Lance - A 30 for 30 Documentary
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Anybody watching this? https://www.espn.com/olympics/story/_/id/29209116/lance-part-1-how-watch-stream-espn-lance-armstrong-documentary
30 for 30 are about the only thing worth watching on ESPN and this looks very promising. With all the cycling fans on here, I figured more than a few will be watching it.
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Lance is a turd who got a lot of folks into cycling. But a turd he remains. Oh and fuck professional cycling generally.
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For the record, I have won exactly as many Tour-de-France's as Lance Armstrong.
Just sayin'.
@George-K said in Lance - A 30 for 30 Documentary:
For the record, I have won exactly as many Tour-de-France's as Lance Armstrong.
Just sayin'.
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@George-K said in Lance - A 30 for 30 Documentary:
For the record, I have won exactly as many Tour-de-France's as Lance Armstrong.
Just sayin'.
@Aqua-Letifer said in Lance - A 30 for 30 Documentary:
@George-K said in Lance - A 30 for 30 Documentary:
For the record, I have won exactly as many Tour-de-France's as Lance Armstrong.
Just sayin'.
Apologies for the apostrophe, by the way.
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[Asshole]No problem, that's what I was laughing at.[/Asshole]
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[Asshole]No problem, that's what I was laughing at.[/Asshole]
@Aqua-Letifer said in Lance - A 30 for 30 Documentary:
[Asshole]No problem, that's what I was laughing at.[/Asshole]
[I don't believe you for a second] No problem, buddy! [/I don't believe you for a second.]
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I watched a documentary about Armstrong a couple of years ago - I can't remember which one, but I was left with the impression that he was a sociopath. It wasn't the cheating, it was his willingness to happily destroy other people's lives, and his apparent total lack of remorse.
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https://www.bicycling.com/news/a46129587/lance-armstrong-reveals-how-he-cheated-doping-drug-tests/
βYou could smoke that joint and go to work driving your tractor (and) in two weeks test positive, because the half-life is much longer,β Armstrong told Maher. βWith EPO, which was the rocket fuel that changed not just our sport but every endurance sport, you have a four-hour half-life, so it leaves the body very quickly. With a four-hour half-life, you can just do the math.β
By βthe math,β it can be assumed the Armstrong was referencing the length of an average Grand Tour stage, meaning, by the time a stage was finished and Armstrong might be tested, the level of EPO in his system was undetectable.