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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Armstrong retains lead


Six-time defending champion Lance Armstrong, below at center, remains the overall leader at the Tour de France. 
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Associated Press

BRIANCON, France – Lance Armstrong finds himself in a familiar position midway through this Tour de France. He’s firmly in the lead, riding well – and savoring every minute of the last race of his storied career.

“This is my final Tour, so every day I get on the bike it is a countdown – 12 days to go, 11 days to go, 10 days to go,” the six-time champion said Wednesday after preserving his overall lead in the hardest Alpine stage.

“It is special. It is still fun. I am going to miss it,” the 33-year-old added. “But at the same time, I am ready to move on.”

With 12 days done and 11 left to go, Armstrong is aiming to wear his prized race leader’s yellow jersey all the way to Paris on July 24 and retire with his seventh consecutive win.

But his rivals aren’t giving up quite yet. Kazakhstan’s Alexandre Vinokourov showed he still has some fight left by riding solo over the Tour’s highest ascent and going on to win the 11th stage in the Alpine town of Briancon. Armstrong finished sixth.

“If you don’t try, you will never win the Tour,” Vinokourov said. “You have to take risks.”

Vinokourov, third in 2003, was seen as one of Armstrong’s main challengers when the three-week race started on July 2. But that changed in the first Alpine stage on Tuesday, when Armstrong surged away to retake the overall lead.

Vinokourov began the day 6 minutes, 32 seconds behind the American. That deficit meant Armstrong was not overly concerned when Vinokourov rode off into the distance, his sky-blue Kazakh national champion’s jersey standing out in the rugged, grey mountains.

“We can’t chase down everybody that is at 5, 6, 7 minutes,” Armstrong said. “We have to prioritize and he was not on our list of priorities, so we left him out there.”

Vinokourov took the lead on the famed Col du Galibier, the last of three ascents on the 107.5-mile trek from the ski resort of Courchevel. The Galibier is the highest climb this year at 8,677 feet.

Santiago Botero was second over the narrow, crowd-lined pass, 40 seconds behind Vinokourov. But the Colombian caught Vinokourov on the descent toward Briancon, and they raced to the finish, where Vinokourov beat Botero in a sprint.

The win was Vinokourov’s second in five Tours. His first was in 2003.

Armstrong, flanked by Discovery Channel teammates, scaled the Galibier more than 2 minutes behind Vinokourov in a group of about 20 riders. They reeled in some of the deficit with a speedy descent, finishing 1:15 behind Vinokourov.

“Our objective today was to stay together,” Armstrong said. “We wanted to be as conservative and relaxed as possible and I think we did it.”

Vinokourov earned a time bonus for winning and cut his deficit to Armstrong to 4:47, climbing from 16th to 12th overall.

Armstrong’s lead over second-place Mickael Rasmussen of Denmark stayed at 38 seconds. French rider Christophe Moreau rose to third overall, 2:34 behind Armstrong .