“Es la mayor estafa”: accusan to Lance Armstrong of using a motorbike in his bicycle and a video to show it in evidence

Published:

12 Apr 2021 11:44 GMT

The images in the stadium excislist show the trace part of his assistant before increasing cases of speed.

State Rep. Lance Armstrong, who was suspended from the professional sports field for systemic doping, wanted to have a polemic while being accused of using an electric motor in his bicycle to improve his performance in competitions.

“Lance Armstrong is the Chief Mayor. With complicity in all levels. Receive a special treat”, said Jean-Pierre Verdi, ex-director of the Anti-Doping Agency France, in a recent interview with the diary Le Parisien on what he accused the cyclist of ‘technological doping’. “Many people tell me that I do not have to deal with the lions, that I have to meet them alone. But if the lions support themselves in any way … I also believe that have a motorbike in the bicycle“, signal.

The director of the agency between 2006 and 2015 related that a record came in one stage of the Texan “dejo a todo el mundo en el suelo”. “At the end of the stage, it was called all the specialists who knew and did not intend to be able to return, including with EPO [hormona natural proteica estimulante]. Algo andaba mal y todos los specialists me decian de mismo “, explained, adding that this return was “impossibly human”.

Despite this confession, writer and columnist Antoine Vayer investigated his account of Armstrong’s distant competition videos and noted that when the cyclist touched the track of his assistant, he recorded his intermediate speed.

According to Vayer, in this way the sportsman activates an occult mechanism that drives an engine in his bicycle. “Is it the use of an engine that explains its 7.4 barrels / kg lasting 9 minutes and 33 seconds per pedal? Submitting the [puerto de montaña] Alpe d’Huez, after 6 hours of effort, passing antes by the Madeleine and the Glandon “, were asked in a tuit.

Lance Armstrong went on to hold consecutive editions of the Tour de France from 1999 to 2005, but was forced by his victories to be suspended for life in 2012 during an investigation conducted by the United States Anti-Doping Agency. Jean-Pierre Verdy reveals more details of Armstrong’s actions in his recent book entitled ‘Doping: My War Against the Trampolines’.

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