    • By all accounts, he was nothing special before the dope. So, no.

      @tonydejesus2134@tonydejesus21342 ай бұрын
  • Great job!

    @jeffreyrobinson8433@jeffreyrobinson8433Ай бұрын
  • Right for having him on.

    @Simonewhitesim-1music@Simonewhitesim-1musicАй бұрын
  • I love Lance. Always have and always will. Yes, I was sad that he used PHD (so did his peers)...but he will always be one of the best because he had grit, discipline, determination, and he wouldn't settle. Thank you for having him on. Love the Podcast 😊

    @sarawill9455@sarawill94552 ай бұрын
  • The only thing I disagree with is the notion that NFL players aren't doping because they get tested. Lance Armstrong never publicly tested positive for anything. There are rumors that he tested positive once and it got swept under the rug.....but the idea that very few players are doping because they don't test positive is kinda ignorant

    @GotDamBoi@GotDamBoi2 ай бұрын
    • Balco, most of those guys never tested positive

      @FSamuels20@FSamuels2012 күн бұрын
  • What amazes me is Chris talks about doping as if it’s uncommon in football. The testing in football doesn’t compare to cycling and they can get around the tests sometimes. For years doping has been prevalent in football. In the 80s there were huge bowls full of these PEDs for everyone to use. I can’t believe it’s gone, and yet Chris talks like it was way worse in cycling. I don’t believe it for a second.

    @ScottRSmith1964@ScottRSmith19642 ай бұрын
    • You’d know

      @ChrisLong-dy2uo@ChrisLong-dy2uo2 ай бұрын
  • One of the best ,,,

    @133badger@133badger2 ай бұрын
  • Armstrong still can't not rip on Greg LeMond. I have to admit, when I saw who the guest was, my first reaction was, "F-that guy" but I'm glad I watched it. Chris was really even-handed with Lance - not treating him like public enemy #1 and not kissing ass, either.

    @KenJohnsonFlyfishing@KenJohnsonFlyfishing2 ай бұрын
    • yeah greg came back and won after being shot in the lung, i'm sure that's a clean story

      @ansonbrooks101@ansonbrooks1012 ай бұрын
    • I feel like Lance has grown a lot and the humility looks good on him but ripping Lemond shows there's still work to be done there. Just like everyone else.

      @victorykj@victorykj2 ай бұрын
    • @@ansonbrooks101show me some evidence. There is none, you’re just trying to bring him down to Lance’s level.

      @tonydejesus2134@tonydejesus21342 ай бұрын
    • Agreed. Ripping on LeMond isn’t the wisest of ideas & shows some immaturity still. He apologizes to the fans but i’d love for him to apologize to teammates like Tyler Hamilton & speak positively of others

      @Enskinner@Enskinner2 ай бұрын
    • @@ansonbrooks101love this! So true!

      @gainknowledgeandinsight@gainknowledgeandinsight2 ай бұрын
  • Glad you had him on. Who cares what the nay sayers say, this is America. Neglecting content based on what other people think is everything wrong with social media. But it’s good to hear his stories he’s a really motivating guy in all aspects.

    @LyfeisByke@LyfeisByke2 ай бұрын
  • This is supurb. Well done Chris lots of athletic IQ in this.

    @toastecmo@toastecmo2 ай бұрын
  • Lance competed in a field where you have to go down to 20th place to find someone that wasn't tested enough to know for sure they doped, and... every generation before him was doped, and he was the best.

    @shawnington@shawningtonАй бұрын
  • Was a solid, easy flowing interview. Good work, Chris.

    @clinn76@clinn762 ай бұрын
  • I don't think he's a hero but i do think he can be a redemption story. Righting the wrongs and helping others to strive for more. He's done some super cool things the past year or two that has helped others. I think thats really cool.

    @Sportsloverandrew@Sportsloverandrew2 ай бұрын
  • Lance, you broke my heart. And, you need to make amends with Greg, Tyler, and Floyd. Just own it. That said, I've come closer to forgiving you than I ever thought I would.

