Armstrong questions fairness of life ban

(Reuters) – Lance Armstrong believes he was treated unfairly and singled out for punishment by the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) after being banned for life for doping.

Armstrong, who was stripped of his record seven Tour de France titles last year after a USADA investigation, said he competed on a level playing field because many of his rivals doped but feels he was targeted for punishment.

“The playing field, those who were on the field would agree it was level. Justice as we’ve seen in the last 12 months hasn’t been level,” the American said in the third part of an interview with cyclingnews.com published on Thursday.

“I’m not whining or complaining, I’m just observing. I’m the one who is serving life and others who made the same choices get a complete pass.

“I don’t know. That doesn’t feel right,” added Armstrong, who in January admitted to years of using performance-enhancing drugs to help him in cycling.

Several of Armstrong’s former team mates testified against him for the USADA investigation into doping in cycling with many receiving six-month bans from the sport after admitting taking performance-enhancing drugs.

“Was I singled out? Yes. Was there collateral damage with other guys? Yes. Again, it’s all my fault. Of course I’m the guy they went after. Of course. It wouldn’t make any sense to go after anyone else. I get that,” Armstrong said.