Armstrong Wins His 5th Tour De France

jazz lady

~*~ Rara Avis ~*~
PREMO Member
:clap: Way to go, Lance! :patriot:

PARIS - Sipping champagne to celebrate his victory, Lance Armstrong won his hardest but sweetest Tour de France title Sunday — a record-tying fifth straight win that places him alongside the greatest cyclists in the sport.

The 31-year-old cancer survivor and Spanish great Miguel Indurain are now the only two riders to win the sport's most grueling and prestigious race five times straight — a record Armstrong plans to break next year.

Savoring his feat on a largely processional final stage past distinguished Paris landmarks, Armstrong sipped from a flute of champagne and toasted his achievement with a "cheers!" as he rode, wearing the overall leader's yellow jersey that he had so ardently coveted.

"It's incredible to win again," the 31-year-old Texan said.

The indefatigable Armstrong overcame illness, crashes, dehydration, team and equipment problems and uncharacteristic bad days during the 23-day, 3,427.5-kilometer (2,125-mile) clockwise slog around France to win by his smallest-ever margin — just 76 seconds over five-time runner-up Jan Ullrich of Germany.

Armstrong, who had never before won by less than six minutes, said his fifth title was "definitely the hardest" but "feels better" than the previous four, when he demoralized rivals by dominating in lung-burning mountain ascents and super-speedy time trials.

A staunch perfectionist, Armstrong said the closeness of the victory was already motivating him to come roaring back in 2004.

"The other years I won by six, seven minutes. I think it makes it more exciting and sets up an attempt for number six," he said. "Before the Tour started I was very confident about winning. But before next year's Tour, I won't be so confident."

The intense rivalry between Armstrong and Ullrich, the 1997 Tour winner, turned 'Le Tour' into a gripping festival of cycling after four years when Armstrong was so strong that he was all but assured of victory days before the finish on the Champs-Elysees.

But this year, the Texan only sewed up his win in a rain-soaked time trial Saturday, the penultimate day, when he managed to stay upright on the slippery road while Ullrich skidded and crashed, ending a squarely fought duel to erase Armstrong's slim lead.

So action-packed was this Tour that Armstrong was prepared even Sunday, on the largely processional final stage, for the unexpected.

"If a plane landed in the race I wouldn't be surprised," he said before setting off from the Paris suburb of Ville d'Avray on the 152-kilometer (92.4 mile) ride through streets packed with cheering spectators.

Armstrong, who underwent surgery and stomach-wrenching chemotherapy to cure him of testicular cancer diagnosed in 1996 that that had spread to his lungs and brain, said his hard Tour battle had humbled him.

"It makes me appreciate this victory and the other victories more because you realize the best form and the best conditioning are not a given," said Armstrong, who favors the Tour above all other races and prepares meticulously for it.

Aside from Armstrong and Indurain, just three other riders have won the Tour five times, but not consecutively. They are Belgium's Eddy Merckx, and Frenchmen Jacques Anquetil and Bernard Hinault. If Armstrong does not win a record sixth title, the question of who is the best will long be debated.

"Armstrong's courageous, a fighter. Somebody who perseveres until the end," said Hinault, whose wins came in 1978-1979, 1981-1982 and 1985.

"You have to do like him to beat him. He's certainly a star, but I don't know if he's a superstar. It's a new generation of riders. They have radios, they work more closely in teams. It's a different era," he said.

Indurain said he still views Merckx as the greatest.

"He competed in virtually every cycling competition, whereas Armstrong really only focuses on the Tour," he told the AP.

The Spaniard, who held the Tour in an iron grip from 1991-1995, said Armstrong would be hard-pressed to win six.

"Of course it's possible. But every year it gets more difficult, and he'll face some tough rivals," he said.

Ullrich, returning from two knee operations and a ban for taking amphetamines in a disco, came into the Tour saying he did not expect to win. But as it became evident that Armstrong was not at his best, the German and other key rivals pressured the Texan as never before, attacking him relentlessly on grueling mountain stages in the Alps and Pyrenees.

Ullrich was most devastating in a time trial July 18, when he sliced a whopping 96 seconds off Armstrong, who had never before been beaten by the German in the race against clock at the Tour before this year.

Armstrong wilted in scorching heat that day in the sun-roasted south of France, hanging grimly onto second place but losing about 5 kilograms (11 pounds) in weight through dehydration. It was a crucial mistake that prompted speculation that at 31, he was too old to win again.

But Armstrong stormed back three days later on a mist-shrouded 13.4-kilometer (8.3-mile) ascent to the Pyrenean ski station of Luz-Ardiden, one of the Tour's hardest climbs. Armstrong recovered from a fall, caused by a spectator's outstretched bag that caught his handlebars, to roar past Ullrich, who sportingly waited for him to get back on his bike. Other than a victory in the team time trial with his U.S. Postal Service squad, it was Armstrong's only stage win of this Tour and marked a turning point. From then on, Ullrich was chasing Armstrong's lead.

"At the start of the climb, I knew that that was where I needed to win the Tour," Armstrong said. "At the finish I was confident that that was enough."

Armstrong said that in previous years, his preparations for the following Tour begin almost straight after his victory celebrations. Not this year.

"This Tour took a lot out of me," he said. "I need to step back from cycling and from the races and relax a little bit and focus on 2004 in due time."
 
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Frostillicus

Guest
What about that dude that won a stage with the busted up chicken wing? All right Hamilton!
 

Christy

b*tch rocket
Originally posted by Frostillicus
What about that dude that won a stage with the busted up chicken wing? All right Hamilton!

Yeah, but Lance Armstrong is a Honey, no one else matters TYVM. :rolleyes: :wink:
 
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