The Denver Post

Floyd Landis starts own cycling team

- By Eddie Pells

Floyd Landis is using money he earned by taking down Lance Armstrong to start his own cycling team.

The man whose own doping saga cost him the 2006 Tour de France title and eventually helped expose Armstrong’s cheating says he’s building a developmen­tal team for 2019 that will be based out of Canada.

He says this is his way of trying to rebuild trust inside a cycling community that has viewed him skepticall­y since he lied about taking performanc­e enhancers in a muchpublic­ized hearing in 2007.

“That’s the main motivation of the whole thing,” Landis said in an interview. “A lot of things were said about me, and a lot was justified. A lot was PR from people who didn’t like the fact I exposed (the doping). One of the main arguments was, ‘He ran out of money and that’s why he did it.’ It was never the case.”

Three years after losing his doping case, Landis provided key informatio­n about his own doping and that of Armstrong and his U.S. Postal Service team, all of which led to Armstrong’s lifetime ban.

Landis is using part of the proceeds from Armstrong’s lawsuit settlement with the government to fund the team. Landis and his legal team split around $2.75 million off the settlement because he brought a whistleblo­wer lawsuit that triggered the case.

Now 42, Landis runs a business in the Colorado mountains, Floyd’s of Leadville, that specialize­s in marijuana and hempbased products that are designed to relieve chronic pain.

His company will sponsor the new cycling team, which will take some riders from Silber Pro, a team out of Canada run by former teammate Gord Fraser that is shutting down at the end of this year.

Landis is well aware his detractors will shake their head at his attempt to get back into the cycling game.

“This gives me a chance to show them I can run a good team in an ethical way, and gives me a chance to show I know what I’m doing.”

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