Lance Armstrong shakes hands with former IOC president Juan Antonio Samaranch (picture) in the presence of Hein Verbruggen during the 2000 Tour de France.Lance Armstrong shakes hands with former IOC president Juan Antonio Samaranch (picture) in the presence of Hein Verbruggen during the 2000 Tour de France.

Former International Cycling Union (UCI) president Hein Verbruggen has dismissed claims by Lance Armstrong that he helped cover up a failed drugs test and says the disgraced American has made his life a misery.

Armstrong suggested last month that in 1999 when the Texan was on his way to winning his first Tour de France title, Verbruggen had helped cover up a positive drugs test for corticosteroids by backdating a prescription for saddle sore cream.

Armstrong was stripped of his seven Tour titles and banned from cycling for life, having been accused by the United States Anti-Doping Agency of the “most sophisticated, professionalised and successful doping programme sport has ever seen”.

Verbruggen told the Daily Telegraph newspaper that Armstrong was destroying his reputation, and also produced a report that he said proved there was no positive test to cover up because the findings in the test were the result of the legal cream.

“Never, ever would I have had a conversation saying, ‘we have to take care of this’,” the Dutchman said.

“It might very well be that he or somebody else from the team has given me a call and my first reaction was, ‘we had this Festina problem and now this’. But that’s a very long way from concluding we have to do something about it.”

Armstrong had alleged that he discussed the positive test with the Dutchman, who had said it was a “knockout punch” for the sport after the Festina team were kicked off the Tour the previous year, and that they needed to “come up with something”.

Verbruggen said Armstrong was destroying his reputation.

“Armstrong has his own agenda and that is certainly his own personal interest, whether it is that he wants his sanctions to be reduced or whether he wants money.

“Usually, with Armstrong, there is always an interest also in money... my interest is the truth.”

Verbruggen, an honorary member of the IOC, also denied donations by Armstrong to the UCI were bribes, saying that they were never hidden, but he admitted accepting them was an error.

He said he did not have any inappropriate financial dealings with Armstrong’s US Postal Service cycling team, and said he would “never forget, or forgive” the American for suggesting he or the UCI were corrupt.

“He caused me a lot of misery,” Verbruggen said.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.