Randy Cohen
The important ethical
question isn't whether Lance deserves a second chance. Chance to do
what? Cheat in seven more Tours? Lie about it seven more times? Bully
seven more teammates into doping? He behaved badly and is rightly
censured.
But that should be the
beginning, not the end, of this disheartening story. There's a lot more
blame to go around. Cycling's governing bodies also have an ethical
duty, and that's to provide a setting in which honest athletes can
participate.
If many cycling fans are
right, most of the top riders engaged in doping. You simply can't
compete against them without doing the same. What was Lance to do? Quit
the sport? And who inherits his Tour titles? Some other cheat?
It would be thrilling if
one by one, they
declined in a Spartacus moment -- an honest,
I-am-drugged-Spartacus moment. This is a community problem; it demands
community solutions. Unless those who run big-time cycling institute
real reforms, Lance's fall will be merely a celebrity scandal, and
there's little good in that.
Jeff Pearlman:
He's almost 42, forget about it
Back when I was 8 or 9,
my parents took me to my first trip to Disney World. I remember Space
Mountain, and I remember Mickey Mouse's enormous head. For some reason,
though, what I remember most is a sign posted within the borders of
Epcot. It read: If you can dream it, you can do it.
"Dad," I said, "I dream of being 8-feet tall. But that'll never happen ..."
"Well, son ..."
Jeff Pearlman
"And, Dad, I dream of being able to fly just like Superman. But that'll never happen ..."
"Son, the thing is ..."
"And Dad, I'd really like to win an Olympic gold medal for my Joanie Cunningham impersonation, but ..."
"Son," my father said, "It's a sign. It's just a damn sign."
Sigh.
Throughout Lance
Armstrong's recent fight to prove he hadn't cheated, and throughout the
plights of Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens and Mark McGwire and the
alleged PED abuses of dozens upon dozens of others, I've often thought
about that day at Disney and, specifically, of that sign.
As a boy, it spoke to me as a kid longing for greatness. Maybe, just maybe, I can accomplish anything. Maybe ...
As a sportswriter who
has chronicled much of the past two decades, however, it strikes me as
foolish nonsense. As Armstrong's recent admission shows, the words must
be altered to -- if you can dream it, you can do it -- as long as you
leave your ethics at the door and cheat your ass off and don't mind
throwing your supporters under a bus.
That, now, is the sad,
pathetic legacy of men such as Armstrong and Bonds. Once upon a time,
they dreamed of doing wonderful things: Of hitting baseballs 500 miles;
of speeding down the largest mountains; of being special. Then, however,
they learned (as we all do) that we are bound by the confines of
humanity. Within the rules and regulations, there is only so strong.
There is only so fast. There is only so big. Hence, one can either
accept his lot in life and put out the best possible effort, or he can
cheat and lie and enjoy the temporary fruits while trying to avoid the
inevitable plummet.
Do I think he should be allowed to race again? No. Lance Armstrong racing again is not truly an option anyway -- he's almost 42.
Just the same, I am
thrilled that he has -- at long last -- begun to come clean. There are
lessons to be learned here, beyond those pertaining to cycling. And
day's end, when the cheering has stopped, there is something to be said
for trying your best, even if your best doesn't result in triumph.
There is empowerment in
knowing you gave your all. There is satisfaction in achieving your own
PR. There is the sense of community and camaraderie that comes in the
aftermath of a sporting event. Cold beers, casual conversation, sore
muscles -- bliss.
Armstrong and Bonds
forgot that long ago. For them, it was all -- and only --about winning.
They got lost in a corrupt world of enhancers and boosters and had their
heads turned by the fame and accolades and money.
Lance knows that a quick
mea culpa is not enough -- otherwise, he would have admitted to doping
long ago. Instead, he made a calculated gamble that he could preserve
his reputation and brand by lying, defrauding corporate sponsors,
impugning the authorities pursuing him and actively slandering and suing
honest whistle-blowers who stood in his way.
Wayne Norman
That bet has not paid off.
Like a convenience store
robbery that goes wrong and leads to a hostage-taking and a high-speed
chase, Lance's doping is by far the least of his transgressions. A
highly calculated confession about the doping still looks like Lance
gambling to advance his interests. Former fans will need contrition and a
sense that he genuinely regrets the gamble. Those he slandered and
defrauded should demand even more.
Lance cannot get another
chance as an athlete at this point. That would make a mockery of all
sporting rules and their enforcement. When you've been that blatantly
dishonest, it won't be easy to convince people to trust you again.
John Eustice
Armstrong can make a deal and get leeway
What Lance has, the U.S.
Anti-Doping Agency wants, and Lance is not going to give it to them
unless he gets his (athletic) life back. USADA knows that Lance stands
at the nexus of two distinct cultures, two completely different
mindsets: The ideals and dreams of Olympic sport and the harsh,
ratings-driven business of the professional game.
John Eustice
They view this conquest
of Lance as their great chance to have the Olympic vision triumph over
the cynicism of the pros. But they need his cooperation to win.
Despite the admitting of
pros into the Olympic Games, in truth, the two cultures do not mesh.
Pro sports are businesses where talent, ratings and the subsequent cash
flows from them, must be protected just as in any other entertainment
business.
USADA needs to
understand how the professional mentality has "infected" the Olympic
movement, and Lance is the key. Was he protected by the International
Cycling Union? Was the Tour de France involved? Did it go even higher
that that?
USADA makes deals. If
Lance can provide them with information on the underground system that
fuels athletes worldwide, and explain, for example, how of the 6,000
drugs tests given at the London Games, only one came back positive,
allowing him to participate in some triathlons seems a very small price
to pay
too bad for armstrong. Notin last for ever
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