Landis admits doping, accuses Armstrong

NEW YORK, (Reuters) – Disgraced Tour de France winner  Floyd Landis has confessed to using performance-enhancing drugs  and accused some of his sport’s biggest names, including Lance  Armstrong, of also cheating. 
 
Seven-times Tour de France winner Armstrong dismissed the  accusations as untrue before crashing heavily during the fifth  stage of the Tour of California and needing hospital treatment.  

“We have nothing to hide. We have nothing to run from,” he  told reporters.  
Landis, stripped of his 2006 Tour victory after failing a  doping test, had spent four years and more than $1 million  protesting his innocence before deciding to come clean on  Thursday.
  
“I want to clear my conscience,” he told ESPN after making  his confession in a series of emails.  
“I don’t want to be part of the problem any more.”  

In the emails, which Reuters has seen and Landis said were  also distributed to USA Cycling and the International Cycling  Union (UCI), the American provided details of a variety of drugs  he had used during his career and who supplied them to him.  

USA Cycling chief executive Steve Johnson would not comment  on the accusations but said they would treated seriously.  
“There are many accusations being circulated and we are  confident these will be thoroughly investigated by the  appropriate authorities,” he said in a statement.  

Landis admitted using EPO, human growth hormone,  testosterone, blood transfusions and female hormones from 2002,  when he joined the U.S. Postal team. 
 
The 34-year-old said he witnessed some of his team mates,  including Armstrong, use illegal drugs, including once on a team  bus during a race. 
 
Armstrong has had to fend off accusations of doping before.  He has never failed a dope test and has always denied taking  banned substances. 
 
“It’s our word against his word,” Armstrong told reporters.  “I like our word. We like our credibility. Floyd lost his  credibility a long time ago. 
 
“With regard to the specific allegations, the specific  claims, they’re not even worth getting in to.”  
The astonishing claims by Landis triggered a swift response  from senior doping and cycling officials.  
“We are very interested in learning more about this matter  and we will liaise with the United States Anti-Doping Agency  (USADA) and any other authority with appropriate jurisdiction to  get to the heart of the issues raised,” World Anti-Doping Agency  (WADA) president John Fahey said in a statement.  

Landis accused officials from the sport’s governing body of  covering up a positive test from Armstrong during the 2002 Tour  of Switzerland — a race the UCI said he did not compete in.
  
“Deeply shocked by the gravity of this statement, which  considerably impinges on the honour of all persons who have  dedicated themselves to the fight against doping, the UCI wishes  to clearly state that it has never changed or concealed a  positive test  result,” it said in a statement. 
 
“Finally, the UCI wishes to make clear that it will  undertake all necessary measures to defend its honour as well as  the honour of all its executives who have been unfairly accused  by Mr Floyd Landis.”  
   
         ARREST WARRANT  
Landis was stripped of his Tour win after returning an  abnormal testosterone/epitestosterone ratio. He denied any  wrongdoing and fought a long and expensive legal case, which he  lost, and was subsequently banned for two years. 
 
His suspension ended last year but in February a French  judge issued an arrest warrant against him for suspected hacking  into an anti-doping laboratory computer. 
 
French anti-doping agency head Pierre Bordry said the judge  believed Landis wanted to prove the laboratory where his samples  were tested was wrong. 
 
Landis maintained that the testers got it wrong, arguing he  had used human growth hormone and not the synthetic testosterone  he tested positive for.