Travis Tygart - the man who brought down Armstrong - Hindustan Times
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Travis Tygart - the man who brought down Armstrong

AFP | By, Washington
Oct 22, 2012 06:02 PM IST

Travis T Tygart has never won Olympic gold or the Tour de France, but in 10 years with the US Anti-Doping Agency (USADA), he has done his best to ensure no dope cheats win them either.

Travis T Tygart has never won Olympic gold or the Tour de France, but in 10 years with the US Anti-Doping Agency (USADA), he has done his best to ensure no dope cheats win them either.

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Not even Lance Armstrong.

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Despite three death threats and Armstrong's accusations of a witch hunt, Tygart guided a staff that compiled 1,000 pages of evidence and testimony from 26 witnesses, 11 of them former teammates, to bring down the cycling icon.

"We focused solely on finding the truth without being influenced by celebrity or non-celebrity, threats, personal attacks or political pressure because that is what clean athletes deserve and demand," Tygart said.

Tygart directed USADA legal affairs and served as general counsel before taking over as USADA's chief executive officer five years ago, having helped reveal dope cheats from the BALCO steroid scandal as well as Armstrong.

The 41-year-old father-of-three, who has a philosophy degree from the University of North Carolina and Southern Methodist University law degree, played on Florida state high school champions in basketball and baseball, where he was a teammate of Major League Baseball standout Chipper Jones of Atlanta.

"The lessons of sport and what I learned growing up in Jacksonville, those are the things that get you through tough times like this," Tygart told his hometown newspaper, the Florida Times-Union.

"What I learned from BALCO is athletes and their enablers will go to great lengths to ensure they're not ultimately held accountable."

Tygart spent years on the front lines of USADA's arbitration appeal system, a method that withstood a US federal court challenge from Armstrong as well as threats from some US lawmakers with an eye toward USADA taxpayer funding.

"Clean athletes appreciate us not bowing to political pressure or the personal attacks. If we're going to cave to attacks by those attempting to cover up their sporting fraud, we might as well shut down," Tygart told the newspaper.

"That would mean we're afraid and don't have the courage to support clean athletes. You have to endure those attacks. We just do our job based on the evidence we have."

Armstrong decided in August not to challenge USADA's charges against him, denying any wrongdoing, so USADA imposed a life ban and stripped him of his seven consecutive Tour de France titles from 1999-2005.

USADA went public with its evidence earlier this month as it submitted a report to the International Cycling Union (UCI). Since then sponsors have fled Armstrong, who stepped down as chairman of the Livestrong anti-cancer charity.

"He cannot right the wrongs he committed," said a column in Armstrong's hometown newspaper, the American-Statesman of Austin, Texas.

"Nor can he undo or take back the hateful, venomous things he said about anyone who had the gall to speak out against him. But he can just do it now, atone for his arrogance and say he's sorry."

Armstrong is far from the first US sports star to be undone by USADA.

Floyd Landis, the 2006 Tour de France winner, and Olympic champions Marion Jones and Justin Gatlin were among those stripped of their titles as a result of USADA investigations under Tygart's direction.

Jones admitted wrongdoing despite never testing positive, a situation that hit at the heart of the viability of doping tests as the only manner to catch cheaters even as Armstrong noted his own lack of a positive doping test.

Tygart recalled to the Times-Union how Landis told him after being greeted by a supporter that he could not live with the lie of being a fraud, eventually confessing his doping but only after years of denial.

"That's what you hear from athletes," Tygart said. "A lot of them never wanted to cheat, but they're put in a culture where they feel it's the only way they can win.

"All that matters here is the truth prevailed. For clean athletes that's the right outcome. It's sad it came to this, but it's good that it was revealed."

Tygart added that he would advise Armstrong to apologize to those he hurt, saying, "That could be a much better legacy for the sport than anything any of these riders ever did on a bike."

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