Only last night did I watch the Armstrong Lie. I've largely lost interest in him now, in fact it feels slightly dirty to watch him talk or to see him in the news but last night I thought I'd watch it for completion.
He's still lying and he's still keeping the Omerta. He won't admit to the conversation in the hospital room, where a major sponsor colluded with his doping. He insists he rode clean in 2009, when all the blood values from the Ventoux stage say otherwise. He knows what happened with the UCI, with Verbruggen but he's not saying, I doubt he will. He continues to play the game, to bully, to lie and deceive, to seek to win power in some way, to be relevant, if you couldn't see that from last night's programme then you still haven't got the measure of the man.
His legacy and the legacy that preceded him is still relevant. Not so much the lessons but the culture. Things have changed and moved on, the players are different now, the secrets are different, cycling is cleaner but you'd be foolish to think it's entirely clean. Concentrating on Armstong detracts from what is happening now. EPO is old news. There are almost certainly new drugs on the block, new Ferrari's, new Bruyneels. Not in the same numbers but they're there. As Boardman said. If it looks unbelievable, it probably is.
Doesn't stop me enjoying the sport. I see the same doubts in other sports too. Athletics for example. Football, Rugby, Tennis, anything. Can't imagine a footballer getting up with half his skin missing and playing on. Cyclists are still a breed apart for me.