    @SMenkveld@SMenkveldАй бұрын
  • Lances book was the first book I read and he helped me be a Better athlete. But I wish he would have told me to do testosterone and EPO becuae maybe I would be on your podcast

    @andrewbradley4160@andrewbradley4160Ай бұрын
  • Good discussion, really enjoyed it.

    @alexanderodiase361@alexanderodiase3612 ай бұрын
  • I admired Lance. I then was disappointed in Lance. But ultimately I respect Lance. I just wish he would openly speak out. & apologize to people like Tyler Hamilton instead of just apologize to the fans. You absolutely should do the interview & i’m happy to listen to Lance’s life journey after racing.

    @Enskinner@Enskinner2 ай бұрын
    • Respect - that is laughable. Horrible person who was solely out for himself.

      @mitchhorton9178@mitchhorton91782 ай бұрын
  • As someone who has been involved in a sport for 50 years, I have no problem with Lance. Everyone tries to take an edge. To pretend that doesn't happen is fantasy. Baseball, Football, Basketball, the list goes on forever. Part of it is peer pressure to try to hold on to your job. Baseballs steroid use is the best example. You juiced or you lost your way of making a living. Your 30 years old and it's all gone. I'm sure every other sport is the same. Just my opinion, not saying it's right. It's just the way it is.

    @chaunceywilliams8405@chaunceywilliams84052 ай бұрын
    • I recall seeing a copy of The Tour rules from the 1930's or earlier online somewhere, and the rules at that time specified that The Tour would not be providing riders with performance drugs, they would have to provide their own! Doping has been part of elite professional cycling since before any of us were born.

      @LionAndALamb@LionAndALamb2 ай бұрын
  • I honestly think Chris is a better journalist than the old man. Im not kidding.

    @stevehougom7454@stevehougom74542 ай бұрын
  • The balls on this Lance Armstrong fella. Something we can all aspite to.

    @Thisisjohn2184@Thisisjohn21842 ай бұрын
    • *The ball* 😂

      @ShawnStradamus520@ShawnStradamus5202 ай бұрын
    • Juan Pelota

      @erikaswinburne1233@erikaswinburne1233Ай бұрын
  • Lance was an amazing athlete with true grit to push through pain, I.e. watch his cycling practice videos where he is in the mountains and keep going. He drugged and beat all the others who were doing it as well. The biggest issue many have is how he apparently treated and bullied those around him. Is this true? Is he sorry? Has he changed? I have no idea. But it does seem like he is a decent person from the public videos but we really do t know because we aren’t close to him. I do think there are a lot of people in glass houses who have thrown stones at him.

    @joesph9748@joesph9748Ай бұрын
  • Lance was the best doped driver in the peloton. He was obsessed with being the best at any cost. Had nothing to do with a fair combat or competition. He still thinks he was the best. The only thing he was the best in using the most blood dope, epo, cortisone and anabole and masking drugs. He was a sport junkie

    @johank1061@johank1061Ай бұрын
  • I found a copy of the Tour de France rules from the 1930's, and the rules stated that The Tour would not supply riders with drugs, they would have to provide their own 🤣. So I guess I'm saying that doping is part of the DNA of professional cycling.

    @LionAndALamb@LionAndALamb2 ай бұрын
    • Seriously? Interesting AF that even back in the 30's they knew whats up

      @maxtheman10@maxtheman102 ай бұрын
    • @@maxtheman10 Look up the wikipedia for "doping in sport" and go to the section on cycling titled "The Convicts of the Road." They were doing cocaine and amphetamines in the 1920's. Doping was a core element of the earliest days of professional cycling.

      @LionAndALamb@LionAndALamb2 ай бұрын
  • I don't follow sports. In this age of feigned outrage, I don't care about what he did or didn't do. But at 63, I've worn my Live-Strong bracelet for years. The man raised $250-million for cancer research. That is an accomplishment I'll always honor.

