DAVE ROSS

A limited confession?

Jan 16, 2013, 6:38 AM | Updated: 8:39 am

This Monday, Jan. 14, 2013 photo provided by Harpo Studios Inc., shows talk-show host Oprah Winfrey interviewing cyclist Lance Armstrong during taping for the show "Oprah and Lance Armstrong: The Worldwide Exclusive" in Austin, Texas. The two-part episode of "Oprah's Next Chapter" will air nationally Thursday and Friday, Jan. 17-18, 2013. (AP Photo/Courtesy of Harpo Studios, Inc., George Burns)

(AP Photo/Courtesy of Harpo Studios, Inc., George Burns)

“I can only say I was satisfied by the answers.”

That’s how Oprah describes her Lance Armstrong interview – which a source now describes to CBS as “at least a limited confession.”

Whatever that means. An interview about a guy who lied… had better live up to its own hype.

“Oprah gets the truth after a decade of denial,” say promotional ads running ahead of the interview.

Whatever he confesses to, Armstrong’s defenders will say it was either take the needle or get out of the sport – so he had no choice. But there were some who took the other road.

Said Scott Mercier, “This is a huge message for clean athletes, and clean athletics – that it does matter.”

Mercier made the US Postal Service team in 1997, but when he saw the drugs laid out before him, he said no way, and abandoned his dream.

I asked him if he felt cheated, “The cost for me is, I never got to race another Olympic games. I never did the Tour de France. I prematurely ended my career. But I also still have my integrity, and I can look my children in the eye and say it matters,” said Mercier.

Mercier says the reason Armstrong gave in was simple – the money. He’s reported to be worth $100 million.

CBS News is reporting that he’s offered to pay back $5 million of the $31 million he was paid to compete on the U.S. Postal Service team but was turned down – $5 million for a government that’s short by a trillion? Get real.
Technically, the government could go after him for treble damages, and that could end up being most of his fortune.

Which has Scott Mercier counting his blessings, “My wife said to me about four months ago, ‘Honey, aren’t you glad you’re not coming down and sitting down our son and daughter and telling them that you’re a lying fraud?”

Instead he lives, like most of us, out of the spotlight, but pretty happy. “I’m a financial adviser in western Colorado and I own a couple or Carl’s Jr. restaurants.”

Maybe one day, if Lance needs an honest financial adviser, they could sit down over the new jalapeno turkey burger.

Dave's Commentary

Dave Ross on KIRO Newsradio 97.3 FM
  • listen to dave rossTune in to KIRO Newsradio weekdays at 5am for Dave Ross on Seattle's Morning News.

Dave Ross

Image: Sound Transit tested train service on the 2 Line between southern Bellevue and Microsoft for...

Dave Ross

Ross: We built it, and they had better come

About 17,500 people attended the opening of the Eastside light rail line. It shows a curiosity about getting to Redmond without driving there.

2 days ago

Photo: A pro-Palestinian demonstration takes place outside the link light rail station at the Unive...

Dave Ross

Ross: Does the right to protest outweigh the right to learn?

When does a protest cross the line? I can answer that. When it devolves into violence, obviously it crosses a line.

4 days ago

privacy pods...

Dave Ross

Ross: Tracking employees’ vital signs at work via privacy pods, what could go wrong?

I saw a Bloomberg story about the latest innovation to reduce your stress level at work: Privacy pods.

1 month ago

car culture...

Dave Ross

Ross: Are we killing car culture? Or is car culture killing the US?

I don’t think the question is whether we're going to "kill" our car culture. The real question is can we stop our car culture from killing the U.S.?

1 month ago

drivers data insurance...

Dave Ross

Ross: As cars release driving data to insurance, is your driving my business?

Every move you make, every swerve you take, every lane change you fake – someone’s watching you. Do drivers have a right to keep driving data private?

2 months ago

rent control...

Dave Ross

Ross: Rent control was never the answer in Wash.

The rent control bill died in the Washington State Legislature this week, even though Democrats control both houses.

2 months ago

A limited confession?