Slaying the badger
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LeMond talks about how riders like Rafal Majka get their chance to shine when their leaders leave the Tour
In an interview, the three-time Tour de France winner says Armstrong was "not capable of the top five"
Former Tour champion tells Anderson Cooper that Armstrong's fraud was criminal and he should do time
Three-time Tour champion says releasing the numbers would end much of the doping speculation
Thirty-five riders are in the Best Young Rider competition entering Saturday's Tour start in Corsica
Only seven riders in history have won both grand tours in the same season, for a total of 12 times
Doping panel talks about the U.S. Postal Service investigation and the lack of change in cycling since the Armstrong report landed
Greg and Kathy LeMond, along with Betsy Andreu, will speak at a symposium about doping at the University of Texas in Austin
LeMond Inc. will sell the Revolution stationary trainer and a line of related products, says the three-time Tour de France winner
Three-time Tour champion Greg LeMond says he doesn't think Lance Armstrong is remorseful over his doping or his smear campaign
For the many victims of Armstrong's doping and PR machine, the disgraced former champion can do little to erase the damage he's done
British journalist of the year David Walsh says what happened to the LeMond bicycle brand is indicative of Armstrong's power during his heyday
UCI president says the Change Cycling Now group is irrelevant and asks what LeMond has done for cycling in 25 years
Riders' association president Gianni Bugno must now take the CCN summit's proposals to the principle players — the riders
Kimmage, Ashenden express doubts over cleanliness of the peloton in 2012, say that riders must get involved for credibility to return
Three-time Tour de France champion Greg LeMond will seek to become the first American president of the UCI
University of Texas-Austin professor Dr. John Hoberman will join the weekend summit
UCI spokesperson declines to comment on three-time Tour champ's call for resignations
America's only Tour winner urges McQuaid and honorary UCI chief Hein Verbruggen to resign for the benefit of the sport
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The Tour de France champ discusses ADD, doping, Floyd Landis, Bernard Hinault and (yes) Lance Armstrong
Excerpted with permission from: The Tour Is Won on the Alpe by Jean-Paul Vespini, translated by David V. Herlihy
An essay by LeMond Fitness CEO Mark Handfelt
During that press conference, as my hand was in the air, LeMond whispered in my ear, “Come on, Neal, ask the real questions.” It was without question the single most surreal moment in my professional career ...
Stephanie McIlvain testified in an earlier case that she never heard the seven-time Tour de France champ admit to using performance-enhancing drugs.
French President Sarkozy, Bernard Hinault, Greg LeMond, Lance Armstrong and others pay tribute to the two-time Tour winner.
Greg LeMond tells a French newspaper that the investigation into the Landis allegations could bring 'the end' to Lance Armstrong
The New York Daily News says the three-time Tour champ must appear at federal court in California on July 30 to say what he knows about the Armstrong inquiry
Two days after shocking the bike world by admitting that he doped and accusing a long list of star cyclists of doing the same, Floyd Landis appeared at the Amgen Tour of California time trial in Los Angeles Saturday. And ESPN.com reports Landis called Greg LeMond Friday to apologize for an incident at his 2007 doping hearing.
Greg Lemond, the first American to win the Tour de France, says he believes "most of Floyd Landis's statements" charging systematic doping in cycling.
Certain dates in cycling history have earned far greater importance than others — among them February 7, which saw an inauspicious debut and an untimely departure.
Our readers weigh in on doping cases, the risks on the road and the Trek lawsuit.
Attorney Jamie DiBoise planned to call some noted Armstrong critics to testify at the trial, which had been scheduled to start less than four weeks from now in a Minnesota federal court.. And in October DiBoise took a three-hour deposition from Armstrong’s ex-wife, asking whether she had ever seen Armstrong use doping products (a question she declined to answer on her lawyer’s advice).
Trek Bicycle and Greg LeMond reach a settlement in their suit over a licensing agreement between the three-time Tour de France winner and the Wisconsin-based bike maker.
Press Release: Cycling legend Greg LeMond and Trek Bicycle Corporation announced an agreement to close out all remaining issues for the business venture they began in 1995, and to provide funding for a charity near Greg’s heart.
With a new decade of professional road racing getting under way, North American cycling has never looked stronger.
The lawsuit between Trek Bicycle and Greg LeMond is rolling, slowly, toward the courthouse and what could be an explosive trial. A federal judge in Minnesota last week rejected requests from each side to dismiss case, and granting each an assortment of minor victories and setbacks.
Past winners of the Tour de France
LeMond testified under oath that Landis implicitly admitted to doping during a phone call. LeMond also testified that he received what he characterized as a threatening phone call from a member of the Landis team on the eve of his testimony.
Last week, I left you with a thought from Greg LeMond after Frenchman Laurent Fignon won the 1983 Tour de France: “We all thought it was kind of a fluke.” Had LeMond, then 22, started that Tour, he might well have won it. He was two months older than Fignon, who was his teammate, and LeMond would have gone into the race with much better results, including victories at the 1982 Tour de l’Avenir and 1983 Dauphiné Libéré. Backing up that theory was the manner in which LeMond continued the 1983 season, winning the world championship and then the Super Prestige Pernod title (see “Inside Cycling,”