Strong-Armed

The tragic fall of Lance Armstrong

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An American hero, a worldwide role model for so many cancer victims and by all accounts an upstanding man, Lance Armstrong deceived all of us, plain and simple. But his deception stretched beyond sport and its accolades. It stretched beyond legal battles. It reached into the hearts of people everywhere who wanted to believe that hard work and dedication can overcome even the worst of circumstances.

Here’s some breaking news: it can’t. Some circumstances are too great, some situations too dire and some obstacles too absurd to conquer. That’s life. That’s reality, and it is far from the image Lance Armstrong portrayed.

Lance was the all-American ream. As a cancer survivor and a seven-time Tour de France champion, he captured the hearts and minds of millions upon millions of Americans. His thrilling races brought attention once a year to a sport that otherwise lay dormant and the story went from “can he win another one?” to “how is he going to win this one?” Most importantly for me, he brought awareness to his cause.

It’s no coincidence that his story became one of legend. He made it so. He pushed his cancer struggle. He pushed his celebrity relationships. His sponsorships blossomed out of successes that made him seem super-human. The irony in it all is that he is the most human among all of us. His faults and misdeeds caught up to him in a big, bad way.

He’s been atop the hollow mountain of a sport riddled with scandal. Those seven Tour de France titles had long been the subject of controversy, with accusations coming from both his competitors and his teammates. His long awaited admission of doping last week took many people by surprise. Not because they’re surprised he was dirty, just that he would admit it. I suppose he was tired of running from the truth.

Once again, it’s not as if it’s a huge surprise. Cycling has long been assumed throughout the sports world as the most notorious for cheating. In fact, if you weren’t doping and you won a marathon race in the past 15 years, you deserve to be considered among god-like status.  Many of the Tour de France competitors of the past 20 years have either been suspected or busted because of steroid usage. Lance Armstrong should have been no different.

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