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Sports Illustrated July 30, 2001 Jack McCallum |
Armstrong tactics Giving Lance the benefit of the doubt... |
Fast Company October 2010 Chuck Salter |
Can Livestrong Survive Lance Armstrong and a Doping Scandal? The world's most famous cancer survivor has been his foundation's biggest asset, even as it grew into an innovative force in health care. Now his legal troubles may make him a risk. |
Registered Rep. March 1, 2006 Kristen French |
Lance's Fund Face Seven-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong is the celebrity poster boy for a new line of mutual funds from American Century, called LIVESTRONG. |
Outside June 2003 Eric Hagerman |
Force Majeure That's the simplest way to define Lance Armstrong's turbulent, awe-inspiring tug-of-war between an irresistible, superior force and events that cannot be anticipated or controlled. |
Sports Central July 25, 2005 Eric Poole |
Lance Armstrong: Long Live the King Thoughts about Lance Armstrong, his role as a pioneer in equipment and training, his interaction with teammates and competitors, and who will succeed him. |
AskMen.com Andrew Tilin |
Doping And The Tour de France Maybe Lance Armstrong should tell the truth about his past. Or maybe people should learn a bit about the history of doping and lay off Lance. |
Outside July 2009 John Bradley |
Remembering Armstrong's First Tour Victory Ten years ago this month, Lance Armstrong was a little-known cancer survivor who showed up at the Tour de France. And no one had any idea what would happen next. |
Salon.com July 29, 1999 Arthur Allen |
Triumph of the cure Lance Armstrong beat testicular cancer and then won the Tour de France. Was it a miracle or is he a poster boy for the power of modern medicine? |
AskMen.com October 21, 2015 Matt Chappell |
Doping In Sport 2015 Nearly three years on from the scandal that was the Lance Armstrong confession, the journalist that spent 13 years of his life trying to bring him down, David Walsh, still has his eye on the ball. |
Outside February 2009 Christopher Keyes |
King of Pain He's got seven yellow jerseys. He's not getting paid. He's 37 years old. So why is Lance Armstrong racing again? Because he still has something to prove -- and nothing else hurts so good. |
Outside July 2005 Hal Espen |
Breaking Away As he rolls for number seven, wrap your mind around the life and legacy and farewell Tour de France of Lance Armstrong. |
HBS Working Knowledge December 18, 2013 Michael Blanding |
Lessons from the Lance Armstrong Cheating Scandal Clayton S. Rose's recent case study looks at the behavior of teammates who were swept up in Lance Armstrong's cheating scandal. When do followers need to break away from their leader? |
Sports Illustrated July 18, 2000 Leigh Montville |
Tour De Amerique Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong used a triumphant whirlwind return to the U.S. to peddle a message of hope |
Salon.com January 3, 2003 King Kaufman |
Sports Person of the Year: Serena Williams Lance Armstrong is racking up awards like this, which is preposterous. Salon sets the record straight. |
Sports Illustrated July 19, 2001 Alexander Wolff |
Riding in circles Lance Armstrong still has questions to answer about doping... |
Outside July 2005 Daniel Coyle |
Street Fighting Man "Lance Armstrong's War" is a true-life sports thriller about how the Armstrong machine smashed the opposition. In this excerpt, the author chronicles the brutal turning point of Lance's greatest triumph. |
AskMen.com January 17, 2013 Michael McKenna |
Lance Armstrong On Oprah It's over. Even to those who really needed this particular kind of hero. Lance Armstrong has admitted to Oprah Winfrey that he did, indeed, use performance-enhancing drugs throughout his career in professional cycling. |
Fast Company April 2012 Rachel Z. Arndt |
Lance Armstrong's Livestrong Lives On In Spite of Doping Allegations Federal prosecutors announced in early February they had closed the investigation into Armstrong's possible drug use. This news relieves the organization of the burden of what Livestrong chief of staff Morgan Binswanger called a "time-sucking" investigation. |
Fast Company February 2011 |
Re: November 2010 Letters to the Editor: Lance Armstrong... Solving Starbucks... Two Little Words... |
Sports Illustrated July 12, 2002 Tim Layden |
Armstrong is gunning for history Armstrong and his United States Postal Service teammates subtly defend a yellow jersey that Armstrong isn't even wearing yet at the Tour de France. |
Sports Illustrated July 25, 2001 Rick Reilly |
Mountain Lion That's the thing about being Lance Armstrong -- once left for dead and now more alive than any other man in sports, once broken and now more than whole -- every day is an envelope you can't wait to tear open... |
AskMen.com January 23, 2013 Ian Lang |
Acceptable Cheating Bill Belichick is still a well-respected and talented coach, while Lance Armstrong's status is now somewhere between 'child molester' and 'drunk child molester.' |
Outside July 2006 Bill Gifford |
Generation Lance Two decades after Greg LeMond became the first American to win the Tour de France, the world's biggest bike race is our party now. The only question: How long will we stay? |
Sports Central February 19, 2012 Diane M. Grassi |
Looks Like Lance, Inc. Too Big to Fail For nearly a two-year period, the U.S. Department of Justice invested untold millions of dollars, at taxpayer expense, for various investigations pertinent to Lance Armstrong. |
Sports Central April 17, 2009 Jeffrey Boswell |
Sports Q&A: Lance Armstrong: Wee, Monsieur Seven-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong believes French doping officials may ban him from the 2009 Tour because of disagreements over a recent drug test. |
