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2004 Tour de France
2004 Tour de France news
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A d v e r t i s e m e n t

 News
Stage 20 July 25, 2004
Stage 19 July 24, 2004
Stage 18 July 23, 2004
Stage 17 July 22, 2004
Stage 16 July 21, 2004
Stage 15 July 20, 2004
Stage 14 July 18, 2004
Stage 13 July 17, 2004
Stage 12 July 16, 2004
Stage 11 July 15, 2004
Stage 10 July 14, 2004
Stage 9 July 13, 2004
Stage 8 July 11, 2004
Stage 7 July 10, 2004
Stage 6 July 09, 2004
Stage 5 July 08, 2004
Stage 4: Team Time Trial July 07, 2004
Stage 3 July 06, 2004
Stage 2 July 05, 2004
Stage 1 July 04, 2004
Prologue July 03, 2004
Tour Preview July 02, 2004
Stage 18 June 23, 2004
Stage 17 June 22, 2004
 Tour de France Photos
2004 Tour Photo Gallery #7,
July 26

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2004 Tour Photo Gallery #6,
July 22

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2004 Tour Photo Gallery #5,
July 19

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2004 Tour Photo Gallery #4,
July 14

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2004 Tour Photo Gallery #3,
July 11

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2004 Tour Photo Gallery #2,
July 9

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2004 Tour Photo Gallery #1, July 62004 Tour Photo Gallery #1,
July 6

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2004 TOUR DE FRANCE
Stage 13: July 17, 2004

Stage 13: July 17, 2004
Armstrong Wins Stage 13; Hamilton Quits Tour
Compiled by Outside Online


Armstrong narrowly bested Ivan Basso for a Stage 13 victory
Armstrong narrowly bested Ivan Basso
for a Stage 13 victory (Beth Schneider)
Five-time Tour winner Lance Armstrong won his first stage of the 2004 Tour Saturday, edging out CSC's Ivan Basso on the 128-mile mountain course from Lannemezan to Plateau de Beille. Although Armstrong put considerable time between himself and his main rivals he still wasn't able to wrest the yellow jersey from Frenchman Thomas Voeckler (Brioches la Boulangere), who currently holds a 22 second lead over the Texan. Georg Totsching (Gerolsteiner) took third place, Andréas Klöden (T-Mobile) placed fourth and Francisco Mancebo (Illes Balears-Banesto) rounded out the top five. Although Jan Ullrich (T-Mobile) placed a respectable sixth on the day, he crossed the finish line 2:42 behind Armstrong, giving the Texan a considerable advantage going into Stage 14.

Armstrong currently stands in second place in the overall standings with Basso in third place and Ullrich in eighth.

It was a wild day at the Tour, with Phonak team leader Tyler Hamilton dropping out of the race after about 52 miles of racing, Armstrong suffering a flat tire, and former U.S. Postal Lieutenant Roberto Heras (Liberty Seguros) crashing on the descent from the Col de la Core climb.

According to the Tour de France's official Web site, Phonak's team director said the reason for Hamilton's abandoning the race is extreme back pain. Hamilton, a former domestique for U.S. Postal, was considered a legitimate contender for this year's Tour title before dropping out. Last year, the Phonak team leader placed fourth after racing for most of the Tour with a broken collarbone and winning a stage.

"He has bruising all down the left side of his back," Phonak manager Urs Freuler told the AP. "When you are in a climb you need the output from the back muscles. Tyler could not generate the power only from his legs."

According to the AP, Hamilton suffered an injury to his back during Stage 6 of the Tour as he fell on the pedal of another bike during a crash. The report also stated that the Phonak rider has a history of back problems as he broke his back years ago while competing with the University of Colorado's alpine ski team.

Heras did not sustain any major injuries in the crash Saturday and finished 49th on the day. He currently stands at 34th in the general classification standings.

After multiple attempted attacks and counter-attacks Jens Voigt (CSC) and Michael Rasmussen (Rabobank) were able to secure a lead of 4:25 over the peloton, with eight miles to go, before it was slowly chipped away.

With 9.3 miles left to race, the duo had a 2:30 lead over Armstrong's group and with seven miles left, that lead had been whittled down to about 30 seconds. A few moments later, Ullrich lost quite a bit of steam and fell off the main chase group, composed of Armstrong, Basso, Totschnig, and U.S. Postal lieutenant José Azevedo. On the strength of Azevedo's pace, the group first overtook Voigt and then Rasmussen, eventually dropping Totsching as well, and leaving just Armstrong, Basso and Azevedo.

With about four miles left in the stage, Azevedo cracked, leaving Basso and Armstrong to battle it out for the stage win. With under 1000 feet to go, it looked as if Basso would pull off a repeat performance of Stage 12, and beat Armstrong to the finish. But with just over 300 feet to the finish line, Armstrong stood on the pedals, and sprinted past Basso for the win.

In other news, the International Cycling Union ruled that U.S. Postal's Pavel Padrnos would be allowed to remain in the Tour, at least for now. Tour organizers had asked that he be removed due to his involvement in a doping case, but that request was turned down and Padrnos was able to ride Saturday.

Tomorrow's race rolls 120 miles through Provence, from Carcassonne to Nîmes.







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