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Wiggins continues to excel
Britain's Bradley Wiggins called for calm on Sunday as he produced a "fantastic" display of climbing on the Tour de France 15th stage to move up to third overall in the standings. "It's a long way to go, let's not get too excited," said the Garmin-Slipstream rider, who now has only Astana’s Lance Armstrong and new race leader Alberto Contador in front of him. Wiggins, a track specialist who is the reigning world and Olympic pursuit champion, has stunned admirers and rivals alike with a consistent display throughout that has kept him in contention for the yellow jersey.
Schleck: Contador can be beaten
Saxo Bank leader Andy Schleck insisted Sunday that his team will "try until we die" to take the yellow jersey from Alberto Contador and his Astana team. Contador dominated Sunday's 15th stage on the first of three days in the Alps after leaving his rivals behind on the 8.8km climb into the Swiss ski resort of Verbier. Schleck, who claimed the white jersey for the highest-finishing rider aged 25 and under last year, was the only contender to counter-attack Contador and in the end his gutsy performance moved him up to fifth overall at 2:26.
Evans: His worst day ever
An emotional Cadel Evans said he suffered the "worst day" of his Tour de France career on Sunday's 15th stage where he slipped back to over four minutes off the leading pace. The Silence-Lotto rider started the 207.5km stage from Pontarlier three minutes and seven seconds adrift but after the 8.8km climb to Verbier had lost still more time, slipping to 4:27 behind new race leader Alberto Contador (Astana).
Armstrong: Contador is strongest
Lance Armstrong has conceded that his dreams of winning an eighth yellow jersey in the Tour de France this year may have been shattered on Sunday’s climb to Verbier. Armstrong was left suffering early on the 8.8km climb to Verbier, where teammate Alberto Contador launched a decisive attack that showed him to be Astana's best chance of winning the race. The 37-year-old American said afterwards Contador had proved that he is the "strongest rider in the race.” And he indicated that it would now be difficult for him to aim for an eighth Tour crown.
Riders get glory; mechanics get greasy
The riders in the Tour de France work as hard as any athletes in any sport. The press documents their efforts extensively, all the way down to a given rider’s heart rate and power output. The mechanics who support them work equally hard but with less fanfare. Indeed, while a stage win or yellow jersey is cause for celebration within the team, it can sometimes mean additional work for the mechanics, in the form of a specially painted tribute bicycle.
Contador claims yellow atop Verbier
Astana’s Alberto Contador won the day and the maillot jaune on Sunday, riding away from a small group of favorites on the final climb in stage 15 of the Tour de France. Contador used the Category 1 climb to Verbier to settle accounts with teammate Lance Armstrong and the rest of his rivals for the overall victory, rocketing away to win by more than 40 seconds over Saxo Bank’s Andy Schleck, who collected the white jersey for the best young rider in the process. Vincenzo Nibali (Liquigas) finished third.
Boonen drops out of Tour
Belgian rider Tom Boonen has withdrawn from the Tour de France ahead of the 15th stage because of sickness,his Quick Step team said on Sunday. The Paris-Roubaix champion vomited during the night and had a fever, according to the team. The 28-year-old Belgian sprint specialist was controversially re-admitted to the Tour at the last minute after being initially sidelined by organizers because of a second positive test for cocaine. After Saturday's 14th stage, he was sitting in 148th place in the overall standings, 1:38:42 behind yellow jersey holder Rinaldo Nocentini.
Now It Begins
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Hinault, Anderson detail final stages
The 2009 Tour de France turns vertical Sunday with the second of three summit finishes that will go a long way toward deciding who wears the yellow jersey in Paris. Everyone seems to have an opinion on what’s going to happen next, but no one will really know until the final climb up Mont Ventoux next weekend. That uncertainty has built huge anticipation ahead of the final week of racing. The GC is still wound up tight and, despite Astana’s stranglehold on the leader board, the race could still be won by the daring.
Husband and wife teammates Heather Irmiger and Jeremy Horgan-Kobelski win matching XC titles at SolVista
The Subaru-Gary Fisher team must now silkscreen “His” and “Hers” national championship jerseys for Jeremy Horgan-Kobelski and Heather Irmiger. The husband-and-wife teammates, together since their dorm days at the University of Colorado and married in 2005, escaped with cross-country wins at the 2009 USA Cycling national mountain bike championships at SolVista resort in Granby, Colorado. At the line, Horgan-Kobelski called the win, his fifth national cross-country title, “unreal.”
Inside the Tour – Verbier: the mini Alpe d’Huez
Although Sunday’s stage 15 from Pontarlier in France to Verbier in Switzerland is 207.5km long, the first 200km is almost irrelevant in the context of who will wear the yellow jersey into Monday’s rest day — unless something totally unexpected happens before the leaders reach the climb to the finish.
A tale of five seconds – The Besançon-Hincapie polemic, in their own words
Five seconds separated George Hincapie (Columbia-HTC) from the yellow jersey in Saturday’s hilly stage across eastern France. How those five seconds are dissected will be the source for debate throughout the remainder of the 2009 Tour de France. At the finish line Besancon, Hincapie seemed poised to move into the maillot jauneafter riding into the day’s winning 12-man breakaway on the hilly 199km 14th stage from Colmar to Besancon. The American started the stage 28th at 5:25 back and was the best-placed rider in the move.