    @mpcinlv@mpcinlvАй бұрын
    • There's a lot you don't know or understand. It isn't just that he doped but that he destroyed people's livelihoods who spoke out against him (Greg Lemond, Betsy and Frankie Andreu, Christophe Bassons, Emma O'Reilly, and others) many of whom were his friends or who he worked with. His foundation raised money for cancer AWARENESS and NOT research. There is a HUGE difference there. He used his foundation and cancer survival as a shield against accusations. And if you come back with "well everyone was doping" it's not true. Christophe Bassons, David Moncoutie, Scott Mercier, Darren Baker, Gilles Delion, Edwig Van Hoydoonck, Andy Hampston, and many others rode clean but were forced out of the sport.

      @kingdc72@kingdc72Ай бұрын
  • How does Chris say he’s gonna hit all the hard hitting questions and not ask lance why he wears socks with sandals???

    @Fiesta-369@Fiesta-3692 ай бұрын
    • Lance does not have sock on with his sandals. It's his white a$$ feet with a tan line from his cycling socks.

      @sarawill9455@sarawill94552 ай бұрын
  • Going outside of football to interview a flawed icon was a really good idea. Would love to see more, great job.

    @elizabeth7563@elizabeth75632 ай бұрын
  • He came to New Zealand for some work, and the news released a dismissive note saying the usual: " The disgraced cyclist Lance Armstrong sent a Twitter message inviting anybody that wants ride along at x time, at y place. If anybody is interested, remember to keep two abreast maximum at the roads..." They thought three or four would show up. Well, thousands of cyclists covered the two lanes for kilometres behind Lance; it was bigger than most events over here. He was kind enough to stay at the end of the ride for a long time to allow us to take a picture with him. It felt so refreshing to see these idiots on the media amazed at it the next day, lol.

    @viborabr@viborabrАй бұрын
  • I don’t care what anyone says. Lance is an unbelievable athlete and competitor. “Our roided up guy beat your roided up guy.”

    @Hawkgoulet@Hawkgoulet2 ай бұрын
    • You can’t be serious ! I loved him for all he did and just because they all used does t take away from his absolute failing Thai country and his followers

      @booms02@booms022 ай бұрын
    • I don’t care what anyone says, Lance is NOT an unbelievable athlete and competitor. Contrary to what you think, not everyone doped. And by the time he started winning, it was EPO, not steroids that was the PED of choice in the peloton. Listen to Greg LeMond’s interviews (probably the last clean winner of the tour, with the possible exception of Cadel Evans), Armstrong was nothing special before he doped. He needed the steroids (early on, and probably what caused his testicular cancer) and the EPO to make himself a winner. Plus he’s an incredibly awful person, vindictive and selfish. He is not an admirable person or athlete.

      @tonydejesus2134@tonydejesus21342 ай бұрын
    • Yeah I agree with Greg Lemond. Lance has treated a lot people like shit. He has always been awful. That doesn't take away the fact he was better than everyone else. To say he's not a great athlete and competitor is ridiculous. I'd love to see you attempt to finish the alp d'Huez, let alone win it against a bunch of others taking EPO.@@tonydejesus2134

      @Hawkgoulet@Hawkgoulet2 ай бұрын
    • @@tonydejesus2134 Thanks Tony, I agree 100%!!

      @kevinegan6311@kevinegan63112 ай бұрын
    • @@tonydejesus2134testosterone doesn’t cause cancer. It’s wild how stupid some people are. Also, lemond is an absolute nut job. He has no idea the state of cycling now. It’s funny when the old timers think they could hold a candle to the newer guys. It’s just sour grapes on their part. What lance did lost almost dying, will probably never ever be repeated. Dorks like yourself would shrivel into a ball and die in a corner if that happened to you. The playing field was level back then, so it wasn’t ’cheating’.

      @frontierlandfrank5314@frontierlandfrank53142 ай бұрын
  • I had the lance yellow jersy as a kid...when he admitted it it was disappointing, but his duels with Jan Ulich were some of the most epic moments in sport...that moment when a guy crashed right in front of him and he went off road, down a grassy slope, and into the lead, was dope. I'd be cool if he made things right with Floyd Landis...but that won't happen.

