Armstrong stays 3rd at Tour; Haussler wins stage

By Jamey Keaten

Associated Press

Published: Friday, July 17 2009 10:36 a.m. MDT

Lance Armstrong heads back to a team bus after signing the start list prior to the start of the 13th stage of the Tour de France in central France Friday.

Laurent Rebours, Associated Press

Enlarge photo»

COLMAR, France — Lance Armstrong stayed in third place after a wet and chilly ride Friday and lost a crucial ally for the rest of the Tour de France when teammate Levi Leipheimer withdrew because of a broken wrist.

Germany's Heinrich Haussler won the 13th stage by outclassing the pack with a solo breakaway, and Italy's Rinaldo Nocentini kept the yellow jersey for a seventh straight day.

Armstrong, the seven-time champion, remained eight seconds behind Nocentini. Astana teammate Alberto Contador, the 2007 Tour champion, is second, six seconds back. Armstrong, Contador and other favorites were 6 minutes, 43 seconds behind Haussler.

Leipheimer's withdrawal is a blow to Astana and Armstrong. He is a four-time top-10 finisher at the Tour, including third place finish in 2007. He had been in fourth place, 39 seconds behind Nocentini.

Leipheimer and Armstrong have a close relationship within Astana, which Armstrong says is riven by "tension" with Contador.

"He's a good friend of mine so it makes it even more unfortunate, but that's cycling," said Armstrong, stressing that Leipheimer's absence is a big loss.

"You saw even there, in some stages in the Pyrenees, when there was an attack, we had four guys there. And now, one's gone," Armstrong said. "Not only does it hurt us, I think it helps the others in terms of morale, and thinking perhaps that the team has been weakened."

At first, it appeared Leipheimer might remain in the race.

"It seemed like an insignificant crash that all of a sudden turned out to be pretty major," Armstrong said.

Leipheimer fell off his bike less than two miles from Thursday's finish line in a crash involving two-time Tour runner-up Cadel Evans. He pulled out before riders began the day's 124-mile stage through the rolling hills of northeast France that featured three big climbs, including the demanding Col du Platzerwasel.

Haussler, a Cervelo rider who won a stage at Paris-Nice in March, raced ahead of the second of two fellow breakaway riders in the last 31 miles and distanced himself from the peloton as the finish neared.

Haussler cupped his face in his hands and choked up with emotion as he crossed the line in 4:56:26 — 4:11 ahead of second-place Amets Txurruka of Spain. Brice Feillu of France was third, 6:13 back.

"I was really happy. I just got teary," said Haussler, who was born in Australia to a German father. "I just couldn't believe it. ... I was just so nervous that I was going to crash."

Get The Deseret News Everywhere

Subscribe

Mobile

RSS