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Lance Armstrong reigns supreme
PARIS, JULY 30. Lance Armstrong won his third straight Tour de
France title on Sunday, ending three weeks of grueling
competition that saw the American establish total domination over
the world's toughest cycling event.
Riding in the leader's Yellow Jersey he has worn for the last
seven stages of the Tour, he crossed the finish line on the
Champs Elysees with the main pack as tens of thousands of
spectators lined the graceful avenue.
He held both arms aloft in triumph on the winner's podium,
smiling in satisfaction. He then stepped down to embrace wife
Kristin and toddler son Luke, dressed in yellow like his father.
``It's the best feeling of the last three (wins),'' Armstrong
said in faltering French. ``As always I am happy to finally
arrive, to finally finish the Tour. It's a special feeling.''
His victory on Sunday had not been in doubt. He had built up a
huge lead in the mountains, meaning only sickness or accident
could prevent him from claiming the title.
He became the first American to win the Tour three times in a
row. Greg LeMond also won three Tours, but with a two- year gap
between his first and second titles. The Tour record of five wins
is held jointly by four riders. Only Spain's Miguel Indurain won
all five titles consecutively.
``The fourth (title) is still the first goal,'' Armstrong said.
``The Tour de France is the most beautiful, the biggest, and most
special race in the world for me, and for the United States.''
The rider from Austin, Texas, who came back from advanced
testicular cancer to win the Tour for the first time in 1999, was
close to the front of the pack when it reached the Champs Elysees
under a scorching sun.
Armstrong completed 10 laps up and down the avenue, circling the
Tuileries Gardens at the foot of the Louvre museum before heading
back toward the Arc de Triomphe. Czech rider Jan Svorada won
Sunday's stage between Corbeil-Essonnes and the French capital,
ending a more than 3,400-kilometre (2,100-mile) ride through
France and Belgium in 20 legs.
Armstrong finished with a big lead over second-placed Jan Ullrich
of Germany in the overall standings. Spaniard Joseba Beloki was
third. The final podium was identical to last year's. It was only
the second time in Tour history that the same riders have
finished in the same top three positions in consecutive years.
Armstrong's route to victory was sealed in just five mountain
stages. And by the time he was through, Armstrong's toughest
rival, Ullrich, acknowledged defeat with a whole week to go. ``I
tried everything to seek out the slightest weakness, but Lance
didn't have any,'' Ullrich said after the last mountain stage.
The contest opened for real halfway through the Tour when riders
reached the Alps. Armstrong arrived trailing the overall leader
by 22 places and fans were anxiously awaiting a sign that he had
the race under control. His title chances looked dim to many when
he grimaced in apparent agony and trailed Ullrich all the way to
the foot of L'Alpe d'Huez, one of the toughest climbs in cycling.
Then he began moving up through the pack. He continued until he
reached the front, just ahead of Ullrich. He looked back, then
surged ahead and sprinted up the 21 hairpin bends to the summit,
claiming his first stage victory and beating Ullrich by a
whopping one minute and 59 seconds.
He took the Yellow Jersey in a gut-wrenching stretch from Foix to
Pla d'Adet that featured six exceptionally difficult mountain
passes. Following a by-now familiar pattern, he let Ullrich lead
for most of the race before powering ahead in the last climb and
winning the stage.
Coming down from the mountains, the Texan extended his lead
further by winning the last individual time-trial, taking his
fourth stage victory of the Tour.
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