    @jorgeherter@jorgeherterАй бұрын
  • They scapegoated the shit out of lance legend. Great interview. Top 5 podcast channel ya got going on here!

    @Phil22886@Phil228862 ай бұрын
  • Awesome podcast Chris.You asked some great questions.Im a huge cycling fan because of Lance.He has contributed so much to the sport of cycling in general. He is the fucking goat in my book! And im sorry but all the haters out there that got there feelings hurt, and are all butthurt..GTF over yourself!!!

    @LETOUR7TIMESFRANCE@LETOUR7TIMESFRANCE2 ай бұрын
  • If you have never doped you know nothing of its direct performance gains. It asks more of you than you can deliver and takes exceptional talent and supreme determination to make it work in favour. Increasing hematocrit isnt what people think. Lance was a true master and everyone was doping and if you had doped you would know that its still the nost determined and talented thay wins.

    @jamesatherton9617@jamesatherton961714 күн бұрын
  • I only watched this becuase its Lance

    @archjapanmotovlogs@archjapanmotovlogsАй бұрын
  • Howie Long the GOAT.

    @joelgonzales5763@joelgonzales57632 ай бұрын
  • Lance the Goat

    @wranglercycling6420@wranglercycling64202 ай бұрын
  • Livestrong’s mission statement was care and resources for cancer sufferers, not necessarily cancer research.

    @billstevenson8142@billstevenson8142Ай бұрын
  • This is gunna be good

    @mikealan2719@mikealan27192 ай бұрын
  • I have no interest in piling on this guy after he spilled the beans....Lance is partly contrite, but he is still trying to remanufacture the narrative on his terms - one tidbit at a time - taking shots at the investigators, taking shots at sponsors, or Lemond ... still saying "I know who won those races". He has convinced many fans. He comes across as someone who is accepting being caught...but with a sprinkling of F-U...and does not truly empathize with his victims. Not my cup of tea.

    @johngoodell2775@johngoodell27752 ай бұрын
    • Perfectly said!

      @brightbleu@brightbleu6 күн бұрын
  • Unfortunately terrible audio with the handheld mics

    @fhowland@fhowlandАй бұрын
  • I was a young kid who was awestruck by Lance. His dominance was GOAT status. Watching highlights of his still inspires me in sports to this day.

    @Rex93241@Rex932412 ай бұрын
  • Lance is a hero and an icon of my childhood and I will be damned if a bunch of crybabies are changing my mind about that. Steroids do not make you a more talented athlete/competitor. They allow you to recover faster and do a larger amount of the same workload by doing so. But, they in no way make you a better talent. You can do every single steroid on this planet in spades and it will not allow you to hit a baseball like Barry Bonds. That is talent. He will never not be a hero. Maybe not to a lot of people, but he will always be a hero and an icon to me. Just like Barry Bonds.

    @HawgWyldFishing@HawgWyldFishing2 ай бұрын
    • Clearly, you have no idea what kind of PED’s he did.

      @juanitoblanco1133@juanitoblanco11332 ай бұрын
    • Your answer reveals a complete lack of knowledge on the subject.

      @tonydejesus2134@tonydejesus21342 ай бұрын
    • You had to have a talent for PED's too. One can take relatively less PED's and having a great performanceboost, where another person can take double the amount and have mostly negative side effects. Lance said openly EPO gave him 10%. Yes him..... But that didnt automatically count for ALL the other users too.

      @Jan-df7dl@Jan-df7dl2 ай бұрын
  • I appreciate you taking the time in the intro to explain why you did this interview. The comment about him being like Captain America was spot on. I feel like you stayed out on the edges talking about how it was with your dad in the 80's (esp given your dad's teammate & friend Lyle Alzado died.) That said, LA is and always has been a liar and a disgrace. You did a good interview though, as usual!

