AUSTIN, Texas: With the latest doping charges against him roiling world cycling, Lance Armstrong was set to address a gathering celebrating the 15th anniversary of cancer charity Livestrong.
Armstrong founded Livestrong after his own battle with testicular cancer, but this week stepped down as its chairman after the US Anti-Doping Agency released a devastating report that placed the Texan at the heart of what it said was the biggest doping programme in sports history.
Corporate sponsors including sportswear giant Nike have cut ties with Armstrong, but have said they will continue to support Livestrong.
Even so, it remains to be seen if the foundation will weather the scandal, with some saying Armstrong — who remains on the board — should break with the organization completely.
Access was tightly controlled for the event, where Armstrong was on Friday expected to address almost 1,700 Livestrong backers and cancer survivors.
Celebrities such as Hollywood stars Sean Penn, Ben Stiller and Robin Williams were scheduled to attend, and it was not known if Armstrong — who has long denied doping accusations — would discuss USADA’s bombshell report.
In support of the life ban it meted out to Armstrong in August, USADA published a damning dossier in which more than two dozen witnesses described his role in a doping scheme that helped him win seven Tour de France titles.
The International Cycling Union (UCI) said on Friday that it would respond to USADA’s report on Monday in Geneva.
The body has to decide whether to endorse or reject USADA’s ban and the removal of his Tour titles.
One longtime cycling sponsor decided not to wait for the UCI.
Rabobank, which has sponsored a professional cycling team for the last 17 years, claimed the sport had been irrevocably damaged by a succession of doping cases, and the report on Armstrong was the last straw.
“We are no longer convinced that the international professional world of cycling can make this a clean and fair sport,” Rabobank board member Bert Bruggink said in a statement. “We are not confident that this will change for the better in the foreseeable future,” he said.
“What the USADA showed us is that international cycle racing is not only sick but also at the highest level within cycling, including a number of the relevant authorities, including checks on the use of doping,” he added.
Rabobank has been the standard-bearer for Dutch cycling and enjoyed success but it has also been mired in doping scandals, including one involving Danish rider Michael Rasmussen when he was wearing the leader’s yellow jersey on the 2007 Tour de France.
On Thursday, the team said it had suspended Spanish cyclist Carlos Barredo after it was announced that he was facing disciplinary action from the UCI for allegedly breaking blood-doping rules.
The withdrawal was a warning that the sport could see further financial backing fall away.
Other repercussions were also being felt as Cycling Australia (CA) parted ways with vice-president Stephen Hodge and former Olympic Matt White after they admitted they doped during their pro riding careers.
US rider Levi Leipheimer, who gave evidence against his former team-mate Armstrong, was ditched by his current team, Omega Pharma-Quick Step.
Meanwhile, a report in Italy’s Gazzetta dello Sport newspaper on Thursday claimed that a host of top riders and even whole teams were linked to the sports doctor who oversaw Armstrong’s doping programme, stoking fears of fresh controversy.
The report, based on a probe by Italian investigators, implicated former Giro d’Italia winner Michele Scarponi, although he denied any wrong-doing.
Some, however, urged a measured response to the Armstrong affair.
British cyclist David Millar, who served a ban for drug offences but is now an outspoken opponent of doping, blasted Rabobank for leaving its cyclists without a sponsor.
“Dear Rabobank, you were part of the problem. How dare you walk away from your young clean guys who are part of the solution. Sickening,” he wrote on his Twitter account @millarmind.
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