Aspen cycling politics: On the budding Armstrong-Ritter ‘bromance’

Only in Aspen, where liberal political bickering has been elevated to an art form, could a proposed day to honor cancer survivor and seven-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong devolve into name calling and too-cool-for-school disinterest.

<em>Lance-Bill Bromance?</em>
A Lance-Bill Bromance?

In ski-town rival Vail, where B and C list stars like Richard Dean Anderson of “MacGyver” get the keys to the city, Armstrong likely would have been given the $9 million Aspen home he reportedly built last year as a mountain retreat for him and his girlfriend and new son.

But in Aspen, liberal lightning-rod Mayor Mick Ireland has been accused by letter writers to the local paper of having a man crush on Armstrong for even suggesting the idea, and the Aspen Times in an editorial indignantly proclaimed “Enough of the Idolatry.”

For his part, Armstrong, fresh off his recent comeback and third-place finish in this year’s Tour, as well as a win Saturday in the Blast the Mass mountain bike race in Snowmass, told the Times he likes his relative anonymity in Aspen, preferring to be “… the dude who lives in the West End that nobody knows about.”

Good luck with that, especially given the latest budding “bromance” Armstrong has kindled, this time with Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter, a Democrat. The cycling guv, who earlier this summer rode in the grueling Triple Bypass, had lunch with Armstrong after the Snowmass race to discuss reviving a Coors Classic-style staged road race in the state.

“Lance and the governor have had several conversations about their shared desire to bring a staged competitive race back to Colorado,” Ritter spokesman Evan Dreyer said Monday. “They met on Saturday, they had lunch together and talked for a couple of hours.”

Ritter and Armstrong have reportedly been discussing the concept of reviving the enormously popular race — which was the unofficial national tour between 1979 and 1988 — since May.

“Basically, it would be a comeback of the Coors Classic,” Armstrong told Rupert Guinness of the Sydney Morning Herald during the 2009 Tour de France in July. “I am not sure Coors would be the title sponsor, but I had several conversations with [Ritter], and continue to do so, about bringing it back and putting it in August and giving the peloton a good race to do in August [of 2010].”

But on Monday, Dreyer said that timetable has now been pushed back.

“They had initially talked about doing it as early as 2010, but it looks like now the earliest would be 2011,” Dreyer said. “There are a couple of hurdles, obviously — funding and logistics.

“It’s a huge undertaking because of the number of jurisdictions that a race of this sort would traverse and go through and so you need state patrol, you need local jurisdictions, and there’s a lot of logistical details that would need to be worked out.”

Dreyer said Ritter rides his road bike three or four days a week and has a real “passion for riding.” Armstrong, meanwhile, is slated to ride in Saturday’s Leadville 100 — a punishing high-altitude mountain bike race near his new home in Aspen.

“There’s no bigger name in cycling right now and there hasn’t been for the past 10 or 15 years,” Dreyer said, “and to have a cyclist of Lance Armstrong’s caliber and the governor trying to figure out a way to make [a staged road race] happen lends instant credibility to the effort.”

Just don’t declare a statewide Lance Armstrong Day in the process or the conservative Ritter-bashers will likely pounce. Armstrong, who earlier this year in an interview with The Daily Beast opened the door to running for political office, is reportedly anti-war, pro-choice and pro gun control, but counts former President George W. Bush among his Texas pals.

Maybe his political chances would be better in the new blue state of Colorado.

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