Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Belgians don’t waffle


Gert Steegmans of Belgium, right, looks at his compatriot, Tom Boonen, after crossing the finish line Monday. Associated Press
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Jamey Keaten Associated Press

GHENT, Belgium – The Tour de France veered into Belgium on Monday, and Gert Steegmans responded with a victory before his home fans in a country passionate about its cycling.

“What an explosion of emotion it was after the finish,” he said. “It was really important for the team. You could feel this enormous pressure because we’re a Belgian team.”

Steegmans avoided a late crash that slowed many riders and left them with scrapes and bruises. He led a 1-2 Belgian finish with Tom Boonen in winning a Tour stage for the first time as fans thronged the team bus.

“I think it was a perfect picture, the two of us next to each other,” Steegmans said.

He covered the 105-mile course on rain-drenched roads from Dunkirk, France, to Ghent in 3 hours, 48 minutes, 22 seconds. Switzerland’s Fabian Cancellara kept the leader’s yellow jersey.

Steegmans hoped his victory would help rebuild spirits at QuickStep, a team under pressure amid speculation about doping.

“There was a big attack from one newspaper on our team,” Steegmans said. “It was a hard time for us – especially when you take a train, people see you as a gang member and not as a team rider.”

Cycling’s credibility clearly is on the line amid doping scandals and investigations. Floyd Landis, the 2006 Tour champion, could be stripped of his victory.

Belgian police temporarily detained 13 people for questioning last month after seizing banned substances in raids on homes of cyclists and their associates, including a QuickStep team staffer. The team denies any wrongdoing.

Steegmans, Boonen and third-place finisher Filippo Pozzato of Italy were among about 20 cyclists who were ahead of a crash that delayed all other riders in the main pack with about 1.2 miles left.

American George Hincapie was cut and bruised, and Discovery Channel teammate Tomas Vaitkus of Lithuania dropped out of his debut Tour after breaking his right thumb in five places.

Cancellara, who injured his left wrist in the group spill, is the leader for a third straight day. Germany’s Andreas Kloeden is in second place, 13 seconds behind. Britain’s David Millar in third, 23 seconds back.

Because the crash occurred within 1.8 miles left, all riders were credited with the same time as Steegman’s.

Boonen, a four-time Tour stage winner and one of Belgium’s biggest cycling stars, is looking for his first stage victory in two years.

The three-week race returns to France today, leaving the Belgian town of Waregem for a 147-mile ride to Compiegne, northeast of Paris.

The main contenders typically don’t seek stage victories in the flat early stages that are prone to crashes. They wait for later time trials and punishing mountain stages to make their move.

The favorites – including Kloeden, Alexandre Vinokourov of Kazakhstan, Levi Leipheimer of the U.S., Cadel Evans of Australia and Alejandro Valverde of Spain – are all within 45 seconds of Cancellara. The Swiss rider is not expected to keep up in the Alps and Pyrenees.

Before this year’s race, all riders signed an International Cycling Union pledge promising they are not involved in doping.