Tour de France: Armstrong Slips to Third After First Mountain Stage

Tools

Tour de France: Armstrong Slips to Third After First Mountain Stage

American seven-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong grimaces as he rides in the rain during the sixth stage of the Tour de France cycling race over 181.5 kilometers (112.7 miles) with start in Girona and finish in Barcelona, Spain, Thursday July 9, 2009. (AP Photo/Christophe Ena)

July 10, 2009

By JAMEY KEATEN, Associated Press Writer
ARCALIS, Andorra – Lance Armstrong dropped one spot to third place in the Tour de France on Friday, with rival and teammate Alberto Contador breaking away in the final sprint up the mountain to claim second.

Italy's Rinaldo Nocentini captured the yellow jersey from Switzerland's Fabian Cancellara after a punishing climb in the Pyrenees to complete the seventh stage. It was the first time the overall lead changed hands since Cancellara won the opening-day time trial in Monaco.

The 140-mile leg from Spain into Andorra, the first in high mountains of this three-week race, was won by Brice Feillu of France in a solo breakaway.

Armstrong, a seven-time champion coming out of retirement, said he was not as tired as he thought he'd be.

"Overall, I feel pretty good. ... Things didn't quite go according to plan that we set up earlier, but it didn't matter," he said. "It was a fine day overall."

The 37-year-old Texan began the stage a split second off the lead and now trails by eight. Contador, the 2007 Tour winner, is six seconds behind the leader. He finished 3 minutes, 26 seconds after Feillu.

Contador sped ahead in the last 1.2 miles, looking to seize the overall lead. He started the day 19 seconds behind Armstrong and finished 21 seconds before him.

In the final ascent, Armstrong hugged the wheel of Australia's Cadel Evans, who briefly attacked Armstrong and Contador.

"When you've got a rider away, my obligation is to the team," Armstrong said. "I had to stay on his wheel. You just got to stay on his wheel."

"That's not my specialty," he added. "But it's not bad at all, all things considered."

Nocentini and Feillu were part of a nine-man breakaway group that jumped out early in the stage, and the main contenders were happy to let them go because they aren't considered threats. Feillu, a 23-year-old rider for Agritubel and in his first Tour, fled the breakaway group about halfway up the last ascent.

Christophe Kern of France was second, five seconds back. Johannes Froehlinger of Germany was third, 25 seconds behind.

Feillu was hugged in the winner's circle by older brother Romain, who wore the yellow jersey for a day last year.

"It really makes me happy," Brice Feillu said.

"I had confidence in him. I knew it, I knew it, I knew it," added a teary Romain Feillu.

Nocentini, a 31-year-old cyclist with the AG2R-La Mondiale team, won a stage in Pasadena in the Tour of California this year. He came into the stage trailing Cancellara by 3:13. He is first Italian to wear the yellow jersey at the Tour since Alberto Elli in 2000.

Nocentini finished the stage in fourth place, 26 seconds behind Feillu. Cancellara tumbled out of the top rankings, crossing the finish 9:16 after Feillu in 67th place.

The trek from Barcelona to the ski resort of Arcalis was the longest stage of this Tour. Competitors scaled the demanding Serra-Seca pass before concluding the day's ride with one of the toughest climbs in cycling.

Two more days of racing in the Pyrenees await before a rest day Monday. Saturday's stage is a 110-mile route that features three hard climbs and finishes in Saint-Girons, France. The Tour ends July 26 in Paris.

___

AP Sports Writer Samuel Petrequin contributed to this report.

Add a comment

Name:

Comment: 500 Characters Left

KIII TV3 - News, Sports, Weather and its affiliated companies are not responsible for the content of comments posted or for anything arising out of use of the above comments or other interaction among the users. We reserve the right to screen, refuse to post, remove or edit user-generated content at any time and for any or no reason in our absolute and sole discretion without prior notice, although we have no duty to do so or to monitor any Public Forum.

KIII-TV Weather

On Demand

AP Video

Stock Quotes

This content requires the latest Adobe Flash Player and a browser with JavaScript enabled. Click here for a free download of the latest Adobe Flash Player.

Poll

The Corpus Christi City Council has voted to negotiate with the National Swim Center to replace the Coliseum. Do you agree?

  • Yes.
  • No. Just demolish the building.
  • No. Rennovate it and use as a public venue, as it has been.
  • I liked the Brass/Ice Skating Rink idea.