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Armstrong and Vaughters riding together in 1999
Armstrong and Vaughters riding together in 1999

Jonathan Vaughters Goes Deep into Cycling鈥檚 Dirty Past

In his long-awaited memoir, 'One-Way Ticket,' a cheater turned reformer tells all about performance-enhancing drugs, the Tour de France, and a rider he used to know named Lance

Published: 
Armstrong and Vaughters riding together in 1999

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The first time I met Jonathan Vaughters, founder and manager of the U.S.-based cycling team now known as EF Education First, he had a secret. Actually, he had several secrets. It was August 2006, immediately after the Tour de France, and like every other sports journalist who covered cycling, I was desperate to get an interview with Floyd Landis, who had won the Tour only to test positive for testosterone. Vaughters and I met for dinner in New York鈥檚 West Village, and he surprised me by casually admitting, off the record, that he had used EPO, the doping cyclist鈥檚 drug of choice鈥攁nd that he had watched Lance Armstrong inject himself with the same substance. I blinked. This was huge.

What Vaughters didn鈥檛 say was that, as we sat there sipping our C么tes du Rh么ne, Landis was just a few blocks away, holed up in the townhome of Vaughters鈥檚 team sponsor, real estate investor Doug Ellis. They were protecting their friend from the media, and perhaps from himself, but they were also trying to persuade Landis to come clean about doping. Landis held the key to the change that they both believed cycling desperately needed. But of course, he was not yet ready to tell the truth; that wouldn鈥檛 happen until nearly four years later, when Landis revealed not only his own drug use, but that of Armstrong and most of his U.S. Postal Service/Discovery Channel teammates. We all know what happened after that.

This is one of several revelations in Vaughters鈥檚 long-awaited memoir, , which was published July 1 in the UK听and will appear in the U.S. on August 27. One-Way Ticket tells two dovetailed stories about Vaughters: the coming of age of a young American bike racer, a misfit kid from Denver who found solace on long, lonely rides in the mountains and pursued his dream of racing in Europe at the highest levels; and his subsequent journey from corruption to redemption, when he became a leading force in the movement to clean up cycling. Let鈥檚 just say it was worth the wait.

Part personal history, part confessional, One-Way Ticket is also a love letter to a beautiful, brutal, hopelessly corrupt, yet paradoxically pure sport. It chronicles Vaughters鈥檚 saga as an athlete, but there are many more layers to the story, and that鈥檚 what makes it essential reading for any cycling fan听and for anyone who followed Armstrong鈥檚 rise and fall. It covers the deep history of American bike racing in a way that has never been done. And it鈥檚 an honest, unflinching听look at cycling鈥檚 darkest era听from someone who fully lived it.

Part personal history, part confessional, 鈥極ne-Way Ticket鈥 is also a love letter to a beautiful, brutal, hopelessly corrupt yet paradoxically pure sport.

The 46-year-old 鈥淛.V.,鈥 as he鈥檚 universally known in the cycling community, belongs to the generation of American riders who grew up watching Greg LeMond鈥檚 three Tour de France victories. Despite those triumphs, cycling remained a stubbornly obscure sport here; for a time in the early 1990s, Tour coverage consisted of a one-hour weekly summary on ESPN. You had to be different to want to become a professional cyclist. By his own account, Vaughters was a misfit in high school, bullied and ostracized. He chose cycling as an escape, but at first he was hopelessly bad at it. He persisted, though,听and eventually found himself thrown into races and team camps with the most talented young riders in the country, including George Hincapie, Bobby Julich, Chann McRae, and a kid from Texas named Lance.

Vaughters鈥檚 anecdotes are vivid and often hilarious. In the late 1980s, after Lance the newcomer blows up the entire field, and eventually himself, in a junior road race in Moab, Utah, Vaughters tells a competitor, 鈥淲ell, Lance sure is strong, but man, is he stupid.鈥 To which McRae, Armstrong鈥檚 friend and a fellow Texan, responds, 鈥淒uuuude, I鈥檓 telling Lance you said that, and he鈥檚 gonna kick your little skinny ass, motherfucker.鈥

Which more or less sets the tone for their relationship over the next 25 years. Lance becomes by turns Vaughters鈥檚 rival, teammate, neighbor (in Spain), friend/frenemy, and ultimately his bitter foe.

