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Armstrong apologizes over Giro protest

Cycling star avoids war of words with angry race organizers

Image: ArmstrongAP
Lance Armstrong talks with race officials during the ninth stage of the Giro d'Italia on Sunday.

CUNEO, Italy - Lance Armstrong was apologetic and avoided launching into a verbal war with race organizers following the protest that marred the ninth stage of the Giro d’Italia.

“It’s an unfortunate situation, an accumulation of days and days of frustration and I think fear on a lot of people’s parts and then this war of words and this war of power afterwards that we have to avoid,” Armstrong said in a video message posted late Monday, the Giro’s first rest day.

Armstrong played an integral role in a group protest that ended up annulling times in Sunday’s stage because riders considered the city circuit through downtown Milan overly dangerous.

Armstrong was seen discussing the perils of the circuit with the race organization’s car as he pedaled through Milan, and he stood next to overall leader Danilo Di Luca when the Italian addressed the fans in the middle of the stage with a microphone to explain the protest, interrupting the race briefly.

For most of the stage, the pack pedaled far below its normal pace, denying fans a chance to see quality racing.

“I think the real point here, and I think the point that we as riders would like to get across is that we’re sorry about that. It wasn’t an ideal outcome, nobody was happy with that,” Armstrong said.

“We didn’t feel the conditions were safe,” the Texan added, listing a number of problems with the course — from parked cars to tram tracks, traffic islands and even oncoming traffic.

Race director Angelo Zomegnan was livid over the protest, especially since the stage was designed to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Giro’s founding in Milan.

“This circuit required explosive bursts. It required riders to get their butts up of the seats of their bikes, and some riders who are not so young anymore apparently don’t feel like doing that,” Zomegnan said. “Instead, it seems like their legs have become shorter and their tongues longer.”

Asked by The Associated Press if he was referring to the 37-year-old Armstrong, Zomegnan replied, “I never name people who have disappointed me, just like I don’t name girlfriends that have snubbed me.”

Armstrong said the protest was over “an accumulation of dangerous finishes.”

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“But I think also that Pedro Horillo’s crash was something that was fresh in everyone’s mind,” he said. “We nearly lost him that day — the facts are the facts and it took them 20 minutes to find him when he fell off that cliff.”

Spanish rider Pedro Horillo Munoz ended up in a 24-hour coma and had severe injuries after falling 60 yards off the side of the road on a downhill stretch Saturday.

“Thank god he’s fine and he’s going to live to ride another day,” Armstrong said. “Other stages had unlit tunnels, dangerous downhills. Can you imagine going into a tunnel at 50 mph with no lights? That’s crazy.”

The seven-time Tour de France winner called for a strong rider organization to prevent similar situations in the future.

“We absolutely have to have a fully independent riders organization that represents our interests,” Armstrong said. “So if there are going to be circuits or there are going to be finishes that we as riders get to have the right to say that this is safe or this is not safe or this we’ll do or this we won’t do.

“Without that organization that represents our voices as a unified front, not as a splintered front, we will have this problem forever.”

© 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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