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Lance Armstrong ready to race down under, but do not expect much

January
12

ADELAIDE, Australia (AP)  Seven-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong said Monday not to expect too much from him in his return to competitive cycling after three years in retirement.

The testicular cancer survivor will make his professional comeback with the Astana team in the six-stage Tour Down Under from Jan. 20-25.

“I think it would be unrealistic to expect a victory,” Armstrong said Monday. “The race has gotten harder and harder over the years. I hope to be in the mix, I could be completely wrong.”

The 37-year-old American arrived in Australia on Sunday and took a four-hour training ride Monday before appearing at a media conference. He spent several weeks in Hawaii training for the Australian race.

“I’ve prepared much harder this series of months than I ever would have in the past,” Armstrong said.

“The tests that we do on the bike, or on the road, or in the lab indicate that my January fitness is much better than it ever was the years when I was winning the Tour. But that doesn’t mean anything until you get into the race.”

He quipped that he might be the first rider dropped from the peloton — an unthinkable scenario for Tour Down Under organizers.

“I know I have questions about my personal condition, but I’ve worked hard to get in shape, I’ve worked hard to show up here and try to ride at the front,” he said. “But when you’re one man out of 200 it’s strange how 199 other guys dictate how your day goes. I think it would be unrealistic to expect a victory.”

While Armstrong said most of the other riders in the field were also starting their seasons in Australia, he must reacquaint himself with riding in the peloton.

“I have a little bit of insecurity and a little bit of nervousness there and so that’s the reason I’ve tried to train hard and prepare hard — I’m fairly fit,” he said.

“You have to consider cycling: it’s not just about your physical condition, it’s about 200 guys going down the road and going around dangerous corners at 40-50 miles an hour — and how does that feel?.

“That’s a dynamic that you can’t simulate in training, so I’ve got to get in the group. And those are the things that most people look at and think we’re nuts to do this.”

Armstrong said his decision to return to competitive cycling was influenced by his efforts in campaigning for cancer awareness.

“There have been times where I’ve thought ‘what the hell have I done’, but they’re brief,” he said.

“For me it’s not so much a sporting challenge, and it’s not a financial challenge, it’s not any of those things. I came back as a volunteer and so I’m here for the love of the bike and the passion of the cause.”

He said the Lance Armstrong Foundation has raised more than $250 million for the fight against cancer.

“We’re reminded on a daily basis that this epidemic is truly a global issue — 22,000 people a day die from this disease,” he said.

“Hopefully in conjunction with a sporting comeback we can also raise a bigger issue and create greater awareness for this disease around the world.”

As well as the Tour Down Under, his race schedule for 2009 will include the Giro d’Italia and an attempt to win an unprecedented eighth Tour de France.

This entry was posted on Monday, January 12th, 2009 at 12:55 pm by Randall Wolf. Print This Post Print This Post | Email This Post Email This Post

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Randall Wolf Randall Wolf is Director of Photography at The Journal News/LoHud.com, and has ridden more than 80,000 miles on a bike during the past 35 years. Some of these miles include a three-week touring trip from Suburban Philadelphia to Nova Scotia and back at age 16 and a few years later a solo two-week trip to Montreal. In 1985, he photographed the first U.S.-based team in the Vuelta a Espana, a three-week professional cycling race throughout Spain. He has participated in professional teams and races throughout the U.S. including the national championship in Philadelphia, and Tour of Georgia. In the mid-Ô90s he competed as an amateur racer throughout the Northeast. Bike commuting was his choice of transportation while working in Baltimore and Toronto. He is a ride leader and member of the Westchester Cycling Club and Rockland Bike Club, and lives in Garrison with his wife.
About the authors
Robert Brum Robert Brum, an assistant metro editor for The Journal News/LoHud.com and The Rockland Express, grew up cycling the roads of Rockland County. He now lives in Queens and rides with the Long Island Bicycle Club. Brum logs between 2,000 and 3,000 miles a year cycling throughout the Northeast.
David Schloss David Schloss is the co-founder and president of the Rockland Bicycling Club. A lifelong cyclist and self-described bicycling addict, Schloss is also a professional writer, photographer and educator, he is also the director of a group that supports photographers, which allows him to travel the globe, sneaking in rides.
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