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Cycling body clears Armstrong for comeback race


Lance Armstrong wants to recapture Tour de France glory again. - AP

GENEVA (AP)

Cycling's governing body is relaxing its own rules to allow Lance Armstrong to make his road race comeback in Australia in January.

The International Cycling Union (UCI) said the seven-time Tour de France champion can compete in the January 20-25 Tour Down Under, his first race since coming out of retirement after three years.

A strict application of testing rules would not have allowed the 37-year-old Texan to compete until February 1, 2009, six months after he filed paperwork with the US Anti-Doping Agency.

Improved testing

But the UCI said yesterday that Armstrong could return early because its drug-testing standards have improved since the rule was drawn up four years ago.

"Riders are now subject to a much-reinforced system of monitoring compared to that of the past," the governing body said in a statement.

"Lance Armstrong has and will be the subject of very strict monitoring throughout the period running up to his return to the peloton."

Armstrong's comeback is meant to draw attention to his global campaign to fight cancer, a disease he survived before winning seven straight Tours from 1999-2005.

It is also a defiant stand against critics who doubt he could have achieved those victories without the use of performance-enhancing drugs.

Now he is liable to be tested at any time without notice and will have his own biological passport as part of a UCI-backed scheme to monitor possible doping offences.

Riders must give a series of blood and urine samples which allow a World Anti-Doping Agency-accredited laboratory to measure abnormal fluctuations in body readings.

Armstrong said last month he was tested in late August, and has enlisted a personal anti-doping expert in Don Catlin, who will make his test results available to the public.

Catlin, who ran the first anti-doping lab in the United States at UCLA for 25 years, will freeze and keep samples of Armstrong's blood to be analysed in the future.

Armstrong will not be paid for returning to the saddle and the testing costs will be covered by his Kazakhstan-based team Astana, which is managed by his cycling mentor Johan Bruyneel.

His comeback race, the Tour Down Under, is the first event on the UCI Pro Tour calendar in 2009 and is likely to be followed by the Tour of California in February.

He has suggested entering the Paris-Nice classic stage race in March, and could compete in South Africa before taking part in the Giro d'Italia in May. He will attempt to win the Tour de France an eighth time in July.

 
October 9, 2008
 

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