Book Reviews: Racing Through the Dark, The Secret Race

The truth shall set them free.

I must admit to not having read most of the cycling memoirs in the Works. I may eventually but the local public library doesn’t carry any of them and never will so I’ll have to buy them or ask Frank to tote everything he has to Hawaii. I did get off my wallet and buy these two and it was money well spent. David Millar and Tyler Hamilton have produced two excellent cycling books, parallel stories in very general terms and times. The contrast of how two people in similar straits handle the truth and the divergent roads it puts them on is compelling.

Doping in professional cycling is still secretive enough that it is best told from someone all the way on the inside. Journalists will be lied to by cyclists. Federal grand juries do better at getting the truth but we usually don’t hear it. Cyclists who lived the lie and need to unburden themselves make a good conduit. I can’t begin to explain it as well as Tyler or David did; their inner world of professional cycling is nothing we hear much about. In the 1990s it was the wild west where the law was absent. Spanish “doctors”, syringes and mini-centrifuges ruled the day. It’s such a huge subject, too interwoven with passion and pressure, so much grey area. For a person like me who likes to talk about doping in black and white, I’ve learned how institutionalized and insidious it was (past tense, I hope). It’s not so simple. It’s tragic. To feed the young ambitious athlete into a system where there is no choice but to accept the drug system is criminal. When money is at stake and the UCI is complicit, as is team management, those are some criminals.

Racing Through the Dark-by David Millar. I’ll also admit to being a long time admirer of David Millar. He has always been well- spoken and not afraid to confront, two qualities I admire and personally lack, but they make a good writer. Millar is a military brat who found his cycling talent in the 10 mile British time trial club races. He ended up living his dream, riding on the Cofidis team, France’s well- funded but dysfunctional squad. He spent his first few years with Cofidis riding clean, yet watching how others “prepared”.

“In my youthful exuberance, I was telling anybody who would listen that I’d won in De Panne and broken the course record with a hematocrit of only 40 percent. I went to see Casagrande and his roommate, whom I refer to as L’Équipier (the teammate), so that I could show Casagrande the test results.

I stood there, a big grin on my face, expecting Casagrande to congratulate me and say something morale boosting. But he didn’t. After a pause, he handed the results back to me and then turned to speak to his roommate in Italian.

“Perché non é a cinquate?” Casagrande asked L’Équipier, puzzled, Why isn’t he at fifty?

No one talked about doping and no one talked about not doping. Eventually, after VDB self-destructed and Casagrande was busted, Millar became a team leader. And with that mantle came the responsibility to produce results, be a professional. And eventually he was implicated by a teammate, evidence was found, he was out of cycling, deeply in debt, and drinking his way to the bottom.

For some interesting video here is a recent Spanish documentary from the inner ring.

The Secret Race-by Tyler Hamilton and Daniel Coyle. Tyler Hamilton and I grew up in the same end of Massachusetts, he went to the same prep school @rob and I dropped out of, so I always felt slightly connected to him. So I was a fan boy and stood by his fantastic excuses for too long.

The whole wretched story of doping in cycling is right here. Tyler Hamilton cheated and lied for so long, it took until 2011 before he could tell his parents the truth. And despite his decade of lying, this book rings true. His reward was getting out from under the lie. I think he would have written the book for free just for the unburdening. He states many times the lightness of being after testimony and though he knows it’s very unlikely, hopes Lance can feel the same lightness that comes from telling the truth. This book is Tyler Hamilton’s story but it is closely linked to part of the Armstrong saga.

Like Millar, Hamilton was unaware of systemic drug use until he had joined the professional ranks. US Postal drugs were at first team- provided and paid for. Once you proved yourself as one of the best riders on the team, as someone who could help Lance win the Tour, you earned the right to use EPO. It is fascinating reading, it’s horrifying, it’s depressing. Most unsettling is Lance Armstrong’s behavior. There are many revelations regarding Armstrong’s psychotic need to win. I’ll share just this one.

Tyler was eased out of US Postal because he was too strong a rider and perceived as a threat to Armstrong. So Tyler left and signed with Phonak in 2004. There was a time trial up Mont Ventoux in the 2004 Dauphiné Libéré weeks before the Tour de France. Tyler beat Lance in the TT. Later during the Tour, Floyd Landis, who was still riding for US Postal rode along side Tyler.

“You need to know something”

I pulled in closer. Floyd’s Mennonite conscience was bothering him.

“Lance called the UCI on you,” he said. “He called Hien, after Ventoux. Said you guys and Mayo were on some new shit, told Hien to get on you. He knew they’d call call you in. He’s been talking shit nonstop. And I think it’s right that you know.”

