Armstrong’s name dropped by charity

Disgraced American cyclist Lance Armstrong has stepped down from the board of the Livestrong charity he founded more than a decade ago. File photo: Lucas Jackson

Disgraced American cyclist Lance Armstrong has stepped down from the board of the Livestrong charity he founded more than a decade ago. File photo: Lucas Jackson

Published Nov 15, 2012

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Austin, Texas - The Lance Armstrong Foundation has formally dropped the name of the disgraced cyclist from its title, the organisation said on Wednesday, marking the latest move by the cancer charity to distance itself from him following doping charges.

The foundation that has been informally known for years as Livestrong - the word adorning its well-known yellow wristbands - filed paperwork with the Texas Secretary of State for a name change that became effective on October 30, said foundation spokesperson Katherine McLane. It is now the Livestrong Foundation.

“For most of its life, the organisation has been known as the Livestrong Foundation, but making that change official is necessary and appropriate during a time of change for the organisation,” McLane told Reuters.

Armstrong founded the charity in 1997, after he was diagnosed with testicular cancer and before he first won the Tour de France. Since then, it has raised $500-million and has evolved from a focus on testicular cancer research to addressing the needs of survivors of all cancers.

Armstrong, 41, announced on October 17 that he was stepping down as chairperson but remaining on the board of the organisation, which helps people and families affected by cancer. That followed an October 10 report by the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) that said that the now-retired rider had been involved in the “most sophisticated, professionalised and successful doping programme that sport has ever seen”.

On October 22, Armstrong's seven Tour de France victories were nullified and he was banned from cycling for life after the International Cycling Union (UCI) ratified the USADA's sanctions against him. Then on Monday, Livestrong chairperson Jeff Garvey said that Armstrong had voluntarily resigned from the foundation “to spare the organisation any negative effects as a result of controversy surrounding his cycling career”. He made the decision on November 4, McLane said.

“All of us - especially Lance - wanted Livestrong to have a presence that was bigger than its founder,” board member Mark McKinnon told Reuters Wednesday in an email. “We knew that in order to make the most profound and lasting impact for cancer survivors, the cause and the organisation had to have its own persona. That's exactly what Livestrong has become and Lance helped shape that effort.” - Reuters

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