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Number 6 for Armstrong
American Lance Armstrong became the first six-time winner of the Tour de France after completing the final 20th stage of the race into Paris yesterday. Belgian's Tom Boonen of the Quick Step team won the final stage, a 163km ride from Montereau to Paris. Australian Robbie McEwen did enough in the final sprint to guarantee his second green jersey for the points competition having won it in 2002.
Frenchman Richard Virenque won a record seventh polka dot jersey for the race's best climber. The 32-year-old Armstrong won five stages on this year's race to take his total from 10 participations in the Tour de France to 21. Armstrong equalled the record of five wins co-held by Jacques Anquetil, Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault and Miguel Indurain last year. However this year the American was sublime as he held off his main pre-race rival Jan Ullrich of Germany, the 1997 winner and five-time runner-up. In second place overall behind Armstrong was Ullrich's T-Mobile teammate Andreas Kloden, whose performance in the final time trial of the race on Saturday assured him the the runner-up place at the expense of Italian Ivan Basso. The 29-year-old German finished more than six minutes behind Armstrong. Basso, a 26-year-old who rides for the CSC team, finished third at around seven minutes to claim his first podium from the Tour de France having won the race's white jersey for the race's best rider aged under 25 in 2002. Ullrich, who complained of having a cold in the first week of the race which started in the Belgian city of Liege, finished in sixth place overall at more than nine minutes, his lowest ever result on the Tour. After some early attacks by Italian rider Filippo Simeoni, which were quickly brought to heel by Armstrong's US Postal team, the first real drama of the day unfolded at the first of two intermediate sprints at the 86km mark. McEwen, who started the day with an 11-point lead over Thor Hushovd, boosted his tally further after coasting over the line ahead of the Norwegian champion whose Credit Agricole team had got their sums wrong in leading him out. The 32-year-old Australian took six points to Hushovd's four for second place on the sprint, giving him an extra two points ahead of the next sprint, on the Champs Elysees. By the time they'd reached the capital's famous boulevard, however, McEwen had to settle for second place. The little Lotto rider may have been caught out by a sprint for the line by Sylvain Chavanel. Who the Frenchman was working for is unknown, but his burst prompted the Credit Agricole riders to pour forward, and on the line Hushovd grabbed the full six points ahead of McEwen, who took four, to bring the lead back to 11 points. Their battle would not take place then until the finish line, after eight laps of the 6.1 km city circuit. But their plans were temporarily put on ice when a 10-man group broke away from the peloton not long after the second of those laps to go on and build a lead of just over 30 seconds. Eventually the group was caught and in the final home straight it was Boonen who emerged from the bunch to coast confidently over the line to claim his second stage of the race on his debut. Boonen came over the line ahead of Frenchman Jean-Patrick Nazon, of AG2R, who won here last year. In third place was German Danilo Hondo, with McEwen claiming fourth place. Hushovd missed the final sprint after a mistake at the final bend before the home straight. Factbox: Born: September 18, 1971 in Texas, US. Brought up by his mother Linda. 1999: Won the Tour for the first time, taking four stage wins on the way. 2000: Earned a second Tour victory beating previous winners Jan Ullrich and Marco Pantani. Won bronze medal for individual time trial at Sydney Olympics. 2001: Became only the fifth man in 88 editions of the Tour to win three or more times in succession following Louison Bobet (1953-55), Jacques Anquetil (1961-64), Eddy Merckx (1969-72) and Miguel Indurain (1991-95). 2002: Took his fourth Tour title - one short of the record held by Anquetil (France), Merckx (Belgium), Bernard Hinault (France) and Indurain (Spain). Armstrong won four stages and wore the yellow jersey continuously after taking it on stage 11. 2003: Named sportsman of the year at the Laureus World Sports Awards. Took the Tour de France yellow jersey on the eighth stage to L'Alpe d'Huez. Won a record equalling fifth Tour. 2004: Won record-breaking sixth Tour de France. Took over the yellow jersey after winning the 15th stage. |
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