Tag Archives: Lance Armstrong

The celebrity face of charity

Photo credits to Ezo

Lance Armstrong’s resignation from the board of the cancer charity Livestrong this week should be treated as a tragedy. Recent revelations have seen him portrayed as the biggest fraud in sport since Diego Maradona but this latest development will put sorrow on the faces of charity organisations worldwide. His stepping down to prevent the charity from suffering due to his negative perception represents the inexplicable and now irreversible blurring of celebrity image and the profile of charities. No one can deny Armstrong’s despicable behaviour in keeping the world in an elaborate ruse while he picked up seven Tour de France titles with the help of performance enhancing drugs but this proves a trivial matter in comparison to his struggle with cancer along with all the other people Livestrong has helped.

Some may argue that the bad press Livestrong has endured from elements of the fickle public is the fault of Armstrong, who made the charity his own creation and his own beast. To a certain extent this is correct, the branding of the charity being dominated by yellow, the colour of the Tour de France winner’s jersey, but one must look beyond that. He still suffered and recovered from testicular cancer, and that entitles him to project his efforts into helping people who have had similar experiences. What this represents is the superficiality of image overpowering a genuine cause, seen in the past with things such as LiveAid and the aftermath of Princess Diana’s death. So what is the solution? End celebrity affiliation with charities? This would seem the obvious solution but ignores complex cases such as with Armstrong, which has proved to be indeed a tragedy.

However at present we see a similar yet entirely different case with the horrific and largely accepted allegations placed against Jimmy Savile. Two organisations of which he was patron, The Jimmy Savile Charitable Trust and The Jimmy Savile Stoke Mandeville Hospital Trust have been forced to close, again the result of one individual overshadowing the work of the charities. With the benefit of hindsight, one can see how the link between Savile’s paedophilic tendencies and charities established to care for sick children is now untenable which adds strength to the argument that celebrities should not be affiliated with charitable organisations. Unlike Armstrong, Savile doesn’t have any credibility; the reason for which he founded charities is also ultimately the reason for his very public undoing. There is no separation between the alleged monster Savile and the philanthropist Savile, meaning that the trusts, which were thinking of continuing under a different name, now cannot. And unlike Armstrong, this issue is largely swept under the carpet with the eradication of any legacy of Jimmy Savile, ignoring the genuine work the trusts have done for the children of Yorkshire. This is a separate tragedy but one that addresses the similar conflict between charitable aims and celebrity culture.

Both the cases of Savile and Armstrong highlight how someone so celebrated can fall, taking everything they have contributed to with them. The reactionary will want to accelerate this fall, eliminating any traces of these disreputable men, neglecting the genuinely good things they have done. In the case of Savile, a moral dilemma over whether a certain charity is ‘good’ comes about, making it very hard to discuss and thus put to one side, out of the limelight. With Armstrong, he has taken the noble step to remove himself from Livestrong, tragically acknowledging the ridiculousness of distorted public perception, fed fat on celebrity culture. The solution however is not to stop celebrities from founding charitable trusts, a kneejerk reaction to current issues, but to improve the scrutiny of these organisations, who exactly establishes them and why. Charities unfortunately can no longer have a free pass; they are irreversibly part of celebrity and should thus be held to account.

Frank Kibble

Armstrong scandal leaves cycling world to pick up the pieces

Photo thanks to Oddne Rasmussen

Lance Armstrong, seven time winner of the Tour de France. No longer will these words be uttered about the man who overcame testicular cancer to win the world’s toughest and most prestigious sporting event.

In the words of the US Anti-Doping Agency, Armstrong was the leader of “the most sophisticated, professionalised and successful” doping program in the history of sport. It is human nature to idealise those who perform better than mere mortals, those who cycle faster, endure longer, who feel no pain. Armstrong was a hero to inspire not just cyclists but action against cancer, with his hugely successful charity Livestrong still receiving support despite the revelations about his career.

It is clear now that Armstrong was no hero on the saddle. Even if he didn’t legally dominate his sport, he was certainly superior to all his rivals when it came to outwitting the doping testers and general public. The problem he faced was that however well he prepared himself against being caught, however much he bribed and threatened people in the know to keep quiet, there were simply too many people involved with guilty consciences for his secret not to come out. This includes Floyd Landis and Tyler Hamilton, both former members of Armstrong’s US Postal Service Team, who weren’t as elusive as their Texan leader around doping tests and would inevitably reveal the truth behind the operation.

After months of revelations and damming statistics since the news broke forth in August, the most disappointing thing is that Armstrong has still not admitted his guilt. He perpetuated the myth by protesting his innocence throughout his career, yet when the truth was revealed he fell back on these lies which once captured the hearts of a nation. In the height of his success in the early 2000s, how could a minority of journalists question his ability? He had passed over 500 drugs tests and was fully supported within the cycling world.

Faced with allegations for years, Armstrong vilified his opponents, thriving off the adversity as he had done his entire career. Knowing that this myth would eventually be destroyed, his final act was to withdraw from the USADA investigations before they could officially reveal the truth. For a day or so we believed him, he was subjected to an unfair “witch hunt” disrupting the family life of a retired middle-aged man. If this tactical move was shrewd at the time, it is now hurtful and alienating. His refusal to confess leaves the tiniest shred of doubt over his career, which can only torment his loyal believers and render a forgiveness process unattainable.

Furthermore, this proud stance has shifted the emphasis away from Armstrong and onto the current generation of cyclists. Armstrong belonged to a black era of cycling; in the seven Tours he won from 1999 to 2005, only one rider on the podium was not later convicted of doping. The International Cycling Union had no choice but to write off any winners in that period, as a reminder of the corruption that marred the sport.

The problem faced by many teams now is whether to remove all contacts with riders and staff members who had a history of doping or whether to forgive them and move on to make the sport clean. For Dave Brailsford’s Team Sky, anyone with a history of doping must leave the team to preserve its reputation, and three staff members have already left. This zero tolerance approach may ultimately weaken the team that dominated this year’s Tour, and the current generation of clean riders will be made to suffer for their predecessors’ actions.

Perhaps the best method of burying the Armstrong era is to continue the work of the last few years before the allegations re-emerged: to produce successful, clean riders. It is tragic how this scandal broke out just a month after Bradley Wiggins became the first British winner of the Tour, when cycling was bathing in optimism. The dark days of a previous generation do not represent the present, clean cycling world, and Wiggins speaks in his autobiography of the anger he feels at having his own wins questioned: “they’ve trashed the office and left, we’re the ones trying to tidy it all up”. With Armstrong in exile, the only hope for cycling is that the good of the present and future will, in time, purge the evils of the past.

Matt Bugler