SAINT-GIRONS, France (AP) -- Seven-time champion Lance Armstrong remains in third place in the Tour de France, after Spain's Luis Leon Sanchez won the eighth stage Saturday in a sprint ahead of three other breakaway riders.Rinaldo Nocentini of Italy earned the yellow jersey for the second straight day by finishing in a pack with Armstrong and his Astana teammate Alberto Contador. The 2007 Tour winner is six seconds back, with Armstrong eight seconds back.
Armstrong went straight to the team bus after the stage and did not speak to reporters. He posted on Twitter: "St8 done. Tough but not 2 challenging. Had antidoping control AGAIN. Couldn't pee so it took forever. Sucked! Now I'm starting to wonder tho''
Teammate Levi Leipheimer is 39 seconds off the pace in fourth place overall.
Nocentini almost lost his yellow jersey when the main race favorites - including Armstrong and Contador - left him behind in the last of the climbs. He credited an escort from his AG2R La Mondiale teammate Stephane Goubert for helping him catch up.
"I had been dropped,'' said Nocentini, a 31-year-old riding in his first Tour. "To him, I say 'thank you' for helping me hang on to the yellow jersey.''
Before the start, Leipheimer tweeted: ``Today's stage starts off going uphill for 20 miles!! That's a rude awakening, plenty of riders will be looking to get in the breakaway.''
He certainly was right.
Two-time Tour runner-up Cadel Evans, a pre-race favorite, was among those to attack on the first climb, the Envalira Pass, at the 14.6-mile mark. He and others built a lead on the pack of about 2 minutes, but the Australian was reeled in after about 39 miles.
Sanchez, who won the Paris-Nice stage race in March, led a four-person breakaway toward the finish line. He looked skyward and tapped his chest after crossing just ahead of France's Sandy Casar and Mikel Astarloza of Spain. They clocked 4 hours, 31 minutes, 50 seconds for the 110-mile trek along three big climbs from the Pyrenean principality of Andorra to Saint-Girons.
"You need to have luck,'' said Sanchez, who won a Tour stage last year. He dedicated the victory to his older brother, Leon, who died in a quad bike accident four years ago.
The victory for Caisse d'Epargne rider Sanchez was a boost to his team. Oscar Pereiro, the 2006 Tour champion, quit the race due to fatigue and the team's star rider, Alejandro Valverde, is not in the Tour because of an Italian doping probe.
Vladimir Efimkin, who was reeled in by Sanchez after a failed solo breakaway, finished the stage in fourth place, while the main pack trailed 1:54 behind.
"That was a really long, hard climb,'' said Christian Vande Velde of Garmin-Slipstream, who was 1:24 behind the yellow jersey and eighth overall.
Among the other favorites, Andy Schleck of Luxembourg is 1:49 back in ninth, defending Tour winner Carlos Sastre of Spain is 2:52 back in 16th, and Evans is 3:07 behind in 18th place.
Riders face a third and final day in the Pyrenees on Sunday, a 100-mile course from Saint-Gaudens to Tarbes via the famed Tourmalet Pass, one of the toughest climbs in pro cycling.
The three-week race ends July 26 in Paris, with the Alps, a final individual time trial and the dreaded Mont Ventoux awaiting in the last week.
By JAMEY KEATEN, AP Sports Writer
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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
7-11-2009 @ 4:58PM
Mary Ann said...
This guy went into this race for the wrong reasons. He made his announcement right after Michael Phelps won all those gold medals. He did it to compete with Michael Phelps and be king of the world. So, he will lose and I really wonder if he won all those other races fair and square - personally, I don't believe he did
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7-11-2009 @ 6:40PM
cange10 said...
How do you know why he went back? He went back as a competitor....and yes maybe he does want to prove that he is the best. What is so wrong with that? He's un 3rd in stage 8 and you already have him losing? He's 37, been away from cycling and in 3rd in the Tour...I think that is a statement of his greatness.
7-11-2009 @ 5:28PM
drritsert said...
Armstrong is one of the most tested sports competitors there is. There's no way he could get around any known doping.
And, wow, I like the very, very insightful quote they chose to print.
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7-11-2009 @ 5:38PM
E raymond said...
Your headline must have been written by someone who hasn't watched the Tour and knows nothing about cycling. In stage 8 no one ( of the leaders) gained any time. What have you got against Lance anyway?
Please get a real cycling writer!
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7-11-2009 @ 7:48PM
Red said...
Who cares. He is such a jerk anyway.
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7-11-2009 @ 8:15PM
chilco said...
whine whine whine. All of these elite athletes do performance enhancing drugs. Repeat... ALL OF THEM. So the palying field is level. You want superhuman performances then you do superhuman things. Get over it or start attending pee wee events and playing ping pong.
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7-11-2009 @ 8:21PM
fairminded1 said...
While I applaud Lance Armstrong for his victory over cancer. (I wish everyone good health). I stopped rooting for him when he divorced his wife.I don't care what kind of talent you have, family comes first. Besides, she stood by him when he was sick and before he became a big time celebrity. Family first, fame second.
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7-11-2009 @ 9:07PM
arhmgr said...
Why are so many people against Lance? Regardless of his personal life which should be personal or his reasons for entering the Tour this year the fact remains "he is the greatest cyclist of all time". He has won the Tour an unprecedented seven times! It does not even matter if he wins this year as he is and always will be the best. Like it or not.
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7-11-2009 @ 9:48PM
chuckycheez48 said...
These guys ride day to day under team orders. The Astana team orders for stage 8 were to ride a constant race for the day. Armstrong followed team orders,as did the rest of the Astana team.Contador broke out on his own, pissing off the rest of the team, gaining a pitiful 8 seconds, and resulting in a team meeting about following orders sat. mmorning. The real testing will come in the Alps in about 2 weeks. Where Armstrong will dominate.
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