Every Second Counts is a 2003 autobiography by cyclist Lance Armstrong written in collaboration with sports writer and columnist Sally Jenkins.
It is a follow-up to Armstrong's It's Not About the Bike: My Journey Back to Life which was also written with Sally Jenkins.
The narrative begins from after Armstrong's first Tour de France win in 1999 and continues up until his fifth win in 2003.
The authenticity of the tale and Armstrong's anti-doping stance described in the work was challenged by a report from USADA in 2012,[1] and in 2013 Armstrong confessed that he had used doping in that period.
This article about a biographical or autobiographical book on sportspeople is a stub.