Bode denies suggesting Bonds, Lance cheat
Skier says comments liberally interpreted, also defends controversial doctor
![]() Shaun Botterill / Getty Images file Bode Miller said he would apologize to Lance Armstrong if he saw him. |
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CHAMONIX, France - Bode Miller’s first day back on the slopes ended with a third-place finish in a World Cup race Thursday, and then skiing’s bad boy denied ever suggesting that Lance Armstrong took performance-enhancing drugs.
Miller, who took a week off the World Cup circuit and played golf in Dubai, has been criticized for comments he made last month in Rolling Stone magazine about Armstrong, the seven-time Tour de France winner, and baseball slugger Barry Bonds.
“In no way was I trying to incriminate him (Armstrong) or accuse him in any way of cheating,” Miller said after finishing third behind Austrians Benjamin Raich and Rainer Schoenfelder in a super-combi. “The interview was pretty warped and pretty compressed to make it sound that way.”
Rolling Stone spokeswomen Nora Haynes said Friday that the magazine stands by its reporting.
Miller said he hasn’t spoken to Armstrong since, but would apologize if he saw him.
Miller also dismissed an ESPN report as 'flagrant exaggerations' about a doctor he has consulted with named Milne Ongley who, according to ESPN, injects patients with something called the "Ongley Solution," a mixture of distilled water, 25 percent dextrose, 25 percent glycerin, and 2.5 percent phenol.
If people wanted to do research about the doctor, they would come to their own decision," Miller told ESPN. "That is what I did, and that is what a lot of athletes have done."
On the slopes, the 28-year-old ski whiz was clearly back in form with his third podium finish in the combined this season.
“I think my head is consistently pretty much in the same place, but it was nice to take a break and play golf,” Miller said.
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Miller was third last month in a super-combi in Val d’Isere, France and third two weeks ago in a traditional combined in Kitzbuehel, Austria.
“It’s a traditional super-combined for me, but I had some mistakes in downhill,” Miller said. “It’s a little hard to come straight out of one training run. I think I pushed a little too hard in some parts.”
Hermann Maier, who initially hoped to get a strong result ahead of the Olympic combined event, was third-quickest in the downhill but later withdrew from the race in protest over the format. He argued that the downhill had been shortened too much and the slalom leg was too long, favoring the technical skiers.
Miller, meanwhile, is gearing up for the Olympics.
“Maybe I can’t win a race on any given day I choose to, but I can ski as fast or faster than the others,” he said. “That doesn’t necessarily translate into a win. But I’ve showed the last eight years I have the speed to compete for the win and to be a lot faster than the other guys.”
Rolling Stone’s interview quoted Miller as saying: “Right now, if you want to cheat, you can: Barry Bonds and those guys are just knowingly cheating, but there’s all sorts of loopholes. If you say it has to be knowingly, you do what Lance (Armstrong) and all those guys do, where every morning their doctor gives them a box of pills and they don’t ask anything, they just take the pills. Yeah, they’re not knowingly taking any substance, they don’t ... ask what it is, but they are sure as (expletive) are taking it.”
Miller said Friday the statements came at different times.
“The two statements were probably five minutes apart, as far as any word of cheating or doping or anything like that,” Miller said. “And then the statement about him was simply about the stuff that he’s dealt with, and then the fact that the sport is involved with a lot of issues like that, and he’s in the spotlight and has to deal with it by really not (dealing with it).”
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