Landis's mother: Floyd is clean
2006-07-28 08:00
Pennsylvania - Arlene Landis stoutly defended her Tour de France-winning son against doping accusations on Thursday after he assured the family that he was "clean."
After speaking with her son via telephone, Arlene Landis said she is convinced that he did nothing wrong, and blasted cycling's governing body for "spoiling everything."
"My opinion is when he comes on top of this, everyone will think so much more of him. So that's what valleys are for, right?" she said, smiling through gritted teeth outside her home in Farmersville, a rural crossroads just outside the borough of Ephrata, about 85km northwest of Philadelphia.
Family spokesperson Tammy Martin told reporters later on Thursday that Landis had "assured them that he is clean and that further testing will confirm this."
In a teleconference on Thursday evening, Landis insisted he didn't cheat to win the Tour and doesn't know why he tested positive.
"All I'm asking for is that I be given a chance to prove that I'm innocent," he said. "Cycling has a traditional way of trying people in the court of public opinion before they get a chance to do anything else.
"I would like to be presumed innocent until proven guilty - since that's the way we do things in America."
Landis' Phonak team said it was notified by the International Cycling Union on Wednesday that Landis's sample showed "an unusual level of testosterone/epitestosterone" when he was tested after stage 17 of the race last Thursday.
Landis is suspended, pending results of the backup 'B' sample of his drug test.
Arlene Landis said it would take two weeks for those results to be made public.
"Of course he wasn't happy about it, but they're spoiling everything he's supposed to be doing right now," she said. "Why couldn't they take care of this before they pronounced him the winner?"
Just four days earlier, Arlene and Paul Landis had celebrated their son's victory in cycling's greatest race, greeting well-wishers who flocked to the tidy white farmhouse in eastern American state of Pennsylvania.
The Landis's, devout Mennonites - a Christian sect that emigrated from the Netherlands, frowned on Floyd's obsession with cycling when he was a teenager and were saddened when he chose to leave the Mennonite fold. But they had said on Sunday they felt joy at his victory and hoped he would use it to glorify God.
His sister, Charity Landis, said on Thursday she does not think he cheated. "I believe that he's a man of integrity," she said. Behind her, signs proclaiming "To God be the glory" and "Floyd's the man" were still planted in the Landis yard.
- SAPA