LANCE Armstrong is a creep. A liar, cheat and a bully. So awful is Armstrong, you are right to question whether all his work for cancer patients is not just calculated camouflage to protect his abuse of drugs, his competitors, teammates and supporters.
He is not just part of the drug regime that saturated cycling when he was at his peak, but he has been that culture's bodyguard. Its enforcer. And he remains so today, arrogantly dismissing the US Anti-Doping Agency findings by telling the world through Twitter that he was "unaffected" by the release of the 1000-page investigation findings. No one in sport has lived a bigger lie. Tiger Woods led two lives, one in public and one in bedrooms other than his own. But he did not cheat his sport as an athlete. Woods is flawed. Armstrong, who used his bedroom as a blood bank, is a crook.
And he had accomplices. They are not just within his team and entourage. Not just his doctors on the tour, not just his "people", not just his teammates, not just his message boys and fetch-it people.
They include cycling administrations, international and local. They include a besotted media and they include a sycophantic public. Excused are those who fight and fought cancer armed with the inspiration of the Armstrong myth.
A read of USADA's Reasoned Decision published on Thursday tells you that Armstrong was not exposed earlier because the sport of cycling did not want to catch him. Nor did the media have the courage to expose him, nor the public the will to disbelieve him.
The USADA documents detail a sport not just aware of, but complicit to, the use of performance-enhancing drugs. It is inconceivable that officials were not conscious that cyclists believed that they could only become competitive on the tour if they used EPO, blood doping, testosterone, cortisone and other drugs and techniques. It appears fundamental to drug use flourishing that cycling officials chose not to stop it. Armstrong, after all, was the face of a sport with an international profile.
The media did not just praise Armstrong, but fawned over him. An example: when Armstrong announced in August he would not fight the charges tabled by USADA, News Limited journalist Anthony Sharwood wrote this: "There'll be some hard-bitten French sports journalists popping champagne corks tonight, while a few in the Australian press will uncork chardonnay. Let them gloat. Lance Armstrong is still a winner to me and to so many of us."
Why? He's a fraud. And frauds aren't and can't be heroes. Sharwood addressed the Armstrong cheating again this week after USADA published the results of its investigation. "The cult of Lance is over now. He's no longer locking anyone with those eyes. His credibility is dead in the water. Mind you, it doesn't say much about the health of the sport of cycling that he was allowed to win seven Tours de France in the first place," Sharwood wrote.
Nor does it say much about the media that sections so fiercely supported Armstrong when all around him tested positive or were found to be involved in drug cheating. It is true Armstrong made it as difficult as he could for anyone who might question the validity of his performances.
He was wealthy, had influence and was litigious. USADA alleges he was able to make a positive EPO test "go away".
A positive test to a steroid was excused after Armstrong's team doctor backdated a script for a cortisone-based ointment for treatment of saddle sores. Nonetheless, too much of the media found it easier to swoon than to suspect. It was not just the media. Former South Australian premier Mike Rann defended Armstrong as an "honourable" man after the star of the state's Tour Down Under was accused on US TV by former teammate Tyler Hamilton of regular use of EPO.
There was too much to lose if Armstrong was found to be a fraud, so best pretend the growing evidence was the result of a "witch-hunt", which is exactly what Armstrong's people did and aggressively so. How does honourable stack up now?
This year's Tour de France winner Bradley Wiggins said: "It's pretty damning stuff. It is jaw-dropping the amount of people who have testified against him It's not a one-sided hatchet job. I'm shocked at the scale of the evidence." But not of the scale of drug use?
So vast was drug abuse in cycling that the Lance Armstrong years have to be expunged from the record books altogether. No asterisks, just nothing. Most of the placegetters have proved to be drug cheats. From the 1998 Tour won by drug cheat Marco Pantani to the 2010 edition won by another drug fraud, Alberto Contador, only once, in 2008, has the winner, Carlos Sastre, not been associated with drug deceit.
In every Tour won by Armstrong, at least two of the top three placegetters have been found guilty of drug infractions. In 2003, seven of the top 10 have been exposed. Cyclists filled up with drugs in races as regularly as Formula One drivers stop for petrol.
Cycling will go on, the Tour will continue to draw headlines and publicity, but if you take it seriously, emotionally invest in the race, you do it at your peril.
Armstrong always chanted that he had been tested more than 500 times and never returned a positive. That only proves he never tested positive, not that he did not use drugs. More importantly, the creep must have defended himself more than 500 times and never told the truth. You can be positive about that.