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AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -- Lance Armstrong's
attorney says the United States Anti-Doping Agency has granted Armstrong a
30-day extension to answer doping charges while the seven-time Tour de France
winner challenges the case in federal court.
The move erases the Saturday deadline for
Armstrong to either send the case to arbitration or accept sanctions from USADA,
which would likely include a lifetime ban from sport and stripping the Tour de
France titles he won from 1999-2005.
Armstrong attorney Tim Herman says he has
withdrawn a request for U.S. District Judge Sam Sparks to issue temporary
restraining order in the case.
A USADA spokeswoman had no immediate
comment.
USADA has accused Armstrong of doping
during much of his career. Armstrong insists he is innocent and says he never
failed a drug test.