Category: Tour de France

Bad, bad day for Lance Armstrong as Evans leads Tour de France

The mountain-top finish at Morzine-Avoriaz will be remembered in Tour de France history as the place where Lance Armstrong's chances to achieve another championship appeared doomed and Alberto Contador showed he was beatable.

Andy Schleck had the strongest legs at the end of the 117-mile stage that included two Alpine summits as he beat Samuel Sanchez in a two-man sprint to the finish. Cadel Evans, left, and Alberto Contador were unable to match Schleck's final kick to the finish, although Evans did gain the yellow jersey for the first time at this Tour de France.

Seven-time Tour de France champion Armstrong didn't take part in this battle, however. He was some 10 minutes down the mountain after getting caught in three crashes. He was just trying to put one of the worst days in his cycling career behind him. He Twittered after the race….

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.bikingbis.com/2010/07/11/bad-bad-day-for-lance-armstrong-as-evans-leads-tour-de-france/

Stage 7 victory puts Chavanel back in yellow at Tour de France

France's Sylvain Chavanel regained the yellow jersey at the Tour de France on Saturday while former leader Fabian Cancellara cracked as the peloton entered the foothills of the Alps.

Chavanel won the 102-mile stage from Tournus to Station des Rousses and took the lead, jumping from 5th place overall to 1:25 ahead of the nearest challenger, Australia's Cadel Evans.

Lance Armstrong, Alberto Contador and the other major contenders for this year's championship finished in a select group 1-minute 47 seconds behind Chavanel. Although Armstrong dropped from 2:30 to 3:16 behind the first place rider, he remained 50 seconds behind his rival, Contador.

The peloton faces its first major mountain stage on Sunday …

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.bikingbis.com/2010/07/10/stage-7-victory-puts-chavanel-back-in-yellow-at-tour-de-france/

Stage 6 marks a dozen wins at Tour de France for Cav

While house sellers tout “Location, location, location” as the three most important attributes of real estate, bike race sprinters must credit “Position. Position. Position.”

For instance, Britain's Mark Cavendish had an ideal position in Friday's finish of Stage 6 of the 2010 Tour de France in Gueugnon behind teammate Mark Renshaw. The HTC-Columbia riders were following three cyclists for Garmin-Transitions, including Tyler Farrar.

As the finish line approached, Cavendish was delivered alongside the Garmin cyclists by Renshaw. Then Cav handlily beat Farrar across the line by more than a bike's length …

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.bikingbis.com/2010/07/09/stage-6-marks-a-dozen-wins-at-tour-de-france-for-cav/

Disorganized sprint doesn't faze Cavendish

The strategy for a textbook lead-out for Team HTC-Columbia flew right out the window on Stage 5 of the Tour de France on Thursday, but Mark Cavendish took the sprint anyway.

It was the first sprint win for the Brit at this year's Tour. The cycling press had begun to wonder if Cavendish's reign as sprint champion had ended as previous sprints had been taken by Alessandro Petacchi (2) and Thor Hushovd (1). In 2009, Cavendish had won 6 stages of the Tour.

As the peloton neared the finish in Montargis, it looked like the drought might continue for Cavendish.

Bernard Eisel was leading the pack toward the finish, but he was followed by four cyclists from Garmin-Transitions ….

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.bikingbis.com/2010/07/08/disorganized-sprint-doesnt-faze-cavendish/

Leaders rocked on cobbles in Stage 3 of Tour de France

Three bike changes for Sylvain Chavanel cost him the yellow jersey on Tuesday as Fabian Cancellara regained the overall lead of the Tour de France.

Cancellara powered himself back into first place at the front of a peloton split into smaller groups by seven sections of cobblestones in the 132-mile stage in the Paris-Roubaix's “Hell of the North” locale.

Lance Armstrong fell out of the top 10 and lost time to other top contenders, such as Andy Schleck, Cadel Evans and Alberto Contador. The RadioShack cyclist limited his losses by bridging across to the fourth group to cross the finish line.

