Seven-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong of
the US smiles during a stop on the first day of training with his new team
Astana in Tenerife, Spain's Canary Islands yesterday. Armstrong came out of
retirement to ride for Astana, which started its preseason training camp in
Tenerife, in the Canary Islands. -Xinhua/Reuters
Lance Armstrong has guaranteed the drug-testing program he arranged with
America's top anti-doping expert will be in place by the time he rides in his
first official race in January.
The seven-time Tour de France winner was to start training with his new team
yesterday without having subjected himself to drug tests by Don Catlin, the
expert he teamed with, and with no deal in place to post results of those tests
online.
But in an interview on Sunday, Armstrong said the goal was not to have the
program in place by this week, but by the time he rides in Australia in January
- the first race of his comeback.
"It's a tough thing to organize, but we will make it happen," Armstrong said.
"All the stuff we said we were going to do will happen."
When Armstrong announced his comeback earlier this year, he partnered with
Catlin to set up a testing program. Catlin said he thought it was important to
make those results available to the public.
Catlin said over the weekend that while Armstrong has been placed back in the
testing pools at both the US Anti-Doping Agency and UCI, cycling's international
body, that he has yet to test him and that an agreement to document Armstrong's
results online is not in place.
Armstrong acknowledged he hadn't been tested by Catlin, but said he had been
tested seven times since re-entering the anti-doping testing programs run by
federations such as USADA and UCI.
Armstrong came out of retirement to ride for Astana, which was scheduled to
begin its preseason camp this week at Tenerife, on the Canary
Islands.