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Lance Armstrong said part of him wants to run an ultra marathon or an obstacle-course race next year in an audio interview published last week.

“Part of me wants to go run an ultra, or find a 100-miler to run or go find an obstacle-course race that’s super challenging,” Armstrong said on Movember Radio, adding that the endurance world is “blowing up” in popularity. “Go try that. I think ’16 would be the year to do that.”

Armstrong, 44, received a lifetime ban and had his seven Tour de France titles stripped by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency in 2012 for doping during his cycling career.

Armstrong ran the 2006 New York City Marathon in 2 hours, 59 minutes, 36 seconds. He ran the 2008 Boston Marathon in 2:50:58. He won half-Ironman triathlons in 2012 before receiving the lifetime ban from competition later that year.

Armstrong can return to non-cycling competition in a limited capacity in August, once his lifetime ban eclipses four years, according to Slowtwitch.com.

“An athlete serving a lifetime ban under the 2009 [World Anti-Doping Agency] Code, is allowed limited ability to participate in local sporting events in a sport other than the primary sport they were sanctioned in, after serving four years of their sanction,” the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency said in a Friday email. “In Mr. Armstrong’s case, this means he will have limited ability to participate in local sporting events.

Specific to his current eligibility for ultra or obstacle course races, so long as the event is not under a code signatory and the event does not otherwise recognize a Code sanction, then there is no prohibition as set forth in the WADA Code.

It is also worth noting that in accordance with the WADA rule, Mr. Armstrong may not participate in an event that has the potential to qualify him to compete in (or accumulate points toward) a national championship, a world championship or an international event other than a world championship.  In terms of what qualifies as an international event, this depends upon the specific sports rules.  However, in general, events licensed, sanction or authorized by an international federation, including world championships, world cups and other such events qualify.”

Armstrong said in last week’s interview that he “very, very rarely” uses a road bike.

“I run more, I swim more,” he said. “If I’m in Colorado in the summer, I’ll do long hikes. Then I guess in the summer I would ride a mountain bike.”

Armstrong said his life consists of being “like an Uber driver” for his five children.

“Before all this goes down,” Armstrong said of the last few years, “life was like 100 miles an hour. Then everything happens, my situation changes drastically, and life goes to like 10 miles an hour. So it feels like it’s gradually picking up. 55’s the speed limit. We might be doing 25 now or 30. So it’s good. As rough as this has been on all of us, it’s nice to have a simple life.”

Armstrong also reflected, again, on his past.

“There are really two big mistakes that I made in most people’s minds, everybody’s mind,” he said. “That was the doping and the treatment of others. I think as time goes on, more and more people understand that the doping just was what it was. It really was completely pervasive, and you really didn’t have a choice. We did have a choice. Your choice was to go home, which nobody took that choice. Everybody geared up and stayed. But all those people that made that first mistake, which now nobody cares about, none of them treated people like [expletive]. None of them attacked another human being. None of them sued another human being. And I did all of those things. So my words to an 18-year-old me would be, I understand you may face some decisions in this sport but, man, don’t ever isolate, attack, ostracize, incite another human being, because we’re not talking about this because I doped. We’re talking about all of this because of the way I treated other people. That’s my mistake, and I own that, and I’ve spent the last three years trying to make amends with those people.”

“The most important word in all of this is betrayal. The people that have a tremendous sense of betrayal, that’s a walk that I’ll walk the rest of my life. I have to now do that just because of the attitude that I had.”

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