Even now Lance Armstrong is still working miracles

Comment: "In the courts, as it was in his professional career, Armstrong has found himself protected, inadvertently perhaps, by the fact that his success served to benefit many people"

Lance Armstrong at a screening of the documentary 'Icarus' in January 2018 (Photo by Mark Sagliocco/Getty Images)

(Image credit: Getty Images)

“I’m sorry you don’t believe in miracles,” was the ever-combative Lance Armstrong’s riposte to his critics from the top step of the Tour de France podium in 2005. And since the US Anti-Doping Authority’s reasoned decision finding him guilty of one of sport’s biggest doping conspiracies in 2012 and Armstrong’s subsequent confession to Oprah Winfrey in January 2013, it has been easy to poke fun at that statement as the “miracles” of his seven Tour wins have been exposed as mere smoke, mirrors and blood bags.

But in the light of yesterday’s settlement of the final legal case against him for $5m it bears re-examining.

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Having trained as a journalist at Cardiff University I spent eight years working as a business journalist covering everything from social care, to construction to the legal profession and riding my bike at the weekends and evenings. When a friend told me Cycling Weekly was looking for a news editor, I didn't give myself much chance of landing the role, but I did and joined the publication in 2016. Since then I've covered Tours de France, World Championships, hour records, spring classics and races in the Middle East. On top of that, since becoming features editor in 2017 I've also been lucky enough to get myself sent to ride my bike for magazine pieces in Portugal and across the UK. They've all been fun but I have an enduring passion for covering the national track championships. It might not be the most glamorous but it's got a real community feeling to it.