Astarloza tames mountains to win stage

Tour de France…
BOURG ST MAURICE, France (Reuters) – Spain’s Mikel Astarloza used his climbing and downhill skills to win the mountainous 16th stage of the Tour de France yesterday as the leading contenders unsuccessfully tested each other out.

The Basque rider, 29, surged in the last two km of the 159-km trek to Bourg St Maurice to give his Euskaltel team their first Tour stage victory since 2003.

“I’m a good climber, I can keep a good pace on the flat, but I’m not a sprinter. My only chance was to attack from far and I’m delighted it worked,” Astarloza told reporters.

Astarloza, who finished ninth overall in 2007, climbed to 11th place in the general classification.

Frenchman Sandy Casar had to be content with his sixth second place in a Tour stage, ahead of compatriot Pierrick Fedrigo, winner of the ninth stage in Tarbes.

Astarloza and the two Frenchmen were part of a break which shaped up in the two big climbs of the day, the Grand St Bernard and Petit St Bernard, crossing over to France from Switzerland and Italy.

Spaniard Alberto Contador retained his leader’s yellow jersey one minute 37 seconds ahead of team mate Lance Armstrong with Briton Bradley Wiggins third, 1:46 behind.

The leading contenders seemed content to neutralise each other until six km from the top of the Col du Petit St Bernard when Andy Schleck suddenly raised the tempo.

Only his brother Frank, Contador, his German team mate Andreas Kloeden, Wiggins and Italian Vincenzo Nibali were able to take the Luxembourg champion’s wheel.

The main victim of the move was Armstrong, who was initially dropped and seemed destined to lose more ground, like in the climb to Verbier on Sunday.

But the seven-time Tour champion showed he should not be discounted too early.

The American took a little bit of time to recover before closing the gap within one km in the flowing style reminiscent of his glory days.

“I didn’t expect to make it across as quickly as I did but I felt good. My legs were good today,” he said. “That acceleration felt like the Armstrong of old.

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