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2005 Tour de France 2004 Tour de France news
2005 Bike Review

Check out the smoothest rigs this side of L'Alpe d'Huez in "State of the Art," our review of the new spokesmodels of spin.  [more

Cycling Training

Are you fit enough to blow through three weeks of hundred-mile race stages? Funny, neither are we. But with a whole lot of practice and some help from Chris Carmichael and the Outside Training Center perhaps we too could tackle le Tour. Plus, get your questions answered in the exclusive Fitness Q&A with Chris Carmichael.   [more

A d v e r t i s e m e n t

 News
Stage 21 July 24, 2005
Stage 20 July 23, 2005
Stage 19 July 22, 2005
Stage 18 July 21, 2005
Stage 17 July 20, 2005
Stage 16 July 19, 2005
Stage 15 July 17, 2005
Stage 14 July 16, 2005
Stage 13 July 15, 2005
Stage 12 July 14, 2005
Stage 11 July 13, 2005
Stage 10 July 12, 2005
Stage 9 July 10, 2005
Stage 8 July 09, 2005
Stage 7 July 08, 2005
Stage 6 July 07, 2005
Stage 5 July 06, 2005
Stage 4 July 05, 2005
Stage 3 July 04, 2005
Stage 2 July 03, 2005
Stage 1 July 02, 2005
 Tour de France Photos
Lance Armstrong photoTour de France 2005
Stages 19-21

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Lance Armstrong photoTour de France 2005
Stages 16-18

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Lance Armstrong and the Discovery Channel Team photoTour de France 2005
Stages 13-15

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Cormet-de-Roseland photoTour de France 2005
Stages 10-12

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Lance Armstrong, Bobby Julich, and Denis Menchov photoTour de France 2005
Stages 7-9

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Tour de France PelotonTour de France 2005
Stages 4-6

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Lance ArmstrongTour de France 2005
Stages 1-3

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Lance Armstrong Foundation

You've seen them everywhere, from grade school kids to John Kerry's wrist. Buy a yellow wristband emblazoned with Lance's motto, "Live Strong," and join the effort to raise money for the Lance Armstrong Foundation's fight against cancer.  [more


2005 TOUR DE FRANCE
Stage 21: July 24, 2005

Stage 21: July 24, 2005
Lance Armstrong Wins Seventh Tour de France
Outside Online coverage compiled by Justin Nyberg


Discovery team portrait
Discovery team portrait (Beth Schneider)
It’s over. Seven Tours de France in seven years. Eighty-three yellow jerseys. Twenty-one stage victories.

With a smile the size of Texas, Lance Armstrong crossed the finish line in Paris after 86 hours, 15 minutes, and two seconds of riding over 2,242 miles, etching his name into history as the most dominant rider ever in the Tour de France, and leaving his career as a professional cyclist on the zenith of his powers.

The 33-year-old took the podium with his three children at his side, kissing his final pair of models, and held his final spoils—the trophy, a bouquet, the saffron stuffed lion, and the yellow jersey he has virtually owned since 1999, the year Armstrong won his first Tour after recovering from testicular cancer.

Team CSC’s Ivan Basso finished second, and German Jan Ullrich, Armstrong’s greatest rival over the past seven years, was on his left in third place as the Star-Spangled Banner rang out over the Champs-Elysees.

“For me to end a career with this podium is perfect. It’s really a dream podium,” Armstrong told the Outdoor Life Network (OLN), addressing the crowd from the tallest of three awards platforms. He thanked his sponsors and competitors, then alluded to the cavernous hole that will exist in the peloton next year by his retirement. “Ivan, maybe this is your step or Jan, maybe this is yours. I’m out of it, so it’s up to you guys.”

Rain on the final day in Paris caused race referees to stop the clock due to fears that the riders would crash en masse on the eight laps and tight turns around the Champs-Elysees. The decision gave Armstrong the victory without the need to ride hard for the finish line. However, after Armstrong won the individual time trial yesterday—his first stage victory of the year—his win was sealed. Armstrong rode part of the day with a glass of champagne in hand, flashing the number seven to the cameras.

The referees’ decision to kill the clock didn’t stop the sprinters in their fight for the final stage victory of the Tour. T-Mobile’s Alexandre Vinokourov, the national champion of his native Kazakhstan, who has continually challenged the leaders with bold attacks throughout the Tour, blasted out of the peloton with just under a mile to go. He held off Bradley McGee of Francaise des Jeux and Fassa Bortolo’s Fabian Cancellara to win his second stage of the Tour.

Behind him, Thor Hushovd (Credit Agricole) was sprinting to fend off Cofidis’ Stuart O’Grady and Davitamon-Lotto’s Robbie McEwen in the points competition—the only jersey left undecided coming into Paris.

Though Hushovd was beaten by both, the lion’s share of points went to Vinokourov, and with 194 collected over the course of the Tour, Hushovd kept the green jersey he has worn since the previous leader, Tom Boonen (Quick-Step), abandoned the race in Stage 12. O’Grady was just behind him with 182 points.

Confusion lingered about the overall standings behind Armstrong even after the last riders had crossed the line. With the clock stopped, the referees had originally announced that riders would not be given time bonuses for placing highly in the intermediate sprint to the finish line. That appeared to mean Gerolsteiner’s Levi Leipheimer, who was just 77 hundredths of a second ahead of Vinokourov, had clinched fifth place and there would be no head-to-head sprint between the two elite riders.

But the sun came out and dried the course along the Champs-Elyssees over the final laps. After Vinokourov crossed the line, the judges announced that the usual time bonuses would be awarded for the day’s top positions. The critical seconds Vinokourov was awarded for winning the day shot him into fifth, ahead of Leipheimer, who finished sixth.

In the overall standings Armstrong beat Basso by 4:40, the second slimmest margin of his seven Tour victories. Ullrich was 6:21 behind in third, and Illes Balear’s Francisco Mancebo finished 9:59 back.

After a powerful showing in the Alps and Pyrenees, riding with and even ahead of Armstrong through the mountain stages, Mickael Rasmussen won the polka dot climber’s jersey. Discovery Channel’s Yaroslav Popovych was awarded the white jersey for the best young rider.

The award for the most combatitive rider of the race was given to Oscar Pereiro (Phonak) who launched the most aggressive attacks, winning one stage and finishing close in several others. He finished 10th overall.

T-Mobile, the team boasting the likes of Ullrich, Vinokourov, and Andreas Kloden, who abandoned in Stage 17 with a broken wrist, won the overall team competition, finishing with a cumulative 14:57 ahead of Armstrong’s Discovery Channel team.







2005 BUYER'S GUIDE
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