When the Americans went over to race in Europe in the mid-1990s, they were in for a rude awakening. Suddenly, they were getting crushed by riders who were using reckless quantities of EPO, which increases the oxygen-carrying capacity of blood. At first, Vaughters recounts, the Americans were outraged鈥擫ance most of all. 鈥淭he bizarre truth is that in 1995, Lance was an incredibly talented but very angry cyclist who was having his career stolen from him by dopers,鈥 Vaughters writes. 鈥淗e was vocally against the use of EPO, called it an epidemic, and wanted there to be a test found to catch the cheaters who were taking it.鈥

It clearly angers Vaughters that Lance won by doping, but at the same time, Vaughters admits that he eagerly joined the EPO generation and became an expert at sticking himself with needles. It worked: he got fast听and became a contender in major races again. (鈥淢y dream was back,鈥 he writes.) His results let him make the jump from a crappy little Spanish team to a new outfit sponsored by the U.S. Postal Service, with many of his fellow Americans听and eventually his old nemesis, Lance. After recoveringfrom cancer, Lance had been transformed into a potential Tour contender himself鈥攚ith plenty of chemical help.

Eventually the U.S. Postal team gets new management, new riders, and a much more aggressive doping strategy, which resulted in Armstrong winning the Tour.

On paper, Vaughters had the right attributes for a Tour de France contender: he was a climber who could time trial. And there is a sense, throughout this tale, that Vaughters at some point believed he should have been the next American to win the Tour. But Armstrong was clearly the chosen one. Power struggles ensued, as they always did with him. Eventually, the U.S. Postal team gets new management, new riders, and a much more aggressive doping strategy, which resulted in Armstrong winning the Tour.

At the same time, much of the peloton was actually easing off of听performance enhancers, spurred by new drug-testing rules and the Festina scandal of 1998. Vaughters finds himself on the outs, disillusioned with Postal鈥檚 frat-party culture and looking for a way to stop doping. His great moment of glory, winning a time trial up the feared Mont Ventoux in a 1999 race, should have been the best day of his life. Instead he felt hollow inside. 鈥淭his is a joke,鈥 he thinks, standing on the winner鈥檚 podium. The magic was gone.

A few weeks later, in the second stage of that year鈥檚 Tour, which Armstrong would eventually win, Vaughters crashed hard along with 50 other riders on the Passage du Gois, a cobblestone road that is submerged at high tide. He got up, bloodied and battered, but climbed off his bike and quit the Tour a few miles later.

鈥淚 wanted nothing more to do with the race, I wanted nothing more to do with the team, and I wanted nothing more to do with Lance,鈥 he writes. 鈥淭he world thought I was brave for even trying to finish. I knew I was a coward.鈥


The second time I met J.V., we were spat on. It was June 2007, and I had finagled a ride in his team car at an important one-day race in Philadelphia. As we made our way up the famed Manayunk Wall, lined with screaming, half-drunk fans, a perfectly aimed glob arced out of the crowd and landed on the windshield, right in front of his face. Nobody said anything, and I still don鈥檛 know whether it came from some random asshole or an anti-Vaughters partisan听during the open war that was then raging in American cycling. Not a lot of fans were neutral about J.V. at that point. On one side, you had the hordes of yellow-wristband-wearing Lance worshippers. On the other, you had people who were beginning to resent the corruption that pervaded the sport.

The 鈥渃oward鈥 actually turned out to be quite brave. After retiring in 2004, Vaughters started a junior-development team in Denver, with a handful of young riders. As they matured, he fretted that they would have to make the same choice he had made: to cheat or leave. When he brought up his concern with Doug Ellis, Ellis said, 鈥淲ell, how can we change that?鈥

The , as it was then known, became the first to take a vocal stance against doping鈥攁nd to try and back it up with proof. Its mission was to enable riders to compete without having to use banned substances and methods. A six-figure chunk of the budget paid for blood and urine testing of the team鈥檚 own riders. Many of them were former dopers, notably David Millar, although not all had been caught or outed. The team emphasized competing clean over winning races, which gave it a kind of underdog chic, and cultivating good relations with the press was a big part of the plan. I sometimes covered cycling in that era, and I can say that the openness and quirkiness of Slipstream was a refreshing change from the thuggish vibe of U.S. Postal and many of the major European teams.

According to Vaughters, all of this got under the skin of a certain former teammate. Lance had retired in 2005, but he saw Slipstream as a tacit rebuke to his legacy. The implication that he had cheated obviously bothered him a great deal听and may have been one reason for his spectacularly ill-advised comeback in 2009. Vaughters says that Armstrong worked behind the scenes to torpedo the Slipstream project, luring away star riders like then teenage听prodigy 听and even trying to poach his chief backer.