Outside March 2007 John Bradley |
Back Pedaling After a two-year ban from pro cycling for doping violations, Tyler Hamilton wants to prove he's the same clean-cut guy once picked to succeed Lance. At 36, does he still have what it takes to win? And if he does, will anyone cheer? |
Outside July 2004 Hampton Sides |
Six-Shooter Lance's 2003 Tour victory was almost a loss-in his own words, he "dodged a bullet." This year the Tourminator is plenty fit, a little less furious, and hungrier than ever. A revealing interview with the greatest rider on earth. |
Outside July 2010 Joe Lindsey |
Whistle. Blown. We all know Floyd Landis is a liar. But is he telling the truth this time with his allegations of drug abuse? |
Sports Illustrated December 14, 2000 E.M. Swift |
Backpedaling Lance Armstrong threatened not to defend his title if all the allegations of illegal drug use didn't go away. Armstrong's threat only adds to suspicion... |
Outside July 2004 |
Tour de France Living Legends Eddy Merckx (Belgium)... Bernard Hinault (France)... Miguel Indurain (Spain)... |
Outside December 2005 Joe Lindsey |
J'Accuse Over the coming months Lance Armstrong will confront his accusers in courtrooms and legal proceedings in the U.S., England, and France. |
InternetNews July 6, 2005 Colin C. Haley |
Tech Rolls With Tour de France IT plays an increasingly important role in bike design, training and communications on Lance Armstrong's team. AMD is the "official technology sponsor" of the team. |
The Motley Fool July 11, 2006 Robert Sheard |
Yellow-Jersey Investing How can you put Lance Armstrong's strategies to work for your portfolio? Individual investors win their own race with Wall Street the same way cyclists win the Tour de France -- homework, teamwork, and consistency. |
Outside April 2002 Ben Hewitt |
Dear Lance: Help! To make his mark in Europe's toughest cycle races, George Hincapie needs more than guts. He needs an old friend... |
Fast Company October 2010 |
Built Strong: Measuring Livestrong's Revenue, Spending, Followers, and Reach Livestrong is best known for its yellow wristbands -- 70 million have been sold since 2004 -- but there are other measures of Livestrong's power. |
BusinessWeek October 17, 2005 |
The Laughter Cure Monique Spencer couldn't find what she wanted in books about breast cancer. So she wrote her own - and made it funny. |
Fast Company May 1, 2011 Salter & Schomer |
Updates -- Getting Stronger What's new with the major league soccer team Sporting Kansas City and with McDonald's commitment to upgrading food quality. |
Outside July 2006 Daniel Coyle |
The New American in Paris From his offbeat stunts to his anything-goes demeanor, Floyd Landis is the anti-Lance in every way but one: He'll stop at nothing in his quest to finish the Tour de France wearing the yellow jersey. |
Outside June 2006 Bill Gifford |
High Rollers Meet the Champions Club, an elite group of bike-crazy execs who are richer than Croesus, can hammer with Lance, and are donating millions to ensure a gold-plated future for U.S. cycling |
The Motley Fool January 31, 2005 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Satellite Radio's Arm Strong Lance Armstrong's Live Strong Radio debuted last night on Sirius Satellite Radio. FM and AM bands face an uphill battle in offering the wide range of specialized content at a local level that XM and Sirius deliver nationally. |
Fast Company April 2005 Julie Bick |
"Buy Bracelets" Lance Armstrong's yellow livestrong bracelets have raised more than $30 million to fight cancer since May 2004. They've also set off a thriving aftermarket -- and a host of silicone wannabes. |
Outside July 2009 John Bradley |
Tour de France Contenders In July, one of the deepest Tour de France fields in years will see several riders not named Lance staking their claim for yellow. Here are the ones to watch. |
AskMen.com |
Contador Leads Tour, Armstrong 2nd Tour de France leader Alberto Contador and second-place Astana teammate Lance Armstrong have started on the 17th stage of the race, which features five tough climbs. |
Sports Central July 7, 2006 Jeffrey Boswell |
Sports Q&A: Real Deal, Please Sit Down Why is "retired" Evander Holyfield returning to the ring?... Will the doping scandal "cycling's greatest event"?... |
American Journal of Nursing March 2006 Pamela J. Haylock |
The Shifting Paradigm of Cancer Care: The Many Needs of Cancer Survivors Are Starting to Attract Attention The complexities of survivorship, and the growing population of survivors who share these challenges has led to an increase awareness of a need for survivorship research on the sequelae of cancer and cancer treatment. |
Sports Central April 12, 2005 Mark Chalifoux |
Burn the Sports Books! A sarcastic look at the impact of books written by sports figures. |
Outside July 2002 Chris Keyes |
Coming on Strong Tour de France 2002: He's no Lance (yet), but former U.S. Postal rider Levi Leipheimer has won the right to lead Rabobank, one of Europe's fastest squads |
Outside July 2006 Andrew Vontz |
Seven Straight. Ten of the Last 20. But, Hey, Who's Counting? Tour dominance by LeMond and Armstrong has given the Euros fits for two decades. And if this group of U.S. pros is any indication, their suffering has only just begun. |
AskMen.com Dustin Driver |
8 Cancer Myths The following myths about cancer have been debunked by doctors and scientists the world over. So do yourself and your community a favor: read the facts and spread the word. |
CIO June 15, 2004 Christopher Koch |
Cycling Power By measuring how many watts he expends on a mountain climb, road racer Lance Armstrong can develop a training program that duplicates those race efforts down to the watt. |