Thursday September 20
A Hell of a Ride with Lance Armstrong: The Secret Race by Tyler Hamilton with Daniel Coyle
Lance Armstrong encompassed so much of what we want in a hero: a rise up from humble beginnings, a lifetime of dedication, followed by a Phoenix-rising-from-the-ashes post-crisis victory story. The man delivered on all counts. Unfortunately, though, following a return to the sport of bicycle racing after surviving stage-three testicular cancer, rumors of Armstrong’s true methods of winning began to circulate. And earlier this year, allegations against the seven-time Tour de France winner by the United States Anti-Doping Agency sent the sports world reeling. But did he dope or didn’t he? This is the question at the heart of Armstrong teammate Tyler Hamilton’s book, The Secret Race: Inside the Hidden World of the Tour de France: Doping, Cover-ups, and Winning at All Costs, co-written with reporter Daniel Coyle.
For three years, Hamilton and Armstrong were teammates on the U.S. Postal Service Cycling Team. During this time, Hamilton alleges in his book, doping became commonplace in the world of professional cycling. Average riders shot to cycling stardom seemingly overnight, and other, genuinely good riders dropped out of the profession as a result of their unwillingness to use steroids or erythropoietin (EPO). The scenarios Hamilton describes in detail are staggering – from the nonchalant beginnings of an athlete’s dope use, to the extent that team members and team doctors would go to hide the drugs both in their systems and out (think: ducking behind kitchen counters when the cycling authorities came a’knocking). In The Secret Race, though, many of these scenarios didn’t simply happen around Hamilton; he was very much a part of the action. Hamilton’s own professional cycling career came to a halt in 2009, when he (for the second time) failed a doping test and was suspended for eight years. Hamilton was, essentially, pushed into retirement.
The Secret Race is certainly a tell-all of sorts, but it doesn’t have that feel of salaciousness that accompanies the typical dishy tome. The story Hamilton tells is rich with detail, but details that invite we the readers into the inner sanctum of the cycling world. Sure, he names names when talking about where the dope came from, who used it, who shared it, who secreted it away, who supplied it, and who transported it, but The Secret Race is also an opportunity to examine the brotherhood that exists among teammates. The men, while training for the biggest races of their lives, board together, eat together, play together, and train together. The team is a fraternity for adults, one in which the psychology of friendship is complicated by the psychology of competition. Hamilton, with the help of Coyle, spares no detail in pulling away that opaque curtain that has kept the mysteries of the sport shrouded. If you’ve ever wondered what really goes on in the exclusive world of sports cycling, what drives the cyclists to keep on pedaling, and what measures they’re willing to take to do so – or if you’ve ever simply wondered what Lance Armstrong is really like – The Secret Race will keep you enthralled from page one.
I’ve got a pretty good poker face; Lance has a great one. But there’s one guy who’s better than either of us: Johan Bruyneel. And it was never so well used as that night at the end of the 2000 Dauphiné, when he told me about the plans for the blood transfusion. I’d heard about transfusions before, but it was always theoretical and distant—as in, can you believe that some guys actually bank their blood, then put it back in before a race? It seemed weird, Frankenstein- ish, something for Iron Curtain Olympic androids in the eighties. But Johan, when he explained the plan during the Dauphiné, made it sound normal, even boring. He’s good at making the outrageous sound normal—it might be his greatest skill. It’s something in his expression, in the certainty of his big Belgian voice, in the supremely casual way he shrugs while laying out the details of the plan. Whenever I watch the likable gangsters on The Sopranos, I think of Johan.
As Johan explained it, Lance, Kevin, and I would fly to Valencia. We would donate a bag of blood, which would be stored, and we’d fl y home the next day. Then, at a key point during the Tour, we’d put the bag back in, and we’d get a boost. It would be like taking EPO, except better: there were rumors of an EPO test being developed for the 2000 Olympics, and word was, they might be using the test during the Tour. I listened to Johan, nodded, gave him my poker face. When I told Haven about it, she gave me the poker face right back (wives get good at it, too). But part of me was thinking, What the hell?
Maybe that’s why I was late the Tuesday morning we left for Valencia. There was no reason to be late—everybody knew Lance despised lateness above all things—but on that crucial morning we were running late by a full ten minutes. I raced our little Fiat through the narrow streets of Villefranche; Haven was hanging on to the oh-shit bars, asking me to slow down. I kept speeding up. It was eight miles to the airport in Nice. During the trip, my cell phone rang three times. Lance.
