AUSTIN, Texas — Johan Bruyneel, the manager behind Lance Armstrong’s seven consecutive Tour de France victories, is denying accusations from U.S. officials that he helped run a doping operation for the cyclist’s teams.
AUSTIN, Texas — Johan Bruyneel, the manager behind Lance Armstrong’s seven consecutive Tour de France victories, is denying accusations from U.S. officials that he helped run a doping operation for the cyclist’s teams.
“I have never participated in any doping activity, and I am innocent of all charges,” said Bruyneel, who currently manages the RadioShack-Nissan-Trek team.
In a statement posted Friday on his website and Twitter, Bruyneel also noted that federal prosecutors closed a nearly two-year criminal investigation into allegations of doping by Armstrong and his teams without filing any charges.
“It cannot be right that I or anyone else can be pursued from court to court simply because our accusers do not like the decisions made along the way and so attempt to find a court which will get them the result they want,” Bruyneel said. “I shall of course cooperate fully with the investigation, although I have no doubt the end result will be the same as all the other investigations over the years.”
The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency this week accused Armstrong, Bruyneel and several other associates of being involved in a longstanding doping conspiracy that supplied the champion cyclist’s teams. Bruyneel’s statement did not mention Armstrong or the others.
USADA is accusing Bruyneel of giving riders or encouraging them to use banned performance-enhancing substances, including the blood-booster EPO, blood transfusions, steroids, human growth hormone and masking agents from 1999-2007.
Bruyneel, a longtime mentor to Armstrong and member of his inner circle, could face a lifetime ban from the sport if found guilty.
Armstrong, Bruyneel and the others face a June 22 deadline to file a written response to the USADA charges, the first step in what could be a months-long process, leading to a hearing before an arbitration panel to hear the evidence.
According to USADA’s June 12 letter announcing the charges, “numerous riders” from Bruyneel’s teams will testify he either gave them performance-enhancing drugs or encouraged them to use them.
USADA has kept the identity of those riders secret, though former teammates — and admitted drug users — Floyd Landis and Tyler Hamilton have gone public with their accusations. Armstrong’s attorneys have demanded USADA turn over all evidence, including witness names.