    @kc2718@kc27182 ай бұрын
  • yeah greg came back and won after being shot in the lung, i'm sure that's a clean story

    @ansonbrooks101@ansonbrooks1012 ай бұрын
  • Lance is so full of it. No way he wouldn’t trade today for Paris 2005. He is still a total narcissist and bully. His stories told here just reframe from his own lens (I’m such a hero as I bought those guys beers when they yelled at me🙄) and he never had any real remorse for the people he bullied. Doping was never the real issue. He destroyed peoples lives.

    @stevefitzgerald8547@stevefitzgerald8547Ай бұрын
  • I don’t understand the bar story. He called the bar and asked them what?

    @zimbobway3137@zimbobway31372 ай бұрын
    • .... Lance paid for the drinks...

      @jonasmeier417@jonasmeier4172 ай бұрын
  • Even doping what Lance was able to do athletically was beyond impressive! Others were doing it, but he perfected it. That said, Lance is a piece of 💩 human being for the way he treated his teammates, Greg Lemond, and others. He literally threatened, strong armed, flexed his celebrity using connections to not just silence but to DESTROY the lives of really good people. I hope he is truly contrite & humbled in his pursuit of redemption. The cheating portion is easy to forgive, but the other things he did to his fellow human beings are very, very hard to let go. Good interview none the less 👍

    @The-Jokes-on-You@The-Jokes-on-YouАй бұрын
  • So I have never been into biking or Tour de France nor have I even watched a race before I seen the movie the Armstrong Lie. I have watched so many documentaries on everything Lance Armstrong related mostly because I fall asleep to documentaries. What I want to say about this documentary and all of the scrutiny about Lance Armstrong are these things. First and foremost , I saw Betsie Andreu crying about “he owes the truth to the sport.” I think that is absolute bull she knew for a long time he was doping according to her, hearing it from doctors, but she never spoke out about it until her husband was cut from the team. According to her he was cut because he refused to dope. Whining & whining every singe deposition and interview. It’s apparent that he quit doping because he didn’t want his marriage to end , as she threatened. I think number one Frankie Andreu was whipped beyond belief and number two he would still be doping if it wasn’t for his wife , And number three in a documentary George Hincapie said point blank ,he learned doping from Frankie Andreu. So that is just two faced. There a tremendous amount of jealousy in play here. People loved Lance Armstrong because he got cancer and beat it , then opened up a cancer foundation. Then raced and won. Doping along with everyone else. David Walsh got a lot of money writing about Lance Armstrong. As my sister says “no one does nothing for nothing! “ So he is getting rich off his book and this story what about that? Then you have Tyler Hamilton saying he lost faith in the justice system. I seen a documentary when David Walsh said Tyler quit the team and went after a doping doctor , so he could win himself then he admitted that it was hard to set it up and have it be as easy as it was for the US postal team. (So two faced. ) He was just pissed Lance was smarter , because Now you see him giving speeches about his experience. I’m not sure ,but I’ll bet he wrote a book. (Kettle black situation there. ) Probably gets money to speak. When you read the history of this race ,it’s such a hard physical race that people Drank alcohol and took substances just to get through it and everyone knew. They’re all a bunch of hypocrites! Then let’s talk about Floyd Landis he dopes on the postal team and then dopes on his own team wins the race then gets caught for doping and gets mad and basically snitches on everyone. What a baby ! Everyone doped ! Get over it. I think Lance doped of course he did. So what !! everyone else did too ,but he was smarter and better at it ! everyone else got caught Lance was just more clever. It just seems like they all got jealous because he over came cancer and became a hero for that and winning. Everyone else was doing the same damned thing , but they got caught and they didn’t survive cancer. So he got popular and rich and everyone around him got jealous or made money off of his story except George Hincapie he was a teammate and doped too , but didn’t go around acting like he was an angel and crying when he got caught and blaming Lance. I’ll bet money that Frank and Betsie Andreu and Floyd Landis ,Tyler Hamilton got paid for the appearances they gave on shows and documentaries and David Walsh , they all made a fortune off the back of Lance Armstrong and his story. Like I said no one does nothing for nothing ! Hypocrites all of them. The guy almost died and he didn’t ,he beat cancer. They were all doping…. All of them. Then they got him busted and then made a bunch of money they should have given that money to fight cancer at least !!!

