Tour de France Turning Into Uphill Climb
Associated Press
Wednesday, July 14, 2004; Page D07
GUERET, France, July 13 -- Move over sprinters, time for climbers to shine.
The charge for the Tour de France title intensifies Wednesday with the first mountain stage -- a chance for five-time champion Lance Armstrong and other contenders to test their legs before mightier battles in the Pyrenees and Alps.
"It will be hard, especially if the race starts aggressively like it did today," Armstrong said after Tuesday's ninth stage.
"A lot of people will be going home if it starts like that."
Armstrong remained in sixth place overall, finishing 44th Tuesday behind stage winner Robbie McEwen of Australia. The 32-year-old Texan is 9 minutes 35 seconds behind leader Thomas Voeckler of France.
Wednesday's 147-mile trek through the Massif Central of central France is the longest of this Tour and has nine climbs, including the most difficult so far -- a 3 1/2-mile ascent to 5,243 feet, which gets steeper as it goes up.
Armstrong is in the dark about the stage, having not checked it out like some of his rivals before the Tour started.
"It's going to be tough . . . up and down all day," Armstrong said. "Unfortunately, it's a stage we haven't seen. It's a hard day ahead."
He acknowledged that his teammates are "a little anxious" but insisted "they will be ready."
"The team is great and healthy," he added. "Everyone's recovered from their small crashes."
Sprinters who have dominated the mostly flat early stages will struggle. Such speedsters include McEwen. Climbers and all-arounders like Armstrong will move to the fore -- possibly offering an early look at how strong the main contenders are.
"The Tour starts now," said American Tyler Hamilton, a former teammate and rival of Armstrong's, on Monday's rest day. "The upcoming stages will really show who is here to win."
Even with one bad leg, McEwen was still the quickest rider of the first half of the three-week Tour.
Head down, the Australian put on a burst of speed to win Tuesday's ninth stage, racing along the barriers and pushing his wheel over the line just ahead of Norwegian champion Thor Hushovd.
© 2004 The Washington Post Company
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Robbie McEwen of Australia (green jersey) edges Norway's Thor Hushovd, top right, and Stuart O'Grady of Australia to win ninth stage of Tour de France.
(AP)
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| _____ Tour de France _____
A brief look at Sunday's 20th stage of the Tour de France: • Stage: 101.29 miles from Montereau to the Champs-Elysees. • Winner: Tom Boonen, Belgium, Quick Step-Davitamon, 4 hours, 8 minutes, 26 seconds. • How Others Fared: Lance Armstrong, United States, US Postal-Berry Floor, 114th, same time. Jan Ullrich, Germany, T-Mobile Team, 32nd, same time. • Yellow Jersey: Armstrong. • Quote of the Day: "I love the Tour de France. It's my buddy." -- Armstrong, who became the first rider to ever win the Tour six times. • Results, overall standings _____ Live Online _____
• The Post's Sally Jenkins took questions July 26. _____ A Race Against Time _____
• Armstrong attempts what no man has yet accomplished -- a sixth consecutive Tour de France win. • The heroes ride cycles instead of steeds, but the Tour de France is an epic saga. • News Graphic: The members of Armstrong's team and their roles. • Organizers have backloaded this year's 2,106-mile course so that Armstrong can't build an early lead and coast to his sixth win in a row. • Stages of this year's Tour _____ Multimedia _____
• Video: The Post's Sally Jenkins on Lance Armstrong. • Photos from the final stage of Armstrong's victory. • Photos from this year's race. • Photos from Armstrong's '03 win. | | |
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