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    A Clean Break: My Story

    A Clean Break: My Story

    by Christophe Bassons, Benoît Hopquin, Peter Cossins (Translator)


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      ISBN-13: 9781472910370
    • Publisher: Bloomsbury USA
    • Publication date: 07/03/2014
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 320
    • File size: 854 KB

    Christophe Bassons was a professional cyclist between 1996 and 2001, racing with the likes of Lance Armstrong, Tyler Hamilton and Richard Virenque. He now works for the French Ministry of Sport and Culture to prevent doping. Peter Cossins has been writing and reporting on cycling for over 20 years. He is a former editor of Procycling and the author ofThe Monuments.

    Benoit Hopquin is a French journalist and author. He is a senior reporter for Le Monde and is based in Paris.
    Christophe Bassons was a professional cyclist between 1996 and 2001, racing with the likes of Lance Armstrong, Tyler Hamilton and Richard Virenque. He now works for the French Ministry of Sport and Culture to prevent doping.
    First drawn into the sport while a student in bike-obsessed Spain in the mid-1980s, Peter Cossins has been writing about cycling since 1993. He has covered sixteen editions of the Tour de France and spent three years as editor of Procycling magazine and the last four as contributing editor to that title. He has also contributed to the Guardian, The Times, the Sunday Telegraph, the Sunday Express and the Sunday Herald. In 2012 he collaborated with Tour de France winner Stephen Roche on his autobiography, Born to Ride.

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    Table of Contents

    Prologue vii

    Chapter 1 Love and l'Eau Claire 1

    Chapter 2 Cycling is a Breeze 26

    Chapter 3 The Illusionists 48

    Chapter 4 Blood and Tears 76

    Chapter 5 End of the Cycle 98

    Chapter 6 Stilled Voices 116

    Chapter 7 Emergency Exit 140

    Chapter 8 Free Wheel 166

    Chapter 9 End of the Road 182

    Chapter 10 Armstrong and Me 195

    Chapter 11 When the Song Remains the Same 217

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    Christophe Bassons is a former professional cyclist. His career was a successful one albeit never in the full glare of the media. That all changed when, in 1998, the Festina doping scandal broke and Bassons shot to fame as one of the handful of clean riders in the peloton - and as the only professional who dared to speak openly about the topic.

    Having been seen as a possible champion, his instinctive and stubborn refusal to dope saw him outstripped in physique, stamina and speed by men he'd once equalled or exceeded. His willingness to denounce the doping culture set him against the entire ethos of professional cycling: owners, management and his peers - the likes of Lance Armstrong, Richard Virenque, Christophe Moreau.

    A year later, Bassons' career was over. Having clashed publicly with other riders - notably with Armstrong during the 1999 Tour de France - and written in French newspapers of his disbelief and disgust, Bassons found himself exhausted and exiled - chewed up and spat out by the sport he loved.

    First published in French in 2000 and now updated following recent revelations from Armstrong, Tyler Hamilton and other high-profile figures, A Clean Break is unmissable reading for all cycling fans. It offers a unique and heartbreaking take on the subject.

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    Library Journal
    02/01/2015
    Professional cyclist Bassons penned his autobiography Positif in 2000, after being driven out of the sport for refusing to take performance-enhancing drugs. Since Lance Armstrong's recent admission to years of doping, Bassons—dubbed the sport's "Mr. Clean"—has updated his account, now translated from French. Bassons describes himself as a "dumb bumpkin, the innocent up from the sticks," who was unwilling to go along with the pervasive culture of the peloton, in which winning at all costs was the goal. When Bassons refused to take performance-enhancing drugs, he was shunned by both teammates and competitors and singled out by Armstrong, who bullied him "in a very merciless and venomous fashion," as someone who was an embarrassment to the sport. Bassons maintains that the level of doping was widespread and tolerated by both team officials and the sport's governing bodies. He even describes an instance when he witnessed pills spilling from a cyclist's pocket during a race. VERDICT For readers interested in an up-close and in-depth account of doping in French professional cycling, this thoughtful book tells a tale of unrelenting peer pressure to give in to the needle. Those seeking additional insight into the fall of Armstrong will need to look elsewhere.—Susan Belsky, Oshkosh P.L., WI
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