    @loriemadruga5703@loriemadruga57039 күн бұрын
  • Have to say I was one who was NOT going to listen! I was a huge cycling fan and adored everything about lances story ! I wore the yellow bracelet, listened to his tapes , read books c watched the Tour and I feel Chris you did an amazing interview ! However the bar story would be me and him buying me some beer would never allow me to forget the absolute hurt he caused so many !! However Chris long I adore you and your team (however I am a Kelce brothers bigger fan ) 😂😂😂

    @booms02@booms022 ай бұрын
    • Oh and for all those supporting doping and steroids cause everyone does it that has to be the most ridiculous answer! And yep I am a female 😮

      @booms02@booms022 ай бұрын
    • ​@@booms02it's not that everyone else did it so why not me. It's more about anybody riding at that time that was clean and producing great numbers but still getting railroaded. You put the pieces together and it's like do I go back home and do something else or do what most are doing to be the best or just stay in the profession. I'd say I wouldn't cheat but I also didn't base my early life completely around one profession that I went all in on. And obviously the high amounts of peer pressure to take it to another level.

      @Sportsloverandrew@Sportsloverandrew2 ай бұрын
    • Tyler Hamilton did such a good job of describing the heartbreak these guys felt when they were faced with the option to dope or be irrelevant, knowing they were putting their health at risk. I hope the young athletes these days have the option to do what they love without having to hurt their bodies

      @erikaswinburne1233@erikaswinburne1233Ай бұрын
  • For all the Lance apologists: Do your own research on Emma O’Reilly, Stephen Swart, Betsy and Frankie Andrew, Kathy and Greg Lemond, Filipino Simeoni, Christophe Bassons, Floyd Landis, Tyler Hamilton, David Walsh, and Paul Kimmage and how Lance attempted to destroy their lives. Please educate yourselves

    @jondmcdonnell@jondmcdonnellАй бұрын
  • Lance is a legend no matter what. He being able to rise up and move on it’s a great example of resilience. Great interview, Chris.

    @actovarv@actovarv2 ай бұрын
  • There still talking about this drug thing.

    @cgtnetwork@cgtnetwork2 ай бұрын
  • There's a lot of stuff in here that is just outside the bounds of the facts and because the interviewer knows so little about cycling and Armstrong (which he admits to) it gets accepted as gospel. Lemond 20 lbs overweight at the end of his career is just a total fabrication and as a reason for why he performed poorly is purely a means of disguising how doping ended the careers of so many who would not dope. Also, wondering whether he was going to put food on the table and roof over the heads of his kids? How about the financial advantages gained by his TdF victories? I'm talking about getting invited to invest in the ground floor of a company like Uber and reaping $100m out of that? Not even getting into the sponsorships, that's just one example.

    @kingdc72@kingdc72Ай бұрын
  • LA is the man

    @phenofinder9145@phenofinder91452 ай бұрын
  • It’s always a business and u must dope to make it in the nfl. Chris doped for sure

    @andrewbradley4160@andrewbradley4160Ай бұрын
  • Please have Greg Lemond on your Podcast. Greg is a true American Champion!

    @harrywong1413@harrywong14132 ай бұрын
    • Lemond was the first big epo user, he's a bitter liar.

      @fistoftulkas7335@fistoftulkas73352 ай бұрын
    • Racing since 1990, Cat 2. No crit pros in Illinois believed Greg was clean. Greg knows there are no urine or blood samples from his career. He can say anything he wants. There was a rumor his wife made him promise not to dope after he got shot.

