Lance Armstrong stripped of Olympic bronze medal

LONDON (AP) - Thirteen years after he stood on the podium in Sydney, Lance Armstrong was stripped of his bronze medal from the 2000 Olympics because of doping.
The International Olympic Committee sent a letter to Armstrong on Wednesday night asking him to return the medal, just as it said it planned to do last month.
The decision was first reported Thursday by The Associated Press.
The IOC executive board discussed revoking the medal in December, but delayed a decision until cycling's governing body notified Armstrong he had been stripped of his seven Tour de France titles and all results since 1998. He then had 21 days to appeal.
Now that the deadline has expired, the IOC decided to take the medal away. The letter to Armstrong was also sent to the U.S. Olympic Committee, which would collect the medal.
"Having had confirmation from UCI that Armstrong has not appealed the decision to disqualify him from Sydney, we have written to him to ask for the return of the bronze medal," IOC spokesman Mark Adams told the AP. "We have also written to USOC to inform them of the decision."
The move was confirmed on the same day that Armstrong's admission of using performance-enhancing drugs - after years of denials - is to be broadcast in an interview with Oprah Winfrey. The timing of the IOC move, however, was not related to the TV interview.
Two months after winning his second Tour de France title in 2000, Armstrong took the bronze in Sydney in the road time trial behind winner and U.S. Postal Service teammate Vyacheslav Ekimov of Russia and Jan Ullrich of Germany.
The IOC opened a disciplinary case in November after a U.S. Anti-Doping Agency report detailed widespread doping by Armstrong and his teammates. The report called it the most sophisticated doping program in sports.
The IOC will not reallocate Armstrong's bronze medal, just as cycling's ruling body decided not to declare any winners for the Tour titles once held by the American. Spanish rider Abraham Olano Manzano, who finished fourth in Sydney, will not be upgraded and the bronze medal will be left vacant in Olympic records.
In August, the IOC stripped Tyler Hamilton, a former Armstrong teammate, of his time-trial gold medal from the 2004 Athens Olympics after he acknowledged doping. In that case, Ekimov was upgraded to gold.
The IOC is also investigating Levi Leipheimer, a former Armstrong teammate who won the time-trial bronze at the 2008 Beijing Games. The American confessed to doping as part of his testimony against Armstrong in the USADA case.
The IOC is looking into the details of Leipheimer's admitted doping, including when the cheating took place, before moving to strip his medal. Finishing fourth behind Leipheimer in 2008 was Alberto Contador, the Spaniard who was stripped of the 2010 Tour de France title after testing positive for clenbuterol.
The International Olympic Committee sent a letter to Armstrong on Wednesday night asking him to return the medal, just as it said it planned to do last month.
The decision was first reported Thursday by The Associated Press.
The IOC executive board discussed revoking the medal in December, but delayed a decision until cycling's governing body notified Armstrong he had been stripped of his seven Tour de France titles and all results since 1998. He then had 21 days to appeal.
Now that the deadline has expired, the IOC decided to take the medal away. The letter to Armstrong was also sent to the U.S. Olympic Committee, which would collect the medal.
"Having had confirmation from UCI that Armstrong has not appealed the decision to disqualify him from Sydney, we have written to him to ask for the return of the bronze medal," IOC spokesman Mark Adams told the AP. "We have also written to USOC to inform them of the decision."
The move was confirmed on the same day that Armstrong's admission of using performance-enhancing drugs - after years of denials - is to be broadcast in an interview with Oprah Winfrey. The timing of the IOC move, however, was not related to the TV interview.
Two months after winning his second Tour de France title in 2000, Armstrong took the bronze in Sydney in the road time trial behind winner and U.S. Postal Service teammate Vyacheslav Ekimov of Russia and Jan Ullrich of Germany.
The IOC opened a disciplinary case in November after a U.S. Anti-Doping Agency report detailed widespread doping by Armstrong and his teammates. The report called it the most sophisticated doping program in sports.
The IOC will not reallocate Armstrong's bronze medal, just as cycling's ruling body decided not to declare any winners for the Tour titles once held by the American. Spanish rider Abraham Olano Manzano, who finished fourth in Sydney, will not be upgraded and the bronze medal will be left vacant in Olympic records.
In August, the IOC stripped Tyler Hamilton, a former Armstrong teammate, of his time-trial gold medal from the 2004 Athens Olympics after he acknowledged doping. In that case, Ekimov was upgraded to gold.
The IOC is also investigating Levi Leipheimer, a former Armstrong teammate who won the time-trial bronze at the 2008 Beijing Games. The American confessed to doping as part of his testimony against Armstrong in the USADA case.
The IOC is looking into the details of Leipheimer's admitted doping, including when the cheating took place, before moving to strip his medal. Finishing fourth behind Leipheimer in 2008 was Alberto Contador, the Spaniard who was stripped of the 2010 Tour de France title after testing positive for clenbuterol.
http://media1.break.com/dnet/media/2013/1/15/17dc0f5d-026a-4775-aa90-1253b69c0640.jpg
Lance could have just faded away into ignominy if he had just kept his mouth shut but instead he "confessed" to Oprah and opened the door WIDER for litigation and possible criminal charges and eliminated any shadow of doubt that, at his very core, he is and always has been, in fact, a liar.
