Contador knocks Armstrong into 3rd

Published: Friday, July 10, 2009 9:01 p.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 

ARCALIS, Andorra — In the Tour de France duel between teammates Lance Armstrong and Alberto Contador, the first big mountain stage went to the Spaniard.

Contador, the 2007 winner, unleashed a burst of speed Friday in the last uphill mile into the tiny Pyrenees principality of Andorra — and Armstrong didn't lay chase.

By the end of the seventh stage, Contador had bumped the seven-time champion from second to third in the overall standings. Perhaps more important, he showed he has the legs for this unrelenting three-week test.

The 140-mile trek from Barcelona, Spain, to the ski resort of Arcalis was the longest stage of this Tour. It was won by Brice Feillu of France and produced a new leader in Rinaldo Nocentini.

Nocentini, who joined Feillu in a nine-man breakaway, became the first Italian in nine years to seize the yellow jersey and ended the six-day hold on the lead by Switzerland's Fabian Cancellara.

Contador is six seconds behind Nocentini, a Tour newcomer at age 31 and a stage winner at the Tour of California this year. Armstrong dropped one spot to third and is eight seconds back.

The question of the day was whether strong climbers would attack Armstrong and Contador, hoping to cut into their deficits from the two time trials during the last week.

Story continues below

Armstrong entered the day a fraction of a second behind Cancellara. Contador trailed by 19 seconds in third.

Astana's plan had been to let less threatening breakaway riders go while squelching attacks from more serious rivals like Cadel Evans of Australia, Andy Schleck of Luxembourg or 2008 Tour champion Carlos Sastre of Spain.

After Evans, a two-time Tour runner-up, took his shot in the final climb, Armstrong hugged the Australian's back wheel. Then Contador struck.

Withstanding the headwinds along the slopes that make solo riding exhausting, the Spaniard overcame his gap with Armstrong. He insisted his real motivation was gaining time on other contenders.

"I was just asserting my position against my main rivals," Contador said. "Nothing was planned in advance, but when I saw Evans and Schleck didn't budge, I sensed the opportunity because I had good legs."

"This is not a show of force," he added. "I felt very good and I took a lot of pleasure in riding in the mountains right close to Spain and my home."

The plan at Astana had been to wait for rivals to strike, not gain time on each other. But after Armstrong used the wind and his wits in Stage 3 with a move that vaulted him ahead of Contador in the standings, the gloves may now be off.

Armstrong said he had foreseen a possible move by Contador.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image
Bas Czerwinski, Associated Press

Levi Leipheimer and Fabian Cancellara, with the yellow jersey, prepare to start.

previousnext

Latest comments

to expound on some of the other comments. It should be required for...

McCoy to resign from Utah Senate

It's nice to see the Republican Party smear machine is already spinning into...

Or....maybe the "alleged sexual misconduct" was regarding his view on...

liberal Charlie is gone. Good riddance.

TCU dominates all-MWC honors

Let's take a look at the efficiency rating for QBs, shall we? Max Hall -...

Bishop Burton: These are good times

So I'm guessing you are the glass half empty type of person.

I'm sure Max led the team in prayer before the game and asked to kick those...

The truth Max Hall spoke should burn on in the consciences of biggots and...

Nutty Putty Cave will close

I MADE A MISTAKE. I meant that those who opposed to closeing the cave seem...

Nutty Putty Cave will close

so many rescue stories from this dangerous cave over the years and yet the...

Advertisements