Utah resident Levi Leipheimer, center, holds up the Tour of the Gila winner's trophy. Teammate Lance Armstrong, left, took second.
Jake Schoellkopf, Associated Press
PINOS ALTOS, N.M. — The last big test for Lance Armstrong before his return to the Giro d'Italia was more than 105 miles of steep roads and windy descents in the mountains of southwestern New Mexico.
It was the hardest stage of the Tour of the Gila, but Armstrong and his teammates Levi Leipheimer and Chris Horner passed the test. The Astana riders, who entered the five-day event as independents, used the tour as a tune up for the upcoming race in Italy.
Armstrong said he feels good enough to be a contender for some stage wins in Italy but that Leipheimer, a Rowland Hall grad and former Salt Lake City resident who still trains frequently in Utah, has the best chance for an overall win.
"The first priority is to protect him and make sure that he fulfills his potential there," the seven-time Tour de France winner said. "It would be an amazing thing for an American to win the tour of Italy again. I'd be pleased to be there and help."
Leipheimer won the Tour of the Gila on Sunday after finishing first in two of the early stages and coming in third behind Armstrong in the last stage, dubbed the Gila Monster. Armstrong moved up in the overall classification from fourth to second after Sunday's stage.
Salt Lake City's Burke Swindlehurst, racing for the Bissell Pro Cycling team, placed fourth in the overall standings, just 4:03 off Leipheimer's pace.
Salt Lake native Jonathan Mumford, part of the Kelly Benefit Strategies team, was 39th overall.
Park City's Billy Demong, a World Cup and Olympic nordic skier, was 57th.
In the women's pro race, Sandy's Nicole Evans (ValueAct Capitol) finished 12th just 8:08 behind Olympic gold medalist Kristin Armstrong while Salt Lake's Alisha Welsh (Park City Ironman) was 14th in her first Cat 1/Pro race.
The Astana riders, who were wearing the kits of Armstrong's Mellow Johnny's bike shop, moved to the front of the peloton as it closed a gap of more than three minutes that had been built by a breakaway of 11 riders in the first 40 miles of the stage.
At the start of a 7-mile, 1,600-foot climb to Copperas Vista, the Mellow Johnny's riders caught the lead pack. With Horner in front, he and Leipheimer positioned to get Armstrong the stage win.
It looked like it was going to happen until the last 500 meters.
- High school football: Cary Whittingham named...
- Brad Rock: Rock On: Jerry Sloan takes his own...
- Jazz, Warriors have much at stake in draft...
- Dick Harmon: John Beck gets a new start in...
- BYU football: Cougars land massive defensive...
- Blue roundup: Jabari Parker tells ESPN.com he...
- Brad Rock: UVU gets a lesson in tournament...
- High school baseball: All-star rosters announced
- BYU football: Cougars land massive...
70 - Blue roundup: Jabari Parker tells...
28 - Vai's View: Vai's View: A return to...
23 - Dick Harmon: John Beck gets a new start...
18 - High school football: Cary Whittingham...
15 - Utah baseball: Utes fall in season...
10 - Brad Rock: Colleges should get aid from...
9 - ESPN reports Warriors want to trade...
8






DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments