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Contador stomps on stage 4 of Paris-Nice, takes lead

In another brutally cold day, the Spanish Armada took control of Paris-Nice, with Alberto Contador winning up the same climb to Mende where he won in 2007 en route to claiming the overall.

JB24After joining Rolland, Contador slowly ramped up the speed until he was on his own.

Contador never really attacked hard. He just steadily ramped it up until he was alone.

Contador chugged away on the short, but steep 3km Mende climb to stake his claim for another crown, pulling the double on a day when temperatures never climbed above freezing.

But the cold temperatures seemed to put the freeze on everyone and Contador said he didn’t have his typical punch, winning 10 seconds ahead of Alejandro Valverde (Caisse d’Epargne) to carve out a 24-second grip on the yellow jersey.

“I waited to attack on the last climb because I didn’t really feel that great. It was very, truly cold, throughout the entire stage. I can only hope it will get warmer in the coming stages,” Contador said. “Nothing is won yet. The hardest part is still yet to come. There are still three stages and Paris-Nice is a race that’s hard to control.”

Contador was alluding to his infamous bonk in last year’s Paris-Nice, when he lost time while leading and eventually ceded the overall to compatriot Luís León Sánchez (Caisse d’Epargne) to finish fourth overall.

Overnight leader Jens Voigt (Saxo Bank) struggled to match the pace when Contador attacked with just under 2km to go. Voigt, who snagged the yellow jersey with a gritty ride Wednesday in Aurillac, crossed the line 12th at 44 seconds back and slipped to sixth overall at 34 seconds off the pace.

David Millar (Garmin-Transitions) did well under the extreme conditions, finishing 25th at 1:01 back and maintaining a top-10 with ninth at 1:03 back. Garmin-Transitions’ Thomas Peterson was 36th at 1:34 back and Tom Danielson was 45th at 1:56.

Cold snaps Leipheimer’s chances
You know it’s cold when a guy who grew up in Montana talked about how frosty conditions were.

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A Montana native, Leipheimer said it was too cold for comfort.

The frigidly cold temperatures kept Levi Leipheimer (RadioShack) from riding at his best, who started the day eighth at 24 seconds back.

Leipheimer couldn’t stay with Contador’s winning surge with just under 2km to go and rolled across with a group at 1:08 back and slipped to 16th at 1:23 off the pace.

“It’s just really cold. I guess before it was amusingly cold, but this isn’t very fun,” Leipheimer said. “It’s our job. Like any professional, we have days that we’re just going through the motions and that’s kind of where I am right now. I am not riding that great and this is obviously miserable weather. It’s good training, that’s what I keep telling myself.”

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Contador did his best to fend off the cold until he hit the last two climbs.

Following his strong fourth-place showing in his season debut at Volta ao Algarve, Leipheimer’s season is very different than the past four years, when he roared into February to win three consecutive Tour of California victories.

With California moved to May, Leipheimer is using Paris-Nice now as preparation for goals for later in the year.

“I was coming off a group of like 20 riders, that’s not very good for the morale. It’s just training and building for later on,” he said. “You’re wearing a lot of clothes. You never feel great when you’re wearing all those clothes, but you have to, or you get too cold.”

Spanish armada firing away
A six-man breakaway that peeled away in the opening 15km was eventually reeled in by Saxo Bank and Astana with less than 10km to go to set up the final showdown.

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2006 Tour winner Oscar Pereiro drives the chase.

Contador had Oscar Pereiro and Dmitri Fofonov from Astana to get him to the base of the Mende climb. The two-time Tour de France champion waited patiently for riders such as Christophe Le Mevel (FDJeux) to attack and for the steepness of the climb to whittle away some of his rivals.

Tony Martin (HTC-Columbia) struggled under the steep grades, but Wednesday’s winner Peter Sagan (Liquigas) did well to pace Kreuziger and then hang on to finish 20th to remain eighth overall at 54 seconds back.

