Armstrong isolated, Livestrong seeks to move on

Editors' Picks

  • Ferdinand signs one-year Man United contract

    Ferdinand signs one-year Man United contract

    Ferdinand signs one-year Man United contract

    MANCHESTER, England (Reuters) - Manchester United centre back Rio Ferdinand signed a one-year contract on Thursday to stay with the Premier League champions for a 12th season. The 34-year-old would have been out of contract this summer after helping his club to a 20th league title but will now be part of new manager David Moyes's set-up following the retirement of Alex Ferguson. "I am delighted to have signed a new contract," Ferdinand said in a statement. ...

  • Sergio Ramos grabs a photo with One Direction

    Sergio Ramos grabs a photo with One Direction

    Sergio Ramos grabs a photo with One Direction

    After watching rivals Barcelona take back the Spanish title, the 27-year-old Real Madrid defender cheers himself up by hanging out with the world-famous boy band

  • Ferdinand extends Man United contract

    Ferdinand extends Man United contract

    Ferdinand extends Man United contract

    Rio Ferdinand has signed a one-year contract extension with Manchester United, the Premier League champions announced on Thursday.

  • Brighton line up Tottenham's Sherwood to replace Poyet

    Brighton line up Tottenham's Sherwood to replace Poyet

    Brighton line up Tottenham's Sherwood to replace Poyet

    The Seagulls want Spurs' highly rated technical co-ordinator if the Uruguayan leaves, with the former Chelsea star currently suspended and strongly linked with the Stoke vacancy

  • Boss who beats Ferguson in longevity stakes retires

    Boss who beats Ferguson in longevity stakes retires

    Boss who beats Ferguson in longevity stakes retires

    By Sonia Oxley MANCHESTER, England (Reuters) - England's longest-serving football manager is retiring aged 71 after overseeing several trophy-laden decades at the club he loves - but he is not called Alex Ferguson. Just days after the footballing world watched Ferguson call time on his managerial career, Jimmy Davies will step aside from his post at amateur club Waterloo Dock after a 50-year stint that makes the former Manchester United boss's 26 years look short. ...

  • Raonic sees a gain from training in Spain

    Raonic sees a gain from training in Spain

    Raonic sees a gain from training in Spain

    By Iain Rogers MADRID (Reuters) - Milos Raonic would probably not feature on most people's list of potential French Open champions but the two-metre Canadian with the booming serve has been working hard on his clay game in Spain and has the potential to cause an upset. The Montenegro-born 22-year-old, who will make his third appearance at Roland Garros next week, joined up with Spanish coach Galo Blanco at his 4Slam Tennis academy in Barcelona in November 2010 and believes Blanco's influence

Lance Armstrong, increasingly isolated in the face of a devastating doping report, is now hoping Livestrong, the cancer charity he founded, will weather the scandal.

The US Anti-Doping Agency dossier painting Armstrong as a central figure in a massive doping scheme that helped him garner seven Tour de France titles finally sent corporate sponsors -- including key backers Nike, Anheuser-Busch and Trek -- scurrying and prompted Armstrong himself to step down as chairman of Livestrong.

But even as the shock waves reverberated through the world of cycling, Livestrong vice president of communications Katherine McLane said those at the foundation were trying to carry on.

"Lance's direction was 'Stay focused on your work. Do not be distracted.' And that's exactly what we've done," McLane told AFP on Thursday.

It's perhaps not surprising then that Armstrong's first public appearance since USADA's latest report will be at a Livestrong event in his hometown of Austin on Friday -- a gala fundraiser marking the 15th anniversary of the organization.

Sean Penn, Ben Stiller and Robin Williams were among the celebrities slated to attend.

Organizers will release a video recording afterwards on YouTube, but he'll face no tough questions from the press.

David Carter, a sports business professor at the University of Southern California and executive director of USC's Sports Business Institute, said any Armstrong journey to reclaim public respectability must include a confession.

"The only way they come back is when they take personal responsibility and accountability for what they've done," Carter said. "He has not taken responsibility."

For years, Armstrong has denied doping allegations. Despite sworn testimony from dozens of witnesses, including former teammates, in the USADA report, McLane said that many continue to view Armstrong not as a drug cheat but as a cancer survivor who used his experience to reach out to others.

"That doesn't go away," she said. "People here at the foundation, and I think within the cancer community, know Lance in a very different way than a larger public person, as a cyclist."

Still, the repercussions were being felt in the sport.

Hein Verbruggen, the Dutch veteran who was president of the International Cycling Union (UCI) when Armstrong won the Tour de France seven times between 1999 and 2005, also moved to distance himself from the American.

Verbruggen scoffed at allegations that he took a bribe to cover up a positive Armstrong test result in 1999.

But he said a report in Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf "unjustly states that despite USADA's dossier I still insist there is no proof."

Verbruggen's statement emerged as Italy's Gazzetta dello Sport reported that the USADA report and more than 1,000 pages of supplementary testimony had opened a "Pandora's box" of shady dealings.

Italian investigators are probing a doctor said to have overseen Armstrong's use of banned substances, Michele Ferrari, who is said to have offered an "all inclusive package" to top athletes on how to cheat the dope testers.

Dozens of athletes were reportedly implicated in the so-called "Ferrari system" and sometimes entire cycling teams, with the network involving money laundering, tax evasion and secret Swiss bank accounts.

The Italian probe could yet cause fresh controversy for the embattled sport.

Current UCI chief Pat McQuaid, whose organization is reviewing the report prior to issuing its own decision on whether it accepts the findings and supports USADA's life ban of Armstrong, insists cycling has moved on from its murky past.

But USADA chief executive Travis Tygart told velonews.com that he believes former Armstrong teammate Levi Leipheimer was punished by his Belgian team for coming forward about his own doping and contributing to the USADA report.

The American was sacked by Omega Pharma-Quick Step on Tuesday.

"At the end of the day, the last thing the sport needs is an attempt to silence those who had the courage to come forward, because that's the only thing that's going to allow the sport to move forward," Tygart told velonews.com

Fantasy Football

Most Popular Stories