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Frank Schleck wins 17th Tour de France stage; Contador remains in lead

Published on July 23, 2009
Published on January 3, 2010
The Associated Press ~ staff The News  RSS Feed
Topics :
Saxo Bank , Astana , Le Grand-Bornand , Luxembourg

LE-GRAND-BORNAND, France - Alberto Contador closed in on the overall victory at the Tour de France Wednesday after finishing second behind Frank Schleck of Luxembourg in the 17th stage as the race left the Alps.
Lance Armstrong trailed more than two minutes back and fell from second to fourth place overall in the 169-kilometre ride from Bourg-Saint-Maurice to Le Grand-Bornand - seen by many as the toughest stage this year.
The stage likely ended any realistic chance Armstrong had of overtaking his Astana teammate Contador, and the seven-time Tour champion will now have to fight for a place on the podium instead.
Contador held on to the yellow jersey by staying with Schleck and his younger brother Andy in a three-man breakaway at the end of the stage. Andy Schleck finished third while Armstrong was fifth, 2:18 back.
"I'm very proud of myself - I'm proud of my brother," Frank Schleck said.
The Schleck brothers both leapfrogged Armstrong in the overall standings, with Andy 2:26 behind Contador in second place and Frank 3:25 behind in third. Armstrong trails Contador by 3:55.
Garmin-Slipstream rider and Victoria native Ryder Hesjedal finished the stage 26th and is 56th overall.
The stage featured five climbs, but the drama set in during the last two - the super-steep Romme and Colombiere passes. Contador proved he simply cannot be shaken by his rivals in the mountains.
On the Colombiere, Armstrong couldn't keep up when Contador pulled away with Astana teammate Andreas Kloeden and the Schlecks, who ride for the Saxo Bank team.
Instead, Armstrong stayed back alongside Britain's Bradley Wiggins to protect Contador. Wiggins entered the day in third place overall and would have been helped by any effort from Armstrong to close the gap to the leaders.
So the Texan decided to wait, for a while. With about 14 kilometres left, Armstrong stepped on the gas to leave Wiggins behind.
"I couldn't find my acceleration to go with the other guys," Armstrong said. "I was there stuck with Wiggins. I had to wait until it got steeper, when you knew you could definitely go away.
"I probably should have gone with the early acceleration."
Armstrong isn't ruling out second place on the podium.
"Yes, it's still my goal, I think it's possible," he said.
The elder Schleck collected his second stage win at cycling's premiere event - after winning another Alpine stage in 2006 up to the L'Alpe d'Huez ski station.
The Schlecks were the main attackers against Contador during the final two punishing climbs, and at times took turns relaying each other or trying to shake the Spaniard.
"We bet everything - make or break it," Frank Schleck said." We deserved to win ... we attacked one after another. We countered well - it was a good tactic."
When Contador, Kloeden and the Schlecks were alone in front on the Colombiere, the Spaniard surprisingly mounted his own attack on the two brothers - but only his German teammate got dropped.
Contador said he had discussed attacking the Schlecks with team manager Johan Bruyneel by radio, who then advised him to take it up with Kloeden.
"He told me, 'Go for it,"' Contador said.
Levi Leipheimer, an Astana teammate who crashed out of the Tour after breaking his wrist, tweeted: "Well that wasn't a good move!!"
"If Andreas finishes 4th in GC by less than 2 (minutes) from 3rd, we know where he lost it," Leipheimer wrote, referring to the general classification, or overall standings.
Armstrong, Kloeden and Wiggins are stronger time-trial riders than the Schlecks - and could make up ground in the 40.5-kilometre race against the clock in Annecy on Thursday.
Kloeden finished sixth in the stage and sits fifth overall, 4:44 behind Contador. Wiggins, a three-time Olympic pursuit champion, is sixth overall, 4:53 behind, after finishing seventh in the stage.
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AP Sports Writer Samuel Petrequin contributed to this report.

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