Dude, where are you?
What’s going on? We’re about to take off.
How fast can that fucking car of yours go? Come on!
We screeched into the airport parking lot; I walked through the security area and onto the runway. I’d never been on a private jet before, so I took in the scene: the leather seats, the television, the little fridge, the steward asking me if I would like anything to drink.
Lance acted casual, as if private jets were routine—which for him, they were. He’d been riding them fairly constantly since the previous July, courtesy of Nike, Oakley, Bristol-Myers Squibb, and the other corporations who were competing for the privilege of ferrying him around. The numbers were unbelievable. USA Today estimated Lance’s income at $7.5 million, he was getting paid $100,000 per speech, and his new memoir, It’s Not About the Bike, was an instant best seller. You could feel the flow of money, the new possibilities it opened. Now we didn’t have to drive to Valencia. We didn’t have to worry about customs or airport security. The jet, like everything else, was now part of our tool box.
The engines revved, the wheels went up, and we were airborne. Below, we could see the Côte d’Azur, the mansions, the yachts; it felt surreal, like a fantasy world. In the plane, my lateness was forgiven. Lance was confident, happy, excited, and it was contagious. The confident feeling increased when we landed in Valencia and were met on the runway by the Postal team: Johan, Pepe Martí, and del Moral. They showed up with sandwiches, bocadillos—it was important to have a little something in our stomachs beforehand.
From the airport, we drove south for half an hour through a marshland as Johan and del Moral talked about the transfusion. It would be so simple, they said. So easy. Extremely safe, nothing at all to worry about. I noticed Johan talked more to Kevin and me than to Lance, and that Lance didn’t seem to pay attention; I got the feeling this wasn’t Lance’s first transfusion.
We pulled up near the village of Les Gavines at a beached whale of a hotel called the Sidi Saler, luxurious and quiet, free of the tourists who’d be arriving later in summer. We’d already been checked in; we took the elevator up to the fifth floor, moving through the deserted hallways. Kevin and I were directed into one room facing the parking lot; Lance got his own room next door.
I had expected to see a sophisticated medical setup, but this looked more like a junior- high science experiment: a blue soft- sided cooler, a few clear plastic IV bags, cotton balls, some clear tubing, and a sleek digital scale. Del Moral took over.
Lie on the bed, roll up your sleeve, give me your arm. Relax.
He tied a blue elastic band below my biceps, set an empty transfusion bag on a white towel on the floor next to the bed, and wiped the inside of my elbow with an alcohol swab. Then the needle. I’d seen a lot of needles, but this one was huge—about the size and shape of a coffee stirrer. It was attached to a syringe that was in turn attached to clear tubing that led to the waiting bag, with a small white thumb wheel to control flow. I looked away; felt the needle go in. When I looked again, my blood was pumping steadily into the bag on the floor.
You often hear “blood transfusion” tossed around in the same breath as “EPO” or “testosterone,” as if it’s all equivalent. Well, it’s not. With the other stuff, you swallow a pill or put on a patch or get a tiny injection. But here you’re watching a big clear plastic bag slowly fill up with your warm dark red blood. You never forget it.
I looked over to see Kevin hooked up in the same way. We could see our reflections on the closet-door mirror. We tried to cut the tension by comparing the speed with which our respective bags were filling: Why are you going so slow? I’m dropping you, dude. Johan shuttled between the rooms, checking on us, making small talk.
Every so often Pepe or del Moral would kneel down and take the bag in their hands, tilting it gently back and forth, mixing it with anticoagulant. They were gentle because, as they explained, the red blood cells were alive. If the blood was mishandled— shaken or heated, or left in a refrigerator beyond four weeks or so—the cells would die.
Filling the bags took about fifteen or twenty minutes. The bags plumped up until the scale showed we were done: one pint, 500 milliliters. Then, unhook: needle out. Cotton ball, pressure. Bags taped closed, labeled, and tucked into the blue cooler. Del Moral and Pepe headed out; they didn’t say where, but we guessed it was to the clinic in Valencia and the refrigerator there, where the bags would be stored until we needed them three weeks later at the Tour.
Co-Author Daniel Coyle/Photo © Scott Dickerson
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