Posted on 07/25/2004 9:01:03 AM PDT by Smartaleck
PARIS - Lance Armstrong rode into history Sunday by winning the Tour de France for a record sixth time, an achievement that confirmed him as one of the greatest sportsmen of all time.
(Excerpt) Read more at story.news.yahoo.com ...
Le Schadenfreude
that's the best one
It would have been nice to see him cross the finish line, tho. They kept showing Thomas Boon. That in & of itself is pretty crappy, IMHO.
I'd like to see him continue. There is something to be said for going out on top. Still, as an athlete, I'd always question how long I could have kept it up. And I guess that would bug me to the point that I couldn't drop out until I lost one. I'm sure the training is grueling, so perhaps he'll opt to get on with his life and leave this chapter behind. What an excellent achievement.
/sarcasm off
I don't know, can he hit the off-speed inside pitch?
Congrats to Armstrong.
But I wish the frogs would do one Tour de Bosche Invasion Routes so the bikers could ride in the shade all day.
On second thought, they'd have to dodge all of the dropped french rifles strewn on and along the boulevard.
Beat me to it by 10mins. Goes ditto for me.
As predicted by George W last week!
1 minute ago
Add Sports - AP to My Yahoo! By JOHN LEICESTER, Associated Press Writer
PARIS - Lance Armstrong rode into history Sunday by winning the Tour de France for a record sixth time, an achievement that confirmed him as one of the greatest sportsmen of all time. His sixth crown in six dominant years elevated Armstrong above four champions who won five times.
AP Photo
And never in its 101-year-old history has the Tour had a winner like Armstrong a Texan who just eight years ago was given less than a 50 percent chance of overcoming testicular cancer that spread to his lungs and brain.
Armstrong's unbeaten streak since 1999 has helped reinvigorate the greatest race in cycling, steering it into the 21st century. And the Tour, as much a part of French summers as languid meals over chilled rose, molded Armstrong into a sporting superstar.
No. 6. The record. The achievement was almost too much even for Armstrong to comprehend.
"It might take years. I don't know. It hasn't sunk in yet. But six, standing on the top step on the podium on the Champs-Elysees is really special," he said.
For him, Sunday's final ride into Paris and its famous tree-lined boulevard was a lap of honor he savored with a glass of champagne in the saddle. Even Jan Ullrich, his main adversary in previous years who had his worst finish this Tour, gulped down a glass offered by Armstrong's team manager through his car window.
Belgian rider Tom Boonen won the final sprint on the Champs-Elysees, with Armstrong cruising safely behind with the trailing pack to claim his crown. Armstrong's winning margin over second-placed Andreas Kloden was 6 minutes, 19 seconds, with Italian Ivan Basso in third at 6:40. Ullrich finished fourth.
Armstrong opened a new page for the Tour in 1999 just one year after the race faced its worst doping scandal, ejecting the Festina team after police caught one of its employees with a stash of drugs.
Armstrong's victories and his inspiring comeback from cancer have drawn new fans to the race. His professionalism, attention to detail, grueling training methods and tactics have raised the bar for other riders hoping to win the three-week cycling marathon.
Eye-catching in the bright yellow race leader's jersey he works so hard for, Armstrong donned a golden cycling helmet for Sunday's relaxed roll past sun-baked fields of wheat and applauding spectators into Paris from Montereau in the southeast.
He joked and chatted with teammates who wore special blue jerseys with yellow stripes. They stretched in a line across the road with their leader for motorcycle-riding photographers to record the moment. The team was the muscle behind Armstrong's win, leading him up grueling mountain climbs, shielding him from crashes and wind, and keeping him stoked with drinks and food.
With five solo stage wins and a team time-trial victory with his U.S. Postal Service squad, this was Armstrong's best Tour. He built his lead from Day 1, placing second in the third-fastest debut time trial in Tour history.
That performance silenced doubts that Armstrong, at 32, was past his prime. Even more so than in other Tours that he dominated, Armstrong finished off rivals in the mountains with three victories in the Alps, including a time trial on the legendary climb to L'Alpe d'Huez, and another in the Pyrenees. He also took the final time trial on Saturday, even though he his overall lead was so big he didn't need the win.
"We never had a sense of crisis, only the stress of the rain and the crashes in the first week," Armstrong said. "I was surprised that some of the rivals were not better. Some of them just completely disappeared."
Basque rider Iban Mayo peaked too early when he beat Armstrong in the warm-up Dauphine Libere race three weeks before the Tour. Mayo crashed in the Tour's rain-soaked, nervous first week, racing toward a treacherous stretch of cobblestones that Armstrong crossed safely. Mayo finally abandoned the race after the Pyrenees, his morale shot after two disappointing rides in the mountains where he'd hoped to win in front of Basque fans.
Former Armstrong teammates Roberto Heras, left trailing in the mountains, and American Tyler Hamilton, badly bruised in a crash, also went home.
"The little guys, the pure climbers Mayo, Tyler the first week is very hard on them, always fighting for position, the wind. A lot of acceleration through villages at the finish. This becomes a problem for them after 10 days," Armstrong said. "That's the beauty of the Tour. If the race was 10 or 12 days long, they'd be much better. You have to do it all."
Ullrich, the 1997 champion and a five-time runner-up, never recovered from seeing Armstrong zoom into the distance for two straight days in the Pyrenees.
The only rider to stay with Armstrong there was Basso, a 26-year-old with the makings of a future winner. He came out of the Alps, where Armstrong for the first time in his career won three consecutive stages, in second place overall.
But Kloden, the German champion and Ullrich's teammate, outdid the soft-spoken Basso in the final time trial, placing third behind Armstrong and Ullrich. That ride propelled Kloden, who did not complete last year's Tour, into second spot on the podium, pushing Basso back to third.
"I never would have predicted Kloden before the Tour. But you could see he was really strong and skinny in the first week," Armstrong
Also very cool to hear the USA national anthem playing in the Champs Elysee on a beautiful Sunday en Paris!
I do hope he comes back for a 7th!
USA!
Great going Lance! The yellow arm bands seen in almost every newscast show our support for your efforts. We are behind you as a cancer survivor, a hard worker in your very competitive field, a Texan and an American.
For those of you that have not been to France this year, I want you to know that what we hear about the French despising Americans is not true. Four of us, from Texas, were there in February, 2004. I didn't know any French! I learned, good day, thank you and please but forgot them as I froze leaving the hotel room alone while my husband and his two coworkers left for work. The French people knew I was American, it's just hard to hide. We were in Greenoble, France for two days. I had to point and hold up fingers for how many baked goods I wanted and then hold out my hand for them to take the money for what I purchased. I greeted them with a smile and left with a smile. Warm smiles were given back and forth the whole time we were there. A waiter even followed me out of a restaurant while I was taking a fresh air break from the smoke and we ended up talking for half an hour as he spoke great English.
It's not ALL the French people and ALL the German people, it's the MEDIA and who they put in front of their cameras or in print!!!! We were welcomed in Germany and France in February 2004 and I'd get on a plane to both countries in a heartbeat.
God Bless Us All!
He is not the good guy that he is made out to be. He left the wife and kids that stood by him during his testicular cancer days in order to ride the Tour de Pants of Sheryl Crow. Sponsored by the U.S. Postal Service, Lance delivers. Perhaps he was the inspiration for Crow's "First Cut Is The Deepest".
Wonder why the French have designated being "yellow" is a good thing?
Is Lance about to spit that French wine on someone?
However Lance Armstrong is a remarkable person to be able to do this and deserves praise. The fact that he did it to the french only sweetens the pot.
Congratulations Lance!
Take that, cheese eating surrender monkeys!
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