Contador never quite opened up the huge gaps that he’s accustomed to once he surged away and a handful of his compatriots are nipping at his heels.

Joining Contador were other Spanish riders who clogged the top-5 in both stage and the GC.

Only Roman Kreuziger (Liguigas), now third overall at 25 seconds back, and Thomas Voeckler (BBox), fifth on the stage at 20 seconds back, prevented the top-5 Spanish sweep on Thursday.

Valverde, who struggled in the opening day prologue, bounced back into contention with a strong, second-place performance to climb into second overall. Along with Joaquin Rodríguez (Katusha), Valverde kept Contador on a short, 10-second leash.

Olympic champion Samuel Sánchez (Euskaltel-Euskadi) found his legs in the relatively easier final kilometer to pass Rodríguez and finish third on the stage in the same time as Valverde and slot into fifth overall at 29 seconds back.

Defending champion Luís León Sánchez (Caisse d’Epargne) finished ninth in the stage to keep alive his podium hopes, now fourth at 28 seconds back.

Early move breaks the ice
More cold weather “welcomed” a weary peloton in Maurs for the 173.5km hilly march to the decisive summit finish atop the Cat. 1 climb up La Croix Neuve, named in honor of Laurent Jalabert.

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Amael Moinard was in the break on the same route in the 2007 Paris-Nice, too.

The bumpy, five-climb stage was ideal for a breakaway, and several riders tried in vain to escape the clutches early, including Yaroslav Popovych (RadioShack) and Verdugo (Euskaltel-Euskadi).

The day’s main break finally pulled clear at in the opening 13km , in the move were: Jerome Pineau (Quick Step), Julien Loubet (Ag2r), Albert Timmer (Skil-Shimano), Amael Moinard (Cofidis), Mikel Nieve (Euskaltel-Euskadi), Marco Marcato (Vacansoleil) and Jean-Marc Marino (Saur Sojasun).

With the non-threatening group up the road, Saxo Bank gladly let them take their chances. The leaders opened up a four-minute gap at 40km.

Moinard knew the roads well, since he was in a similar breakaway in 2007 when Contador eventually won the stage.

“This is the first day we tried to get into a breakaway because things will open up in the peloton,” said Cofidis sport director Francis Van Londersele during the stage. “We don’t have too much confidence in the break, because Saxo Bank is controlling the stage. We still hope to have Moinard in good position for the final climb.”

After topping a second-category climb, the route dropped down to the spectacular Gorges du Lot before two more third-category climbs to the approach to the finale. Saxo Bank was determined to give Voigt at least a fair shot of defending his hard-fought yellow jersey and kept the gap steady at about three minutes with 80km to go.

The gap grew to more than four minutes after the day’s third of three third-category climbs, prompting Astana to surge to the front.

What’s next
The 68th Paris-Nice continues Friday with the 157km fifth stage from Pernes-les-Fontaines to Aix-en-Provence.
Snow on the day’s first climb might force organizers to change the route to avoid the Cat. 2 Col de Murs at 647m at 40km into the race. There are three more third-category climbs sprinkled along the route that should push the race into milder weather.

If the sprinters can make it over the climbs, a complicated and slightly rising finish into downtown Aix-en-Provence will surely be their last shot at victory in this year’s Paris-Nice.

Forecasters are calling for temperatures to climb into the low 50s by the afternoon. After four days in bitter cold, that will feel like the Tour de Langkawi.