      @rickhammel7907@rickhammel7907Ай бұрын
  • Chris wasn’t because he doped and so did all of the NFL

    @andrewbradley4160@andrewbradley4160Ай бұрын
  • After everything that came out, anyone who looks down their nose at Lance as an athlete is just deluding themselves. We all know that he wasn't the only guy who used the drugs, but we do know that he was still winning more than everyone else. If you don't like the way he handled the aftermath, that's fair. That being said, I challenge any of these detractors to look back at their lives and think of a time where they made an ass of themselves over something small. Now picture yourself in his shoes at that time, and the whole world has their pitchfork out, ready to crucify you as if you've committed crimes against humanity. If you knew that you weren't the only one who was guilty, would YOU have accepted 100 percent of the blame and 100 percent of the punishment? We've got pro athletes out here beating their spouses and murdering people... I think Lance Armstrong is pretty far down the fuckin list of people who deserve to be shunned. You don't have to like him, but don't stand there with your eyes closed and your fingers in your ears.

    @donjohnson5172@donjohnson5172Ай бұрын
  • Tour de France average speed in 2005 when Lance and all of his comrades were juiced to the max was 41.65kph. The average speed in 2023 was 41.48kph........hello....NOTHING has changed. He still can't be honest.

    @markphilpottultra@markphilpottultraАй бұрын
  • He’s just a great competitor and pain manipulator. But not a great athlete. He used EPO , it’s the Superman of PED’s …it’s underrated

    @andrewbradley4160@andrewbradley4160Ай бұрын
  • No one I've ever met has said a damn thing bad about Lance.

    @tylermaiden5123@tylermaiden51232 ай бұрын
    • How many people have you met that have known him? Because several people in pro cycling who actually know have said on the record that he’s cruel and vindictive. A survey of your friends doesn’t mean anything.

      @tonydejesus2134@tonydejesus21342 ай бұрын
  • Stickers..... None of your Dad?

    @jrl4645@jrl46452 ай бұрын
  • 19:32 is he actually trying to say that steroids is "not prevalent" in the NFL? Really? Does that include his dad and all the other jacked up men....let's be real.

    @bhpalmer@bhpalmer2 ай бұрын
  • People, the NFL, NBA, MLB, NFL, pro soccer have TONS of doping. Cycling has its reputation because the French media wanted to chase some sport over doping, and wanted to do soccer/futbol, but France had the World Cup, and said "don't threaten this money maker". So they picked cycling. Here's the thing: cycling is like ... tops .. a million or two contract. Maybe 10 million if you are the absolute dominant best of a generation. Those are peanut numbers to the NBA / MLB / NFL. Pat Mahomes has a HALF BILLION DOLLAR CONTRACT. NBA is up to, what, 60 million per year or more? MLB is doing 1/2 billion contracts. People, those numbers GUARANTEE there is huge amounts of doping. BALCO was the spotlight, there is an entire cottage industry in bypassing drug tests. And BALCO also showed to the major leagues that you should catach a few randos here or there, but you don't catch a major star. You lose 100s of millions of dollars in league revenue if that happens, maybe billions.

    @carlemueller@carlemueller2 ай бұрын
    • No, that’s flawed logic based on assumptions. I’m open to the argument that doping is common in pro sports, but show me some actual evidence. “It’s huge, so they must be doping” isn’t any proof at all.

      @tonydejesus2134@tonydejesus21342 ай бұрын
  • More like lance “Legstrong” 😅

    @milkman2591@milkman25915 күн бұрын
  • I was going to skip this episode. Glad I didn’t.

    @BradYoder-iz2we@BradYoder-iz2weАй бұрын
  • I hate Lance Armstrong for what he did to Greg LaMond!!!!!!!!! What he did to Greg is unforgivable!!!!!!!!! I hate people that use roids to get ahead. He knew what he did is wrong!!!!!! Just because everyone does that don't means you have to!!!!!!!!!

    @kathysiedlecki6364@kathysiedlecki636423 күн бұрын
  • Lance did a good job. He made 100 million in his career with the help of EPO and bullying. Then he only had to pay 5 million back. And yes, all used but the bullying is something I cannot bypass. I hope he has told his children NOT to take example of their father.

