USA TODAY International Edition

Armstrong defends ‘ 10,000 lies’ in film

- Brent Schrotenbo­er

In the first 21⁄ minutes of the new 2 ESPN film about his life, Lance Armstrong tells a story that includes 13 Fbombs, two other curse words and four obscene hand gestures.

Then he really gets going.

❚ He talks about his teenage years, when he used a forged birth certificate to circumvent the minimum age requiremen­ts to enter triathlons.

“Forge the birth certificate, compete illegally and beat everybody,” he said of his formula.

❚ He talks about his “10,000 lies” – not in terms of regret, but as a best practice to protect his empire and conceal his doping in cycling.

“Nobody dopes and is honest,” he said. “You’re not. The only way you can dope and be honest is if nobody ever asks you, which is not realistic. The second somebody asks you, you lie. It might be one lie because you answer it once. Or in my case it might be 10,000 lies because you answer it 10,000 times.”

❚ He also talks about grudges. He still has them, particular­ly against his former cycling teammate- turned- legal nemesis.

“Could be worse,” he said. “I could be Floyd Landis … waking up a piece of ( expletive) every day.”

OK, so why is ESPN giving this guy another big stage – this time airing a two- part, prime- time film about him this Sunday and next?

“He’s utterly fascinatin­g, and he’s likable, and he’s light on his feet, and he’s funny,” film director Marina Zenovich told USA TODAY. “But he also did horrible things to people, so it’s kind of like you’re trying to understand someone. It’s like a perfect documentar­y subject. For me to be able to have the access to him to try to kind of uncover all of this was like a dream job.”

The broad outline of the narrative is now infamous. He’s that kid from Texas who became an American superhero, having survived a near- death battle with cancer to win the Tour de France seven straight times from 1999 to 2005. But he’s also an American villain, disgraced and exposed as a cheater, liar and bully – aided and abetted by performanc­e- enhancing drugs and friends in high places.

Each of those separate story lines qualified as compelling television in previous decades. ESPN now reels it all in with part one ( the rise) and part two ( the fall) through the wider lens of time, more so than other books and films that have documented Armstrong’s saga, one of the biggest sports stories of the 21st century.

In this case, the film does so mostly in Armstrong’s own words, past and present. Armstrong, now 48, dominates the show and is given so much time to explain himself by Zenovich that he reveals himself in ways large and small, from his lack of skill in the kitchen at home to his view of himself as a martyrlike figure at the end.

But his answer and explanatio­ns aren’t exactly redeeming. Zenovich said Armstrong had no editorial control over the film and apparently was not pleased with it after viewing it in December.

A version of the film that is edited for language also will air simultaneo­usly on ESPN2, in case any parents want their children to learn from Armstrong about how to rationaliz­e rampant dishonesty and deceit but don’t want them to hear the profanity.

“This film is not just a rehashing what we know about what happened, but an exploratio­n of the who, the how, the why, expertly composed by an esteemed storytelle­r,” said Libby Geist, vice president and executive producer for ESPN Films and Original Content.

After watching it, viewers still likely will reach different and nuanced conclusion­s about him, which is another reason this character study of a film could become fodder for college psychology courses. The film also details his heroic stature among cancer survivors and his work at Livestrong, the charity he built to help them before his ouster from it amid scandal.

“Another thing that was surprising was to see how different people reacted to him in different ways,” Zenovich said.

Some people hate him. Some have stuck with him. Some still can’t make up their minds.

“Thirty years of knowing a person, you either love him or hate him,” former Armstrong teammate Bobby Julich said in the film. “I still haven’t decided where I stand after all that.”

Part one airs at 9 p. m. ET on Sunday, followed by part two at the same time on May 31.

 ?? ELIZABETH KREUTZ/ ESPN ?? “Nobody dopes and is honest,” Lance Armstrong says in the two- part ESPN documentar­y. “You’re not. The only way you can dope and be honest is if nobody ever asks you, which is not realistic.”
ELIZABETH KREUTZ/ ESPN “Nobody dopes and is honest,” Lance Armstrong says in the two- part ESPN documentar­y. “You’re not. The only way you can dope and be honest is if nobody ever asks you, which is not realistic.”

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