Â
There is only one conclusion: Lance needs the spotlight of celebrity, good or bad, just to draw air.
Â
Inevitably, Lance will fade away into ignominy only to be remembered for his lies and deceptions but now he'll be roughed up on the way...just as he apparently wished. He is America's own Guy Fawkes of sports and he'll forever be that guy whom sporting people burn in effigy as a lasting example of bad sportsmanship.
Where's the pride in winning a race when you have an unfair advantage over everyone else? Lance was in it for the fame and money. Dang shame too because he may have still won some of the races if he had not cheated. Good role models for kids are hard to come by these days. That's why it's even more important to make examples out of the bad ones.
Armstrong has been stripped of all his titles and stripped of his Olympic medal. The only things this avid cheater has not been stripped of is the money he made by cheating and his ego. Of course he cannot be stripped of his dignity, integrity, or honor because he has none.Â
Armstrong needs to come completely clean. He needs to show his kids that lying is the wrong way to do things and to live life.Â
Guess it is time to get what is coming to him. But I seriously doubt he was the only one doing it. Wonder how many others will toss themselves on the sword of truth? Not many I bet LOL
Hind sight is 20/20 but I really did never like him and I couldn't pin point it....something seemed wrong because he was so dominant, even after his cancer.
This comment has been deleted
 @Dr. Rawdog It also took a lot of balls to vehemently deny it for so long.
 @deejm2112 I think the point of the "ball" comment was that Armstrong, as you may recall........never mind -- if I have to explain it, you wouldn't understand.
@Dr. Rawdog or at least 1
 @Dr. Rawdog Doesn't make it right.
 @Dr. RawdogÂ
Or maybe he knew the proof was coming out and he just wanted to get his spin on it out there first. Does anyone really think that Oprah didn't know exactly what he was going to say ahead of time? If so, please contact me about a nice property for sale.
Meh. I taught my son years ago that all professional sports were corrupt and never to make a hero out of a single one of them. I feel sorry for all the kids who were allowed to look up to this phony and are now disillusioned.
@ormom You may be correct about professional sports being corrupt, but I don't think all the players are. I think it's ok to look up to some of the people in sports, a lot of them do good things, and I think they can be considered hero's, or at least good roll models
As much as we American love our Hero's.  There is more interest in watching them fail.Â
Â
The IOC's response is as bad as Lance admitting to breaking the rules. The IOC is breaking their own rules.Â
Â
So, in short, an athlete breaks the rules and a governing agency breaks the rules while trying to punish him? Â
FYI - they keep saying the interview with Oprah is on at 9 pm. Â It is on the east coast. Â Where I live it is on at 6 pm PST, 9 pm eastern.
The IOC are nothing but a bunch of hypocrites. The statute of limitations for revoking a medal is 8 years, not 12. If this keeps up the IOC will be stripping medals from the ancient Greeks.
Furthermore I hope Lance tells the IOC to take the medal and shove it up their rooty poot candy ***.
Too bad you can't go into his bank account and strip out all the money he fraudulently took/stole!
 @Sara Armstrong will be financially ruined by the time all the lawsuits that will be filed are complete. He received a lot of money for endorsements, appearances, etc. that people and organizations will want returned. His troubles are just beginning.
 @Sara Lawyers are actively on that just wait lawsuits will be flying soon...
 @Sara I agree with you Sarah, it is a fact that it is 8 years I was researching this you beat me to the punch...As far as I am concerned the IOC can take there Job and shove it.
Lance, I believed in you. You inspired me to push harder and ride further. I would watch every day of the Tour and you elevated the Tour to international prominence.
Â
Now I know what you really are. You are a loser who had to cheat to win. You are the lowest of the low and as worthless as our politicians. You offered great hope and then let us down.
Â
I won't be watching the tour anymore. If I did I will wonder which riders are dopping and which aren't. With all the dopping in all professional sports I am thinking that the odds are excellent that there are lots of cyclists on the tour that are dopping.
Â
You did one thing that was positive. You shined the light on all the dopping that goes on in sports. Maybe some good will come of that down the road.
Â
As for the rest of your life, I can only hope that it is one of disgrace till you die. People like you need to get their just rewards for your deception. You will probably write a book and it will be a best seller and you will make millions. Even in shame there is money to be made.
Â
I guess you are the poster boy of how cheating and deceiving is profitable in America and the world.
Â
On another note Jan Ullrich was also a dopper and died from it.
 @RalphCramden He did do one good thing, he did start a cancer research center..
 @lee986321Â
That would be like saying the mafia is good because they gave money to orphans and widows (which they often did).
 @RalphCramden  @lee986321 They mafia did that to buy the local poor folks which bought loyalty so no one would report their activity or testify against them.
 @lee986321  @RalphCramden research just how much donated money actually got to the center? not much