Top-10 stage results:
1. Alberto Contador Astana
2. Alejandro Valverde Caisse D’epargne
3. Samuel Sanchez Euskaltel – Euskadi at 00:10
4. Joaquim Rodriguez Katusha Team at 00:18
5. Thomas Voeckler Bbox Bouygues Telecom at 00:20
6. Damiano Cunego Lampre – Farnese at 00:21
7. Roman Kreuziger Liquigas-Doimo at 00:21
8. Christophe Le Mevel Francaise Des Jeux at 00:29
9. Luis-leon Sanchez Caisse D’epargne at 00:29
10. Reine Taaramae Cofidis Le Credit En Ligne at 00:31

Preliminary GC standings:
1. Alberto Contador Astana
2. Alejandro Valverde Caisse D’epargne
3. Roman Kreuziger Liquigas-Doimo at 00:25
4. Luis-leon Sanchez Caisse D’epargne at 00:28
5. Samuel Sanchez Euskaltel – Euskadi at 00:29
6. Jens Voigt Team Saxo Bank at 00:34
7. Joaquim Rodriguez Katusha Team at 00:36
8. Peter Sagan Liquigas-Doimo at 00:54
9. David Millar Garmin – Transitions at 01:03
10. Reine Taaramae Cofidis Le Credit En Ligne at 01:06

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  • John
    As far as i know, any athlete that is dominating the sport is automatically accused of doping,for example, Manny Pacquiao and Lance Armstrong ;-)
  • AlexBaja
    I think is very frustrating having doping like a shadow of ghost around the sport you love. Some times I just quit for standing up 5:30 in the morning (Pacific Time) to see the final two or three hours of great races in Europe. I am still get goose bumps when someone try to get rid of the peloton or two or three breakaway partners in difficult conditions. But sometimes I just have that angry feeling because of what cheaters do and stop reading all the lines in the news about cycling. Is just not fare, either for themselves nor for us (public) to do cheating. And then I start thinking about men who do worst things like stealing or killing and showing but nothing of regret, I say well at least people like Bjharne Riis still show they´re humans and show consideration for a better sport. If Lance Armstrong cheated we may never know from his own lips, just because of the entire market around him, they better make him dissapear before he make them loose their money. Lance Armstrong has an arrogant personality he showed many times, and he likes to have revenge. When I read his book he showed some of his annoying arrogance when he described the feeling he had when he walked in yellow close to Cofidis guys. You just know this man didn´t show the right feeling he gotta have, like giving them thanks for what they did. And If Contador´s cheating he gotta buy something really new and undetectable or pay enough money to officials. I think Contador doesn´t have "friends" like Lance (top security men, even expresident Bush, etc.), but I hope he´ll (Contador) have enough for another Tour victory and Lance do the of himself a man of honor again because he fall from the grace of people when he did it to Contador last year Tour the France being so egocentric and divisive not giving him recognition for his triumph. The one who doesn´t give respect to the leaders show nothing but the bad bones he has.
  • jkelly
    As a cyclist and fan of the sport I have the utmost respect for anyone who is at the top of their game, which AC clearly is. More so than in other sports anyone who excels is bound to be labelled as a 'doper', especially given the negative press that cycling has received in the recent past. However as fans of the sport I think we should be the last people to start accusing athletes at the pinnacle of the their careers. There will always be individuals that surpass everyone else in any given sport; Ali in boxing, Pele in football, Federer in tennis. Examples only, I don't wish to start another discussion. This is down to natural talent and ability, most people can ride a bike, some better than others. But let me ask you this, If every club rider in the country started using EPO would they be riding for Radioshack, Astana, Sky etc next season? I think not.
  • Greg687
    He is a great athlete. He makes for boring english interviews. He is controversial and egotistical as only the best athletes CAN be.