One of the biggest winners of the day was Canadian Ryder Hesjedal ….

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.bikingbis.com/2010/07/06/leaders-rocked-on-cobbles-in-stage-3-of-tour-de-france/

Christian Vande Velde knocked out of Tour de France

U.S. cyclist Christian Vande Velde is abandoning the Tour de France because of injuries he suffered in Stage 2 on Monday.

Two other cyclists for Garmin-Transitions — Tyler Farrar and Julian Dean — also are bandaged, but will take the starting line for Stage 3.

They're all victims of extremely slippery conditions on the descent of Col Stockeu that took down dozens of riders in the peloton, among them General Classification contenders Lance Armstrong (Radio Shack) and brothers Andy and Frank Schleck (Saxo Bank).

This is rotten luck for Vande Velde, who has been injured multiple times this season…

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.bikingbis.com/2010/07/06/christian-vande-velde-knocked-out-of-tour-de-france/

Breakaway win and another big crash at Tour de France; Stage 2

Year in and year out, the name of French cyclist Sylvain Chavanel has become familiar for failed attempts at long-distance attacks on the peloton at the Tour de France.

Monday's Stage 2 marked only the second time in his career that he's survived to win a Tour stage, and the first time he's ever pulled on the yellow jersey.

While Chavanel was riding into the yellow jersey out front, many members of the peloton, including Lance Armstrong, were licking their wounds after a mass pile-up on a descent about 25 miles from the finish. With many teammates trailing behind, the main peloton finished en mass as a form of protest. …

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.bikingbis.com/2010/07/05/breakaway-win-and-another-big-crash-at-tour-de-france-stage-2/

Crashes aid win by a flash-from-the-past at Tour de France; Stage 1

Three crashes in Brussels, including a road-choking pileup, cleared the way for a victory by Italian sprinter Alessandro Petacchi in Stage 1 of the Tour de France on Sunday.

The finish of the 138-mile stage that started in Rotterdam was more like an episode of Survivor than a competitive bike race. Most of the sprint contenders had been on the ground by the time Petacchi crossed the line for his 164th career victory — his first at the Tour de France since 2003.

The crashes didn't affect the overall standings from Saturday's prologue as they occurred in the protected zone in final kilometers; everyone in the peloton will receive the same time ….

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.bikingbis.com/2010/07/04/crashes-aid-win-by-a-flash-from-the-past-at-tour-de-france-stage-1/

Cancellara wins Tour de France prologue; Armstrong finishes in 4th

Australia's Tony Martin led the 2010 Tour de France prologue for most of Saturday until Switzerland's Fabian Cancellara, left, scorched the 5.5-mile course through Rotterdam.

Lance Armstrong, riding in his last Tour de France, finished in 4th place overall, beating rival Alberto Contador by 5 seconds, who now sits in 6th place.

Garmin-Transitions's Tyler Farrar of Wenatchee, Washington, finished in 7th place, a surprisingly high finish for a sprint specialist. Another US cyclist, Levi Leipheimer on Santa Rosa, California, finished in 8th place.

While the prologue does little more than present the cyclists to the fans ….

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.bikingbis.com/2010/07/03/cancellara-wins-tour-de-france-prologue-armstrong-finishes-in-4th/

Landis making headlines with doping allegations

Disgraced pro cyclist Floyd Landis is making some bombshell disclosures regarding doping in the peloton, especially during his time with the US Postal Service team.

Landis rode alongside Lance Armstrong on that team for several years. During this year's Tour of California, Landis disclosed that the use of performance-enhancing drugs and illegal techniques were prevalent during that time. Landis is reiterating those assertions in “Blood Brothers,” a Wall Street Journal article published Saturday, the first day of the 2010 Tour de France.

Armstrong says the WSJ article is “full of false accusations” at LanceArmstrong.com.

Among the latest allegations ….

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.bikingbis.com/2010/07/03/landis-making-headlines-with-doping-allegations/