FILE-This July 24, 2005 file photo shows Lance Armstrong, left, and Johan Bruyneel, sporting director of the Discovery team, posing on the Champs Elysees during a victory parade after Armstrong won his seventh straight Tour de France cycling race in Paris. Team staff, including director Bruyneel, "seemed to have an outstanding early warning system regarding drug tests," Jonathan Vaughters testified. "We typically seemed to have an hour's advance notice", plenty of time for riders to manipulate their blood with infusions of saline solution to make it look normal. (AP Photo/Alessandro Trovati,dapd,File)
FILE-This July 24, 2005 file photo shows Lance Armstrong, left, and Johan Bruyneel, sporting director of the Discovery team, posing on the Champs Elysees during a victory parade after Armstrong won his seventh straight Tour de France cycling race in Paris. Team staff, including director Bruyneel, "seemed to have an outstanding early warning system regarding drug tests," Jonathan Vaughters testified. "We typically seemed to have an hour's advance notice", plenty of time for riders to manipulate their blood with infusions of saline solution to make it look normal. (AP Photo/Alessandro Trovati,dapd,File)
FILE-This Sept. 30, 2012 file photo shows David Zabriskie from the United States competes in the men's elite time trial at the World Road Championships in Geelong, Australia. After joining the U.S. Postal squad, Zabriskie broke his vow never to take drugs himself. He testified that team manager Johan Bruyneel, the brains behind Armstrong's assaults on the Tour, pushed him to dope with EPO and that a team doctor, Luis Garcia del Moral, administered his first shot of the blood-boosting hormone, in Spain in 2003. (AP Photo/Andrew Brownbill, File)
GENEVA (AP) ? Lance Armstrong's former manager Johan Bruyneel left the RadioShack-Nissan team Friday after he was singled out as a central figure in the former Tour de France champion's doping program.
The RadioShack-Nissan team said the decision was by "mutual agreement," adding Bruyneel "can no longer direct the team in an efficient and comfortable way."
"His departure is desirable to ensure the serenity and cohesiveness within the team," it said in a statement.
Bruyneel said he was leaving to "concentrate on my defense," having chosen an arbitration hearing to fight charges leveled by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency.
Armstrong was banned from Olympic sports for life by USADA and stripped of his seven Tour titles after choosing in August not to contest the allegations, including that he used and supplied banned drugs.
Friday's announcement came two days after USADA's damning report on Armstrong exposed the doping program in the U.S. Postal Service and Discovery Channel teams that Bruyneel managed when Armstrong rode to seven straight Tour de France victories from 1999-2005.
"In light of these testimonies, both parties feel it is necessary to make this decision," RadioShack said. Its sponsors include longtime Armstrong backers Nike, Trek, Oakley and Livestrong.
Bruyneel, who was general manager of the Luxembourg-based team, now has his own legal battle with USADA. The agency placed him at the heart of doping programs for Armstrong's teams through the rider's second retirement in 2010.
"I am surprised and extremely disappointed that USADA released information in the public domain relating to their pending case against me before I had been given any opportunity to review the evidence and provide my defense against it," Bruyneel said.
"I still hope to be able to defend myself in a forum free from bias, although I now fear that USADA's calculated action may have irreversibly prejudiced my case," he said in a statement on his personal website.
Armstrong and Bruyneel were an unbreakable partnership for years, with Armstrong widely crediting the Belgian for helping him achieve his Tour successes on a U.S. Postal Service team that dominated cycling's showcase race.
Armstrong rode his final Tour in 2010 under Bruyneel's leadership, with the new RadioShack team that Armstrong co-owned. Bruyneel also helped Spaniard Alberto Contador win the 2007 Tour for the Discovery team and worked with both Armstrong and Contador on the 2009 Tour, which Contador also won.
USADA's dossier pinpointed Bruyneel as the focal point of massive doping throughout the USPS team's heyday.
"The overwhelming evidence in this case is that Johan Bruyneel was intimately involved in all significant details of the U.S. Postal team's doping program," USADA said in its 200-page report. "He was on top of the details for organizing blood transfusion programs before the major Tours, and he knew when athletes needed to take EPO to regenerate their blood supply after extracting blood."
The report added that "Bruyneel learned how to introduce young men to performance-enhancing drugs, becoming adept at leading them down the path from newly minted professional rider to veteran drug user."
Former Armstrong teammates also said Bruyneel appeared to have advance knowledge of when drug-testing teams would arrive to take samples.
RadioShack thanked Bruyneel for his "dedication and devotion" to the team, but was quick to further distance itself from him.
"The USADA investigation does not concern the activities of Mr. Bruyneel while managing," the team, the statement said.
At this year's Tour, RadioShack-Nissan team leader Frank Schleck tested positive for a banned diuretic. The Luxembourg rider was pulled from the Tour after the International Cycling Union said he had tested positive for the banned diuretic Xipamide. Schleck has a disciplinary hearing Monday with the Luxembourg cycling federation.
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AP Sports Writer Jerome Pugmire in Paris contributed to this report.
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