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-Short Attention Span Theater-
Lance Has Already Won
2005-07-22
DC Examiner print edition. If you go to link, page forward to p. 17. The whole thing is here.

You had only completed one full Tour de France, placing 36th, before getting the awful news on Oct. 2, 1996: You had an advanced form of cancer. It had spread from your groin to your lungs and then to your brain. You were 25 years old. Your chances of survival were never high — 40 percent, maybe. You endured three surgeries, three months of chemotherapy and a rough year of recovery full of nausea and vomiting. You lost 10 to 15 pounds of muscle. But you survived.

When you got out of the hospital, you got back to the business of cycling and stunned the world by pedaling your way back to the Tour, where, in 1999, you biked, no crushed, 2,287 miles and captured your first title and the hearts and admiration of millions. But you didn’t stop there: You decided to bike another 10,710 more miles and, in the process, capture six titles — the most ever in what is, arguably, sports’ most grueling endurance feat. You overtook not only cancer, but pelotons and mountains as well, all with two six-inch, quarter-inch-deep dents in your skull and with lungs still scarred from the chemotherapy.

You never let the pain in your legs show in your face. It’s not because you weren’t in pain — you were. And it’s not simply because you were trying to psych out the opponents — you could have beaten them regardless. No, the reason that you kept your poker face on is simple: You’ve known pain. You’ve known despair — you wanted to give up in 1998 when, during a rainy race-day in France, you pulled your bike over to the side of the road and said, “I quit.” So how bad can a little biking be? What’s so hard about climbing thousands of miles over France’s tallest peaks at 15 percent inclines? That’s child’s play compared to what you’d been through. Easy. You knew that millions of cancer victims were watching your every revolution on that bike and, by keeping a face of stone, you not only showed respect for the real and sustained pain they were feeling at that very moment, you also hoped to inject hope into each victim by saying, “Once you get out of that bed, you, too, can bike 2,000 miles across France. No big whoop.”

Where you were once a brash and cocky Texan made tough by a troubled family, you became a humble and thankful “cancer survivor,” a badge of honor you never let go of no matter how far away those cancer days seemed. You convinced us to contribute to cancer research — $85 million to your Lance Armstrong Foundation — and to educate ourselves on cancer prevention. In the process, you not only graced the cover of Sports Illustrated, but Philanthropy Review, as well. You made 48 million of us slap silly looking yellow bracelets on our wrists to appreciate what you had been through and what others go through on a daily basis.

For the past seven years, we’ve taken a three-week vacation with you, across the fields and foothills, the towns and thoroughfares of France. We woke up early to watch you zip and zoom through French cities. We cried when you took the podium in Paris each July. We cried even more when you brought children you never thought you’d be able to have. Those vacations will come to an end, as you finish your last Tour de France this weekend.

But there’s a reason I’m writing this before Sunday’s conclusion of the Tour de France and not after: No matter what happens during the Tour’s remaining three stages, you’ve already won. In fact, you won eight years ago, when you stepped out of your house in Austin, after months off the bike and in chemotherapy. You walked into the garage, took your dusty bike out onto the driveway and got back to the work of living, one slow pedal stroke at time.

Patrick W. Gavin is the Examiner’s associate editorial page editor.

Posted by:Bobby

#6  Well Lance is one of the greatest riders of the Tour, no doubt about that, there are others from the past however. Eddie Merckx comes to mind as one amoung the hand full.
Posted by: Sock Puppet 0’ Doom   2005-07-22 21:27  

#5  I really miss Lucky, dammit
Posted by: Frank G   2005-07-22 21:02  

#4  Ima think LA is number 6
the Cannibal is still the best rider.....


/LUCKY dammit say something.
Posted by: Shipman   2005-07-22 20:32  

#3  your right about it not being over but I get great pleasure in the American rider being the greatest rider ever in a French event that so defines their culture.
Posted by: 49 pan   2005-07-22 19:58  

#2  It's not over until they cross the finish line in Paris. There are nine guys that are in striking distance and there are 2 days to go. The TT tomorrow well tell us more. It is not over until it's over.
Posted by: Sock Puppet 0’ Doom   2005-07-22 17:38  

#1  Italian Giuseppe Guerini clinched a surprise victory in the 19th stage of the Tour de France.
Frenchman Sandy Casar finished second in the shortest road stage of the Tour, ahead of Franco Pellizotti of Italy. Oscar Pereiro came fourth to force his way into the overall top 10, with Lance Armstrong finishing safely in the pack.
The American, heading for his seventh Tour de France victory on Sunday, has a lead of two minutes 46 seconds over Italian Ivan Basso. He will look to tighten his stranglehold on Saturday in what will be his last ever time trial before his retirement. "I probably have five more hours in my career as a cyclist. I'm not terribly sad about that," said the 33-year-old.
Posted by: Steve   2005-07-22 15:29  

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