    @jayleppanen@jayleppanen2 ай бұрын
    • Do you feel like there is anything he could do to overcome the sins of the past?

      @joesph9748@joesph9748Ай бұрын
  • Get better mic and sound. This is unlistenable with headphones. Constant rumbling sounds.

    @cometier@cometierАй бұрын
  • Clean now? NO CHANCE

    @gainknowledgeandinsight@gainknowledgeandinsight2 ай бұрын
  • The issue has always been the administrators of cycling. How could a multi million dollar sport be run in such a pathetic manner? Don't blame the participants as they should never of had the opportunity to profit from cheating.

    @danielparsons2859@danielparsons28592 ай бұрын
  • What a punk opening to this interview. When my friend in Cleveland Tn was dying of cancer, and did die a few weeks later, Lance was contacted in 2014 to speak to him to encourage him to fight. Lance called and spoke at length with him. You have people like Stephen A Smith, Steve Belichick, what good have they done? You interview pro football players try asking them if they ever did steroids. Everyone of them will lie. Including Jason Kelce everybody's favorite Swifty brother. A bike race held on the other side of the world vs NFL players that American kids worship.

    @jimwhitehead6265@jimwhitehead62652 ай бұрын
  • To say the majority of NFL players are not doping where speed, mass and power are a premium is just not correct. The difference between the NFL and cycling is the testing is far less stringent in the NFL.

    @reppingeason@reppingeason2 ай бұрын
  • Doping isn’t prevalent in the NFL… LMFAO.

    @TraderJHart@TraderJHartАй бұрын
  • Lance Armstrong is the villain. Waxing on about his ptsd. Dude, you don’t get to claim trauma for being held accountable for your actions. Maybe his bullying and trying to ruin people’s lives caused some ptsd for his victims. Guy is an ass.

    @darcymoon2109@darcymoon21092 ай бұрын
    • Feel better now?

      @roadie26@roadie262 ай бұрын
    • @@roadie26 I hope he does, because he’s right to shame Armstrong.

      @tonydejesus2134@tonydejesus21342 ай бұрын
    • @@roadie26 I feel a little better, thanks for asking. 🙂

      @darcymoon2109@darcymoon21092 ай бұрын
  • They didn’t raise money for cancer research, you’re wrong about that. They raised money for cancer awareness.

    @bubbastard@bubbastard2 ай бұрын
  • Look folks not everyone doped not even close, Lance even retaliated against clean riders all the time and would not hire them and would try to destroy them....guy should be in jail and loose all his assets as well as results

    @rman5815@rman5815Ай бұрын
  • Doping isn’t prevalent in Football? Um okay 😂

    @bubbastard@bubbastard2 ай бұрын
    • You’d know

      @ChrisLong-dy2uo@ChrisLong-dy2uo2 ай бұрын
    • @@ChrisLong-dy2uo Since 2001, NFL players have been suspended for performance-enhancing drugs and related substances at least 258 times.

      @bubbastard@bubbastard2 ай бұрын
    • @@bubbastard How many players do you think have played in the nfl since 2000? Compare to numbers in cycling. Lance stripped of a win and they have to go 25 spots to find a clean athlete. Not comparable.

      @ChrisLong-dy2uo@ChrisLong-dy2uo2 ай бұрын
    • @@ChrisLong-dy2uo Lol NFL doesn't test anywhere near as much as cycling, and stops testing for half the year. Cycling is tested worldwide 365 days a year, while the NFL is one league in one country. It's not a valid comparison. Everyone knows there is doping in cycling, claiming there is none in the NFL is frankly laughable.

      @bubbastard@bubbastard2 ай бұрын
    • The guys from NFL look so big,unnatural,they must be full of steroids….

      @staniaborakova4952@staniaborakova495214 күн бұрын
  • Triathletes deal with Jellyfish 🪼. That’s the scary/annoying thing on race day.

    @dcfan40@dcfan402 ай бұрын
  • I clicked on because I'm a huge fan of Lance Armstrong

    @amarishakur7480@amarishakur7480Ай бұрын
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