It was a Wednesday in October 2012, and Ulman, CEO and president of the Livestrong Foundation, had just received the inevitable news he had been dreading for months: The United States Anti-Doping Agency's long - awaited and damning report, which concluded once and for all that Lance Armstrong, the cancer charity's founder and chairman, was guilty of doping during his legendary cycling career. (inc.com)
This week, in an interview with Oprah Winfrey, Armstrong gave the greatest «See, what had happened was...» in recent history by admitting what he had spent nearly a decade denying: He used performance - enhancing drugs during his illustrious cycling career. (relevantmagazine.com)
While a standard treatment wouldhave been radiation, Nichols and his colleague Scott Shapiro agreed that byexcising the lesions instead, they would run a much smaller risk of damaginghis cycling career. (si.com)