The Slipstream team, as it was then known, became the first to take a vocal stance against doping鈥攁nd to try and back it up with proof.

Vaughters fought back. Disgusted by the behavior of his former teammates, especially , who had tested positive for a blood transfusion in 2004, he went听to the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) and recounted听everything he鈥檇 done and everything he knew. When Floyd Landis eventually confessed, in an epic e-mail to the USADA, and serious investigations began, Vaughters made his riders available to testify, with no fear of repercussions. Many of them were former Armstrong teammates, and their testimony was pivotal in the USADA鈥檚 2012 鈥渞easoned decision,鈥 which ended Armstrong鈥檚 career and cost him his Tour titles. Probably the most amazing claim in the book is that Lance was actually offered the same deal by the USADA that his teammates accepted: tell all and receive a minimal suspension. According to Vaughters, Armstrong 鈥渢urned it down cold.鈥

(国产吃瓜黑料 contacted Armstrong to ask about this and other details in Vaughters鈥檚 book. His reply: 鈥淢y only response is that I just checked my calendar and it鈥檚 2019. The fact that people are still sitting around writing about this is a sad reflection on them, and it serves no good, especially for the sport of cycling.鈥)

I may be giving the impression that One-Way Ticket is some kind of score-settling tell-all. In fact, the doping saga takes up less than a third of the book. On the whole, it鈥檚 actually a fun read, with entertaining stories packed in among the drugs and the darkness. Vaughters covers a lot of ground, and he鈥檚 as hard on himself as anyone else.

He鈥檚 also insightful about the weird economics and politics of cycling, which helped me finally understand why such a globally popular sport has always seemed so Podunk, sponsorship wise. The problem, he points out, is that there鈥檚 no equity value in a cycling team; unlike with an NFL franchise, there鈥檚 nothing of value to 鈥渙wn.鈥 As a result, teams tend to rely on bike-industry sponsors听and medium-sized corporations with CEOs who happen to love cycling. Vaughters鈥檚 own team has gone through nearly a half-dozen major sponsors, from Garmin to Chipotle to Sharp to Cannondale to Drapac (an international property-investment group). Now it鈥檚 backed by a for-profit learning company that specializes in international language courses and travel.

Vaughters covers a lot of ground, and he鈥檚 as hard on himself as anyone else.

One downside of this haphazard system is that well-funded newcomers can essentially buy their way into professional bike racing and snap up all the best riders. Case in point: Team Sky, whose first order of business was to try and poach Vaughters鈥檚 best rider, . Wiggins was the first legitimate star who Vaughters was able to recruit, and he cultivated Wiggins鈥檚 ambition and talent, helping him make the unlikely jump from the track to the Tour, where he finished fourth in 2009鈥攋ust behind Lance, whose third place has since been disqualified.

What鈥檚 interesting about the Wiggins story is that it highlights one of Vaughters鈥檚 strengths as a team director, which is his ability to spot talent before it becomes obvious to everyone else. Many previously unknown riders have emerged as major stars during or just after a stint on Vaughters鈥檚 team. But Wiggins was the only one (so far) with the ability to win the Tour, and Vaughters was crushed to lose him to the hyperaggressive Team Sky in 2010, after only one year. Wiggins would go on to win the Tour in 2012.

There are some loose ends here, which is not surprising in a book that attempts to cover so much ground. Vaughters does say, somewhat surprisingly, that he believes Lance was clean during his 2009 comeback season. But he doesn鈥檛 address the elephant-in-the-room question that continues to loom: Is cycling finally clean? Or at least cleaner? He doesn鈥檛 offer an opinion. Perhaps he feels that the mere existence of his team, and its survival, speaks for itself.

Toward听the end, Vaughters mentions the recent discovery that he has Asperger鈥檚 syndrome, which he blames for his second divorce and other personal difficulties. This is brave of him, and he describes his occasional inability to handle or express his own emotions. But his condition surely deserves further exploration, at a time when mental-health issues among athletes are finally receiving long-overdue attention. Anyone who鈥檚 familiar with the world of competitive cycling knows that, for some athletes, the sport is a means of escaping, or salving, or expiating, tremendous inner pain. Not all of them succeed, as the tragic suicide of Olympian showed.

The most indelible scene in the book, hands down, remains the story Vaughters told me back in 2006, of听Lance injecting himself inside a hotel room at the 1998 Vuelta a Espa帽a.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e one of us now, J.V.,鈥 Lance says, looking him in the eye. 鈥淭his is the boys club鈥攚e all have dirt on each other, so don鈥檛 go write a book about this shit or something.鈥

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