Loki Pico
Registered User
Join date: 20 Jun 2003
Posts: 1,938
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07-02-2005 17:48
The 2005 tour is underway! Lance Armstrong is seeking his 7th consecutive win and is off to a good start. Armstrong is the only rider to ever win six tours, with just four people having won five. If he wins, seven wins may never be repeated, so, Go Lance! Follow the tour at the official site: Tour de France WebsiteIn honor of the tour, my profile will feature a daily update to the tour top five standings.
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Loki Pico
Registered User
Join date: 20 Jun 2003
Posts: 1,938
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07-04-2005 18:35
Tour Standings... Stages completed, 3 of 21. (413.0km/256.6mi traveled) 1. David Zabriskie (USA/CSC) 8h48min 31sec 2. Lance Armstrong (USA/DIS) at 0:02 3. Laszlo Bodrogi (HUN/C.A) 0:47 4. Alexander Vinokourov (KAZ/MOB) 0:53 5. George Hincapie (USA/DIS) 0:57
The standings havent changed since the start, but tomorrow is the team time trial and it should shake up some of the standings.
I went to a watching party this morning at a local grocery store. Lance Armstrong is from Austin, so its a big deal here, lol. I wonder if other places around the country have Tour de France watching parties? I actually have about four options as to a venue to view, the grocery store is closest to where I live though. It was a lot of fun to watch out on the tree covered patio along with others that are interested in the tour.
Anyway, theres my tour update for you. If you got a fancy cable or satelite setup, you can watch it on OLN (outdoor life network). Its on daily for the next three weeks.
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Loki Pico
Registered User
Join date: 20 Jun 2003
Posts: 1,938
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07-12-2005 22:38
No one cares about the Tour de France? Lance looked really strong today and took back the yellow jersey. This week they are in the mountains, will be a good week to watch the coverage if you can. Tour Watching
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Ilianexsi Sojourner
Chick with Horns
Join date: 11 Jul 2004
Posts: 1,707
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07-12-2005 22:48
I saw something on the Sports Illustrated website that said he blew away his rivals in the latest leg of the race. Nice to see him giving props to the rest of his team, and to his 2nd place rival as well. Woot! Go Lance! 
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Saul2Paul Took
Eu Tine Cu Dinamo!
Join date: 24 Jan 2005
Posts: 22
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07-12-2005 23:11
I hope he wins his 7th. Go Lance Go, Punk the french in their own damn country.
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Loki Pico
Registered User
Join date: 20 Jun 2003
Posts: 1,938
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07-24-2005 13:27
Lance won! Seven consecutive Tour de France victories! What an amazing accomplishment, it may never be equalled. Its great to see Lance retire at the top of his game, what a class act. He is possibly the greatest cyclist of all time. Vive le Lance! A good NY Times storyMy in world tribute
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Loki Pico
Registered User
Join date: 20 Jun 2003
Posts: 1,938
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07-24-2005 13:32
Doh! The link to NY Times makes you log in. You can get there via Google News Or, read below. From: someone PARIS, July 24 - Once more, and for the last time, Lance Armstrong swept into Paris today as the winner and undisputed champion of the Tour de France.
Protected by Discovery Channel teammates on his way to victory and retirement, Armstrong finished the last of 21 daily stages and mounted his final podium after a day of intermittent cold rain.
Lance Armstrong with his three children after Sunday's final stage. Armstrong's new record of seven wins confirmed him as one of the greatest cyclists ever.
Although riders were still racing, with eight laps of the Champs-Élysées to complete, organizers said that Lance Armstrong had officially won the Tour de France.
He stood there with his three children, Luke, 5, and twin daughters, Isabel and Grace, 3. Both girls wore yellow dresses to go with their father's jersey while the boy was in blue with a yellow logo.
In a brief speech after a French military band played "The Star-Spangled Banner" and the American flag was raised on the Champs-Élysées, Armstrong praised the two riders flanking him on slightly lower steps, Ivan Basso and Jan Ullrich. Basso, the Italian leader of CSC from Denmark, finished second by 4 minutes 40 seconds and Ullrich, the German leader of T-Mobile from his homeland, was third, 6:21 behind.
"It's really a dream podium," Armstrong said. He called Basso "not only my rival but a special person. It's tough to race against a friend." The Italian beamed as he held his young daughter, Domitilla.
Ullrich, who has a young daughter too but broke the family atmosphere by leaving her at home, also came in for praise from Armstrong. He then thanked his teammates, team officials and a host of others. "Vive le Tour," he concluded. "Forever."
