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Subscribe Today!June 11, 2007Vol. 36/No. 10

FEATURES

THE DRAMA AND THE SCIENCE

It was a case of simple science that showed Landis guilty of using
synthetic testosterone to win the 2006 Tour de France, said one side.

It was a case of simple incompetence that showed the French anti-doping
lab’s methods and findings to be completely unreliable, said the other.

It was also a case that included tales of sexual abuse, threats of blackmail
and testimony on illicit drug use.

After the smoke had cleared, the three-man arbitration panel had
six weeks to decide whether or not Landis will keep his yellow jersey.

THE PLAYERS AND THE ISSUES

Fifteen witnesses testified in the Landis arbitration hearing. Some were
dry but significant. Some were outrageous but likely ineffectual. Here,
we profile them all and also look at the key issues.

A LAWYER’S VIEW

Attorney Antonio Gallegos attended the hearings on behalf of VeloNews as
a non-affiliated but informed observer. He provides some interesting legal
insight into the various arguments.

THE CIRCUS INSIDE THE HEARINGS

Two in-court firings. Landis’s parents, Paul and Arlene, clad in traditional
Mennonite clothing. Snoozing press. Aggressive lawyers — who weren’t
involved in the case. It was a zoo inside the Malibu courtroom.

DEPARTMENTS & COLUMNS

ROAD RAGIN'

Webcor’s Amber Rais rises through the ranks

PLANET DIRT

NorCal MTB league sends high school mountain biking airborne

WORLD BEAT

Robbie Hunter leads Barloworld’s
charge into the Tour de France

PROSHOP

Cadel Evans’s Ridley Noah

JUST IN

2008 Shimano XT

WHAT WE'RE RIDING

Syncros FL mountain bike components

TRAINING
  • On the bike with Michael Barry - Amstel Gold Race
  • The power requirements of the Tour de Georgia
AT THE BACK

with John Wilcockson

MISCELLANEOUS
  • Letters
  • VeloNotes
  • Calendar
  • Classified/VeloMarket

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