July 29, 2007 in Sports

Contador controls destiny at Tour

Jamey Keaten Associated Press
 
Associated Press photo

Alberto Contador dons the yellow jersey after Saturday’s stage. Associated Press
(Full-size photo)

At a glance

Tour de France

A look at the 19th stage of the Tour de France on Saturday:

Stage: Saturday’s time trial took riders over 34.5 miles of flat roads from Cognac to Angouleme to the finish in Paris.

Winner: American rider Levi Leipheimer of the Discovery Channel team won in 1 hour, 2 minutes, 44 seconds.

Yellow jersey: Alberto Contador of the Discovery Channel team kept the overall lead and the 24-year-old Spaniard will likely win the Tour. He leads Cadel Evans of Australia by 23 seconds.

Next stage: Today’s 20th and final stage is a 90.7-mile ride starting from France’s rugby center in Marcoussis and ending on the Champs-Elysees in Paris. Often mostly a processional spin for the rider wearing the yellow jersey, the final stage this year could offer more drama given Contador’s slim margin over Evans.

ANGOULEME, France – With Lance Armstrong chattering in his ear, Alberto Contador churned out the miles, his lead dwindling along with the chance to wear the winner’s yellow jersey at a Tour de France that will be remembered for its scandals.

The 24-year-old Discovery Channel cyclist beat the clock in Saturday’s time trial to seal the victory at cycling’s biggest event, where the prerace favorite was accused of cheating, and the longtime leader was sent home for lying.

Contador entered Saturday’s 19th stage with a 1 minute, 50 second lead over Cadel Evans. When it was over, teammate American Levi Leipheimer had won the stage, and Contador was clinging to a 23-second advantage over Evans, paving the way for a ceremonial ride along the Champs-Elysees in the heart of Paris today and the first Tour win for Discovery since Armstrong retired.

But perhaps even that celebration will be tainted, as Contador has not been spared the doping suspicions that seem attached to the yellow jersey.

He missed last year’s Tour when his former team, Astana, was disqualified because he and four other riders were implicated in the Spanish blood-doping investigation known as Operation Puerto.

French daily Le Monde, citing what it said was an investigation file to which it had access, said Saturday that Contador’s name, or initials, appeared in documents found at the apartment of the Spanish doctor at the center of the Spanish probe.

Contador said he was “sure” he was not involved in the case.

He said he would – if asked – give a DNA sample but added he wouldn’t offer it up himself.

“I’m innocent,” he said. “I don’t have to prove anything to anyone.”

Contador said his name mistakenly turned up in the file.

“I was on the wrong team at the wrong time,” he said. “The first time, my name was in Operation Puerto, but then the UCI fixed this mistake. So I’m out of this case.”

His road toward victory has combined grit, explosive acceleration on tough mountain climbs and luck at the expense of former leader Michael Rasmussen.

Contador inherited the leader’s yellow jersey when the Danish cyclist was ousted Wednesday by his Rabobank team for lying about his whereabouts in June when he missed a doping check.

A day earlier, prerace favorite Alexandre Vinokourov and his Astana team were forced out of the Tour when it was revealed he had tested positive for a banned blood transfusion. Although Vinokourov has denied doping, a senior official said Saturday the backup “B” sample confirmed the positive test.

They were just the biggest names to fall.

Italy’s Cristian Moreni tested positive for testosterone, then he and his Cofidis team were taken out of the race. That came a week after word that Patrik Sinkewitz of the T-Mobile squad tested positive for testosterone in a training run last month.

“I think cycling is crazy now; we see that there are a lot of problems,” Contador said. “It’s clear that we can’t continue with all the scandals and all the problems we had.”

Contador’s story has a back-from-the-brink appeal. In 2004, he suffered a massive blood clot in his brain that needed surgery. While in a hospital bed, he drew inspiration from reading a book about Armstrong, he said.

Saturday, that inspiration was right there with him, riding in the team car.

“It was more nerve-racking than I expected,” said seven-time Tour winner Armstrong.

He said the team has performed better than he and team sporting director Johan Bruyneel expected.

“Johan wanted to win the white jersey, put someone on the podium and win two stages,” Armstrong said. “We’ve done all those things, plus the yellow one so far.”

Leipheimer was a big part of that. He won his first Tour stage with a time of 1 hour, 2 minutes, 44 seconds in the 35-mile ride from Cognac to Angouleme. Australian Evans was second, 51 seconds behind, and Contador was fifth, 2:18 behind.

Leipheimer, who started out 2:49 behind Contador in third place, trails him by 31 seconds.

© Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

No comments on this story so far. Add yours!

    You must be logged in to post comments.
    Please create a profile or log in here.