This little story is amazing for many different reasons and the only good one is Floyd Landis telling it to Tyler. I’m guilty of saying some negative things about Floyd, mostly because he was such an idiot liar. But at a point, when he has nothing to gain and he has lost everything else and he starts telling the truth, he gains back my respect, just like Tyler Hamilton has.

I ended up reading these books one right after the other. As I said before, I recommend them both. David Millar is a better writer. He actually has more demons to battle than Hamilton so his story of redemption is inspiring. Tyler Hamilton’s story is more depraved (in a doping sense) but both books are important. A lot of people in cycling are now admitting to past deeds in very unspecific terms. These two authors are both shining lights into some dark corners and making the inevitability of drug use in cycling more human and understandable. Also, in reading these books back to back, it highlights the contrast in how these two people dealt with their fates.

Both had the bad luck to be nearly singled out as dopers when a large percent of the riders were dopers. Millar realized it was the doping that killed his passion for even riding a bike. He took no joy in his EPO-assisted victories, only a temporary satisfaction that the task at hand was completed. He decided to come clean and to become an advocate for clean racing and changing the corrupt system.

Hamilton could not admit to anyone but his wife (who already knew) that he had been a cheat. His lie was so crushing he couldn’t even see a way out. He then spent all his money and energy protecting the lie for years, for nothing, obviously. It was the threat of perjury in that finally broke open the dam. It’s a cruel lesson to learn; the truth will set you free, even if it takes forever.

 

 

 

Gianni

Gianni has left the building.

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  • @Leroy I am not asserting that Lance is the baddest man ever to walk the face of the planet.  Or even that there was no-one else involved in applying pressure rather than succumbing to it.  Much less that he introduced drugs to the peloton.  I am simply saying that there is a world of differene between those who were pressured to dope and those who applied the pressure.  Whether or not Lance was at one point the impressionable youngster who felt pressured into doping is not relevant (though I don't get the impression that he was).  The point, rather, is that he ended up applying the pressure.

    Moreover, your casual implication that everyone doped themselves to the gills because they wanted to and felt they had to in order to keep up is not easy to square with the testimony of the confessors - for example, VDV and DZ.  Armstrong's pressure seems heavily implicated in at least the extent of doping, and probably the fact of it in at least some cases. 

    I don't feel at all, personally, that I am looking for excuses to dislike the guy.  (I never liked him.  At one time I admired him.  But that is now a thing of the past.) I am simply reacting to what seems patently obvious to me - that there is a world of difference - in terms of culpability and degree of deserved condemnation - between, say, a David Millar and a Lance Armstrong.  (Besides which, as others have pointed out, there is the character assassination, enforcement of the omerta, etc - none of which, so far as I can see, are behaviours evident in many, let alone all, other memebrs of the peloton.) 

    If your moral compass swings a different way, so be it.  While I am passing moral judgment on Armstrong, I am not seeking to do so on you.  And I apologise if my "barking mad" comment was too much playing the man rather than the ball. At the end of the day, we come here to talk shit and have interesting conversations, not trade insults (unless you're Marcus and Minion, before they fell in love with each other).  So I shall loosen my grip on the handbag strap ...

  • @Oli

    @Nate

    @Oli

    @Leroy Have you read the Reasoned Decision? If not, I think you should.

    Also, the rider declarations.

    While I've admittedly not read it front to back, I've read a considerable portion of it as well as many of the rider statements... Particularly statements like those from Dirty George ("it became clear to me that, given the widespread use of performance enhancing drugs by cyclists at the top of the profession, it was not possible to compete at the highest level without them") or Leipheimer (" A sport where the athletes at the highest level, perhaps without exception, used banned substances. A sport where doping was so accepted that riders from different teams, who were competitors on the road, coordinated their doping to keep up with other riders doing the same thing") or Vande Velde (Then, one day, I was presented with a choice that to me, at the time, seemed like the only way to continue to follow my dream at the highest level of the sport.")

    Reading those statements, to me at least, it seems pretty clear that it was a problem in the professional ranks of cycling that was anything but limited to USPS. None of those riders are suggesting they had to dope to ride for USPS, they had to dope to ride at all.

  • @Nate

    There is the pusher aspect of it. There is also the bullying, character assassination and witness intimidation. Absolutely despicable.

    You could just as easily apply that statemet to any number of powerful men throughout the ages... from Obama to Gates on back to Carnegie, Vanderbuilt, and Rockefeller. That's what powerful men do... honestly, for them the money is secondary, they compete (be it in business or otherwise) to destroy the opposition and the money often comes secondarily to that.

    Maybe I'm just jaded about human nature enough that I wouldn't expect any less... but I'm honestly more surprised by the number of riders who were willing to turn on Lance after all these years than I am by the extent of the efforts to surpress the truth.

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