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Saturday, March 22, 1997
Lance Armstrong prepares for different kind
of race
By CHIP BROWN
Associated Press Writer
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - Lance Armstrong had planned to be in Italy,
riding with his new French cycling team as a favorite to win the
Milan-San Remo road race, and preparing for the Tour DuPont and
Tour de France.
That was before America's premier cyclist was diagnosed with
testicular cancer. Now, the only race on his mind this weekend
is Sunday's charity ride in Austin for the Lance Armstrong Foundation,
which raises money for cancer awareness.
"My life was dominated by cycling," said Armstrong,
the 1993 world road race cycling champion, a two-time Tour de
France stage winner and two-time Tour DuPont champ.
"Now, the foundation and the charity work and helping
others are an equally important part. The rest of my life will
be devoted to cancer awareness," he said.
Armstrong, 25, completed 12 weeks of chemotherapy in December
and doctors say the cancer is disappearing, although it will take
at least a year to determine if it is in remission. Doctors recently
gave him the OK to ride as vigorously as he wanted, and he said
he plans to resume racing in the summer.
When he was diagnosed with cancer in October, Armstrong was
one of the world's best in one-day road races, and was beginning
to blossom in the more grueling stage races, with his victories
in the Tour DuPont. He was being groomed to challenge for the
Tour de France in the next two to three years.
But those career goals, once an obsession, have changed.
"Winning the Tour de France was very much on my mind.
Now, I realize it's most likely impossible," Armstrong said.
"I think I can be competitive again in one-day races,
but in a race that is three weeks long and is as competitive as
the Tour de France, I think that a rigorous cycle of chemotherapy
would have an affect on my potential," he said.
Armstrong was preparing for the world road championship last
year when his life changed forever.
He had felt pain and swelling in one of his testicles for weeks
and had even spit up blood. But as a world-class athlete who constantly
dealt with nagging injuries, he shrugged it off.
Finally, the pain became unbearable, and he went to a doctor.
Testicular cancer is considered one of the most curable cancers,
but Armstrong's was so advanced that it had spread to his lungs.
He had the testicle removed and three weeks later learned that
the cancer had reached his brain, requiring more surgery. In such
cases, doctors typically give the patient a 50-50 chance.
"When they said I had brain lesions, emotionally, that
was the lowest I felt. That was rock bottom," Armstrong said.
With his mother, Linda Waller, by his side, he had to deal
with the devastating effects of chemotherapy.
"It would make the worst climb in the Alps seem flat,"
said Armstrong, whose light brown hair only recently grew back.
"It's just such a miserable experience and makes you so physically
ill."
Dr. J. Dudley Youman, Armstrong's cancer specialist, said that
because the cyclist was in such good physical condition, "he
has tolerated this very difficult chemotherapy better than anyone
I've ever seen."
Armstrong decided from the start to go public with his cancer
fight in hopes that young men nationwide would conduct self-examinations
for early detection of the disease.
The outpouring of support "was surprising and overwhelming,"
said Armstrong, who received calls and letters from riders and
cycling teams from around the world.
A get-well card arrived from three-time Tour de France winner
Greg LeMond, who retired from the sport due to a rare muscular
disease. And a November exhibition ride with Eddie Merckx, a five-time
winner of the Tour de France in the 1970s, also helped pull Armstrong
out of his doldrums.
"That was awesome," he said.
Armstrong quit school and turned professional as a triathlete
when he was 16, and ever since had lived a regimented life dictated
by eating, training and racing schedules.
A day without riding put Armstrong in a crabby funk.
"I enjoyed the disciplined lifestyle. I didn't have much
patience with my career," he said. "I was ready to be
successful and get all the things that come with those accomplishments."
Those things include his new art-filled, $1 million waterfront
home, a Porsche, a speed boat, and a Harley Davidson motorcycle.
"When I first got sick, the first thing I worried about
was my career, which in hindsight seems a little crazy,"
Armstrong said. "I knew it would be a setback to my career,
but in reality, it was a setback that could have killed me and
still could kill me."
Lately, his days have consisted of lying on the couch, reading,
strumming his guitar and playing with a kitten named Chemo.
"A lot of the things that were important to him before,
like his car, or material things, have taken a back seat to simple
things, like music or talking to his friends on the phone,"
said friend John Korioth, an amateur cyclist and director of Sunday's
charity ride, Race for the Roses.
Armstrong's new two-year, $2 million contract with the French
Team Cofidis was renegotiated after his diagnosis. Armstrong will
make "slightly less" than the original contract, he
said. If he doesn't race this year, the team has the option of
terminating the second year of the deal.
None of his other sponsors, including Nike and Oakley, has
wavered.
Armstrong, who grew up in suburban Dallas and moved to Austin
for its hills, says he is financially secure enough not to have
to work again. But he quickly adds that he would like to race
and probably will, beginning in August.
"I miss the competition," he said. "I follow
it closely still."
The only competition Armstrong gets these days are brief sprints
during rides with Korioth.
"He's definitely got the pep and fire back in him when
we are out riding," Korioth said. Send a Letter to
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Copyright ©1997,
Abilene Reporter-News / Texnews / E.W. Scripps Publications
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