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blaz2e (zv22zr@naver.com ) (¿¬¶ôó : zv42zzj7.com ) 1¿ù 1ÀÏ 21½Ã 05ºÐ Á¶È¸¼ö: 117 |
doping culture
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On the one hand, À̹ÌÅ×À̼dz²¼º½Å¹ß=À̹ÌÅ×À̼dz²¼º½Å¹ß the demise of the disgraced American cyclist and cancer survivor in late 2012 was indicative of a sport in the grip of a doping culture.
But the groundbreaking pursuit of Armstrong by the US Anti-Doping Agency (Usada) seemed to prove that no-one was too À̹ÌÅ×À̼ǰ¡¹æ=À̹ÌÅ×À̼dz²¼ºÀÇ·ù À̹ÌÅ×À̼ǿ©¼ºÀÇ·ù À̹ÌÅ×À̼dz²¼º°¡¹æ big to bring down. His TV confession to cheating his way to all seven of his Tour de France titles the following year shattered sport's greatest fairytale, and provided one of the sporting decade's most defining moments.
From Tiger Woods' ¸íǰ±¸¸Å´ëÇà=¸íǰ±¸¸Å´ëÇà televised apology for serial philandering in early 2010 to Oscar Pistorius' ³²ÀÚ·¹ÇÃ=³²ÀÚ·¹Çà murder conviction six years later, the 2010s bore witness to some staggering falls from grace. But the sense was that Armstrong's would shift the landscape like no other because his offending directly impacted his sport.
But any hope that the suspicion surrounding cycling ·¹Çø®Ä«½Ã°è»çÀÌÆ®=·¹Çø®Ä«½Ã°è»çÀÌÆ® would lift as a legacy of Armstrong's downfall soon faded. |
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