Sastre
wins 17th stage of Tour
ALPE D’HUEZ, France — The mountains
have proved that Cadel Evans isn’t the fastest man uphill,
but the Australian may have done just enough to win the Tour
de France.
Carlos Sastre of Spain did all he could to gain time on Evans
by winning yesterday’s 17th stage and taking the yellow
jersey off his CSC teammate, Frank Schleck of Luxembourg,
in the hardest Alpine ride this year.
With the toughest mountain stages over and
a final time trial awaiting Sunday, the podium outlook is
taking shape in what until now had been one of the closest
Tours in years — with seven different riders having
worn the yellow jersey.
Sastre beat other title contenders by at least
two minutes in the 130.8-mile ride from Embrun to L’Alpe
d’Huez. Overall, he leads Schleck by 1 minute, 24 seconds,
and Bernhard Kohl of Germany by 1:33. The three-week race
ends on Monday.
While Evans is fourth, 1:34 back, he is the
best time trial rider in that bunch, and his rivals knew they
needed to get a big jump on him in the climbs. And Evans wasn’t
shaken when it counted.
“I suffered a lot on the way to the
summit, but I take great pleasure in capturing the jersey,”
Sastre said through a translator. “A pure climber has
to take advantage of his opportunities, and this was mine.”
The strong position of Evans points more to
cautious and canny riding, despite the CSC-led attacks on
him during three Alpine stages. At times the Danish squad
had to fight headwinds.
Asked if he thinks he can win, Sastre said:
“I don’t know. I don’t want to think about
that now.”
Two mostly flat stages before Saturday aren’t
likely to influence the leading bunch. Thursday’s stage
is a 122.1-mile ride through medium mountains from Bourg-d’Oisans
to Saint-Etienne.
Evans, the 31-year-old Silence Lotto team
leader who was second last year, is perhaps the man to beat
— barring bad weather or a mishap. For him, being a
complete rider matters most, through the flats and in the
time trials as well as in the mountains.
Saturday’s time trial — the next-to-last
stage before the race ends in Paris — is likely to determine
the winner. Riders will set off one by one along 32.9 miles
from Cerilly to Saint-Amand-Montrond.
When it comes to time trials, past performance
is often a good indicator. The race against the clock Saturday
is about the same distance and layout as two in last year’s
Tour.
In the first one of those, in Albi, Evans was second behind
Kazakh rider Alexandre Vinokourov, who was later kicked out
after testing positive for a blood transfusion. Sastre was
2:47 slower than the Australian. In the second, from Cognac
to Angouleme, Evans was again second, behind Levi Leipheimer
of the United States, and 2:33 faster than Sastre. Kohl and
Schleck were even further back each time.
In the first time trial this year —
Stage 4 in and around Cholet — Evans was fourth, 27
seconds behind stage winner Stefan Schumacher of Germany.
Sastre was 28th, 1:43 back.
Among strong time trial riders still in contention for the
podium, Denis Menchov of Russia is fifth, 2:39 behind Sastre,
and Christian Vande Velde of the United States is sixth, 4:41
back.
Sastre is no slouch: he’s placed in
the top 10 five times at the Tour, and won a mountain stage
in 2003. The 33-year-old Spaniard is riding in his eighth
Tour, and this is his first yellow jersey.
“It’s a dream come true,”
he said.
The title contenders played it safe and didn’t
attack on the first two climbs up the Galibier and Croix de
Fer passes. Along with the Alpe d’Huez, they amounted
to nearly 40 miles of ascents so hard that they are beyond
classification.
CSC was dominant up the first two climbs,
leading the group around the race leader that split ahead
of the main pack. By the foot of the Alpe d’Huez, Schleck
had five teammates escorting him. Then Sastre went ahead.
“I had to take the risk of attacking
from the beginning” of that climb, Sastre said, adding
that he knew he needed to get a time cushion against Evans
and Menchov to have a shot at the title.
Evans, who was in the group of other title
hopefuls, said he didn’t stand much chance of catching
Sastre — even if he did lead that group up the climb
for much of the last few miles.
“When you have the 10 best bike riders
in the world behind your wheel and you have a 2-minute gap
to close on one of the best climbers in the world, it’s
not any situation to be in,” Evans said.
But the situation looks better for him from
here on out.
“The time trial is the race of truth
and whoever has the legs will win,” Evans said./PN
|