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Tour officials ho-hum about Armstrong's return

Tuesday, December 02, 2008 6:42:14 AM
By JAMEY KEATEN

U.S. cyclist Lance Armstrong, front left, pedals through a training session with other members of his cycling team Astana,  outside Arona, on the Spanish Canary Island of Tenerife, Monday Dec. 1, 2008. (AP Photo/Arturo Rodriguez)PARIS (AP) - Tour de France officials responded with a Gallic shrug Tuesday after Lance Armstrong announced he will ride in cycling's premier event next year.

The seven-time Tour champion, who is currently training with his Astana team in Tenerife, Spain, confirmed Monday his ambitious plan to return to the Tour just weeks after riding in his first Giro d'Italia in May.

Tour officials said nothing had changed since Armstrong's surprise announcement in September that he planned to ride in the Tour again — even though he had since publicly expressed doubts about that idea.

"We're in the same situation," Tour spokesman Christophe Marchadier said.

Tour chief Christian Prudhomme wouldn't comment "because he'll repeat the same thing, and he doesn't want to repeat himself," Marchadier added.

In September, Prudhomme said: "One cannot say that his comeback is good or bad news. But it really is news ... It's making noise everywhere" — and that nearly everybody seemed to have an opinion about it.

U.S. cyclist Lance Armstrong, right, walks with an unidentified member of his team after a training session with his cycling team Astana outside Arona, on the Spanish Canary Island of Tenerife, Monday Dec. 1, 2008. (AP Photo/Arturo Rodriguez)Despite his record-breaking success on the Tour, Armstrong is a controversial figure in France, with many suspicious as to how the cancer survivor could achieve such success without doping. Armstrong has repeatedly denied ever using performance-enhancing drugs.

Marchadier said Tour officials haven't had contact with Armstrong in a long time.

"Nobody even met with him when he came to Paris last week," said Marchadier. "He's coming back, and if he abides by the rules, like all the other riders of the Tour, he'll be at the start."

French team leaders were even more standoffish.

In this July 24, 2005 file photo, overall leader Lance Armstrong, of Austin, Texas, pedals past the Arc de Triomphe in Paris on his way to win his seventh straight the Tour de France cycling race, during the 21st and final stage of the race between Corbeil-Essonnes, south of Paris, and the French capital. Armstrong will ride in the 2009 Tour de France, marking the first time he will compete in that race and the Giro d'Italia in the same year.  (AP Photo/Peter Dejong, File)Eric Boyer, head of the International Association of Professional Cyclist Groups and sporting director for the French team Cofidis, said simply: "I don't want to react. It doesn't interest me."

Speaking after wind tunnel testing last month in San Diego, Armstrong suggested his safety might be at risk if he enters the Tour again because fans can get so close to the riders.

"If they hate you and you're on the roads and they want you, they can get you," he said.

But in an interview published Tuesday in Le Parisien daily, Armstrong played down reports of his concern about safety, saying they were "like many stories that start small and end up very big."

"We've had threats in the past. The French government and the (Tour) organization have ensured protection," Armstrong said, according to a French translation of his remarks. "So am I worried about that? No."

Francaise des Jeux manager Marc Madiot mocked any concerns that Armstrong might have about safety, and took a not-so-subtle dig at his home state of Texas.

U.S. cyclist Lance Armstrong, front second right, pedals through a training session with other members of his cycling team Astana,  outside Arona, on the Spanish Canary Island of Tenerife, Monday Dec. 1, 2008. (AP Photo/Arturo Rodriguez)"You can tell him simply that France isn't Texas. We're not in the Far West in France," Madiot said. "We are honest and respectful people. That's all."

Giro director Angelo Zomegnan told The Associated Press in a telephone interview that he believes Armstrong can race both the Giro and the Tour and that his participation in the French race would be good for the Italian one, which is trying to become more international.

"To have such a highly anticipated figure, who then goes on to the Tour, will push the Giro into globalization," said Zomegnan.

"Judging from the great care with which he's preparing his comeback on the big stage, I think his return will not be a pathetic remake but a performance that will push the limits of mankind," he said. "From the physical point of view, he comes off three years of low to medium physical activity, so he's less tired than his younger colleagues."

U.S. cyclist Lance Armstrong, second left, listens to a member of his Astana team before a training session outside Arona, on the Spanish Canary Island of Tenerife, Monday Dec. 1, 2008. (AP Photo/Arturo Rodriguez)Brian Nygaard, spokesman for the Danish team led by former Tour winner Bjarne Riis, said he "cannot see anything negative" in Armstrong's return to the Tour and that it would give the race "exciting perspective."

Many riders have said they want to see how Armstrong fares back on the road before commenting on whether he could present a real racing threat at the age of 37.

A spokesman for Australian cyclist Cadel Evans said the 2008 Tour runner-up was still waiting to see how Armstrong will do.

"It's still a long way off," said the spokesman, David Lyall. "Cadel has maintained the whole time since Lance announced his comeback that it's still a long way off. We'll see if he (Armstrong) gets to the Tour Down Under, then we'll see how he goes there and then we can talk about it."


AP Sports Writer John Pye in Brisbane, Australia and Alessandra Rizzo in Rome, Italy, contributed to this report.


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