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Bad Blood, Jeremy Whittle (2009)
Yellow Jersey 9780224080231 paperback 234pp £8.99
The contamination of cycling's life blood, compellingly chronicled
from the press enclosure

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Originally titled Ten Years In A Hire Car, this is the tale of Whittle's
experiences as a journalist and later as editor of a cycling magazine
rather than a forensic analysis of drugs in sport. It is a tale of press
conferences, chance encounters with cyclists, lunch with sponsors and
the unconcealed aggression of Lance Armstrong.
Through these Whittle traces what is known for sure, and what is simply
rumoured, about how pharmaceutical cheating has become endemic in cycling
in the 1990s and the decade since.
As readable as his story is depressing, Whittle argues that drugs divide
cycling. There are those who denounce their use, and those who enforce
the omerta. And it is not only the riders this affects, but the journalists
whose trade has always been so entwined with professional racing.
The colossus bestriding this narrative is, of course, Lance Armstrong.
At the start of his story, Whittle has intimate access to the pre-cancer
neophyte. By the end, when their paths do cross, the Texan refuses to
recognise the author. Other journalists who earn his displeasure are subjected
to phone rage and bullying by the seven times Tour winner, says Whittle.
He makes no specific allegations that Armstrong doped, but his disappointment
with the American's behaviour is clear. More than anything, he alleges,
Armstrong eschewed the opportunity created by the Festina affair, to seriously
distance the road racing from the syringe. Instead, Armstrong became the
enforcer of the omerta, publicly humiliating those riders who spoke out
against drug use.
Along the route of this sorry saga there are plenty of fascinating details
by way of leavening - the Champions Club of cycling obsessed American
CEO's for example and the way in which relationships between journalists
affects their approach to the stories they write. There is also a trace
of Hornbyesque self discovery between the hotel rooms and hire cars. It
is enough to ensure that, while this might not be a happy story, it is
a compelling read.
PS Feb 11
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