Jeff Novitzky News
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Lance Armstrong finally “surrendered” yesterday, ending a decade's worth of denials that he had used performance-enhancing drugs.
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A U.S. federal probe into doping in cycling involving Lance Armstrong’s former team may be slowed by legal hurdles in pursuing the inquiry in Europe, sports lawyers said.
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Lance Armstrong, the seven-time tour de France champion, and his professional bicycle racing team are no longer the subjects of a U.S. criminal probe, the U.S. attorney in Los Angeles said.
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Lance Armstrong didn’t win the Tour de France, the grueling race he once dominated, the one jokingly dubbed the Tour de Lance. In prior years he pedaled and pedaled and pedaled until he was the last man standing on the podium. Past tense.
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Seven-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong , who two former teammates say took banned performance-enhancing substances, is facing a legal process that eventually proved similar allegations against other professional athletes accused of doping.
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Seven-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong said he’s quitting professional cycling, ending a two-year comeback at age 39.
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Floyd Landis , stripped of his 2006 Tour de France title for doping, is giving up on a return to professional cycling, the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency said.
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U.S. authorities are in the early stages of considering whether to investigate Lance Armstrong and other cyclists for fraud and conspiracy tied to doping, the New York Times reported.
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Scientists are working on a doping test for transfused blood that may help a probe into allegations that the U.S. Postal cycling team led by Lance Armstrong used the technique to improve riders’ performances.
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Lance Armstrong, the record seven- time winner of the Tour de France, is seeking to force the U.S. to make public its filing in a case over alleged leaks to the media involving an investigation of doping in cycling.
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