If the ceremony had a familiar ring after Armstrong's seventh consecutive victory before his immediate retirement, the concluding stage was a rarity.
Instead of the usual mass sprint finish, the 144.5-kilometer, or 90-mile, race from the suburb of Corbeil-Essonnes north into the capital was won in a surprise breakaway by Alexandre Vinokourov, a Kazakh with T-Mobile.
He sped away from the 154 other riders with three kilometers to go on the eighth and final circuit on the Champs-Élysées. Registering his second daily victory in this 92nd Tour, Vinokourov easily held off the chasing pack and the two riders nearest him, Bradley McGee, an Australian with Française des Jeux, and Fabian Cancellara, a Swiss with Fassa Bortolo.
The victory gave the Kazakh 20 bonus seconds, enabling him to move into fifth place over Levi Leipheimer, the American leader of Gerolsteiner, by just that margin. Earlier, Vinokourov picked up six bonus seconds in an intermediate sprint, with Leipheimer second, gaining four seconds, as his teammates failed to help him by swarming over the line ahead of the Kazakh.
"Wow," Armstrong said when he greeted Vinokourov after the stage.
The winner was timed in 3 hours 40 minutes 57 seconds, a speed of 39.2 kilometers over roads made treacherous by the rain.
Among other crashes, two of Armstrong's teammates and bodyguards, George Hincapie and Yaroslav Popovych, went down just before the race reached Paris and Armstrong had to slither around them, nearly running over Hincapie.
As is the custom, the opening part of the final stage was marked by general hilarity and conversations in the pack. Armstrong even shared a Champagne toast en route with his Discovery Channel team director, Johan Bruyneel, who was driving a car. Neither did more than clink glasses.
Once the hijinks were over, the race turned serious in Paris, with frequent attacks and careful bike handling on the wet cobblestones of the broad Champs-Élysées.
There was a lot at stake even if the final overall victory was not. The fight for the green points jersey was not settled until the finish, with Thor Hushovd, a Norwegian with Crédit Agricole, first, Stuart O'Grady, an Australian with Cofidis, second, and Robbie McEwen, an Australian with Davitamon, third.
The climbers' jersey was won by Mickael Rasmussen, a Dane with Rabobank and the victim of two crashes and three bicycle changes on Saturday in a time trial that sank him from third place over all to seventh. Second for the white jersey with red polka dots was Oscar Pereiro, a Spaniard with Phonak.
Popovych was the top rider under 26, followed by Andrei Kashechkin, a Kazakh with Crédit Agricole.
For his labors, Armstrong won 400,000 euros, or $500,000, in addition to a handsome bowl just like the six others at home in Austin, Tex.
Factoring in prizes for his days in the yellow jersey, three individual stage victories, including the time trial on Saturday that Armstrong won, and first place in the team time trial, Discovery Channel earned 545,640 euros to be distributed among riders, but not the leader, and team workers. That contrasted with the lowest haul among the 21 teams, 9, 310 euros for Euskaltel.
Armstrong took no part in the duel at the finish, coasting over his final line with a smile on his face as a crowd estimated at half a million watched.
His time for the 3,593 kilometers that were covered in three weeks was 86 hours 15 minutes 2 seconds, a speed of 41.6 kilometers an hour. If that seems high considering the many mountains transited, the riders were sometimes pushed by strong tailwinds, the roads are often resurfaced before a stage and bicycles are constantly being improved.
Although this was Armstrong's seventh triumph in the world's toughest bicycle race, it was in many ways, as he has said, just more icing on the cake. His sixth victory last year broke the tie he was in with four other dominators: Jacques Anquetil, a Frenchman; Eddy Merckx, a Belgian; Bernard Hinault, another Frenchman; and Miguel Indurain, a Spaniard.
They were the Tour stars of the 1960's, 70's, 80's and 90's. This new century has belonged to Armstrong, who was stricken in 1996 with testicular cancer that spread to his lungs and brain, underwent chemotherapy and, after nearly two years away from the sport, began his comeback in 1998.
The next year he won his first Tour de France. Now he has won his last one.
"There was nothing on the line this year, no history, no record, no financial reward, just a promise," he said Saturday, explaining his participation. When Discovery Channel signed on as sponsor for three years this season, replacing United States Postal Service, Armstrong promised to ride the Tour one more time.
As for his retirement, he said, "Absolutely no regrets."
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