    But, please! Someone! Tell Alberto the "pistol" schtick is incredibly stupid! I skip the photos of him doing it, and I will end the DVR if I am watching a race he wins. This is as bad as the pacifier thing.... what's next, end zone dances? T-shirt launchers?
  • velo4eva
    Calm down dude, the pacifier was a one-time thing. But you are right about the pistolero thing. Its just lame and boring. I'm not against creativity, I happen to like Fletcha's bow and arrow salute, its VERY cool. But having a cap made with his pistolero finger on it? Very very gay AC!
  • Greg687
    I wish the pacifier had been one time. I can't remember who it was taht did it several times one year.... did the guy have a kid every month? I didn't know Tiger Woods raced bikes...
  • Guest
    Power to weight ratio is beneficial to all cycling events, not just climbing. Cancellara is a freak and he puts out a hell of lot of power to overcome his extra weight. He also has one of the best looking strokes in the sport. Contador also has a great pedal stroke and the most natural out of the saddle style I’ve ever seen. Other than his obvious physical attributes, Contador also presents small silhouette to the wind when time trialing, which could account for his prowess at the event. It is a myth that raw power and time trialing ability are mutually exclusive.
  • Guest
    My comment above is a reply to Evan. The benefits of recovery can not be overstated. Hinault and Lemond raced more and their training wasn't nearly as honed to specific races like Contador. Anybody who is the best world at anything will make that something look easy.
  • theryanexpress
    When Tiger wins EVERYTHING,oh ,isn't that great.So exciting.When Lance won EVERY TDF,boy isn't this exciting! But bring someone else,and all the Lance (fans) cry 'boring,dope. Kinda reminds me of when Indurain won the tours.(note I say tours and not TDF) Mostly it's american (I am one) 'fans when convienent doing this. They know Lance,Levi,George and maybe one or two more,but throw a name like Betini or Fletcha and they look at you like you're from another planet.
  • Ryan
    I like the pic layout
  • ToadRiderSAXO
    Why doesn't Contador let Jens win it. Unlike Contador Jens doesn't need to save his strength for the Tour to battle Lance and the two saxo brothers for yellow.
  • O Paco
    IF AC were doped definitely he is exposing himself MUCH, MUCH more than Lance ever did - participating in races all over Europe all season long. This is not a guy that hides in a cave till the TdF (such as Lance and even Lemond). In fact, other than the obvious number TdFs (and he could have 3) AC already has a superior palmares compared to Lance.

    For those that question his TT skills. In fact, he always excelled. In fact his first win was on a TT (Tour of Poland when he was 22).
  • velo4eva
    No, Contador does not have superior palmares to Armstrong. He has not won a World Championship and he has not won anything close to a one day classic. Don't use the word palmares if you don't know what context to use it in.

    Yes, Lance may have hid in a cave later in his career but LeMond never did. Unlike Lance, he rode a full racing calendar like all REAL cyclists should. He rode most of the classics and even finished a high 4th in Roubaix one very muddy year. He also rode all the grand tours.

    I'm not impressed with your cycling knowledge Opaco
  • O Paco
    For sure I know better than you. As for Lance's WC it was an isolated incident and his couple of classics are second rate. On the other hand Contador is amassing an aura of invincibility in almost every HC tour or GT he participates. Only his Paris-Nizas and Tour of the Basque Country are much more prestigious than the whole set of Lance's wins out of the TdF. And he has Giro and Vuelta that Lance will never have.

    As for the classics, again it is your knowledge that is lacking. If you were listening to people like Cunego, S. Sanchez, Valverde. They know very well that Contador is not winning Liege;s and things like that because he does not give a damn for the moment, he has other plans. And they have openly stated it.

    As for Lemond. His European early seasons were always a complete disappointment. He was the inventor of the 100% dedication to the TdF. It was a shame the way he hang around in the Giro's (in fact many people thought at the time, he should be doped in the TdF) as his regular performance before was well beyond the par of a champion (ot what was considered one until that point), such as Hinault, Anquetil, etc.
  • feromo
    As long as he keeps on winning is okay by me.I just want someone to break 7 TDF wins and it's possible that he could do so. But you have to consider that he also likes winning other big Tours, so breaking seven may be harder to reach.

    Sorry, I'm just tired of the other guy with the ego too.

  • ez
    So many people implying that Contador wins all the time, and by extension, must be on dope. Interesting to me that not one person asked how the 38 year old guy in sixth place (5x winner of Criterium international = pretty good in a TT, no?) was able to hang tough on the climb...(Nothing against Jens - I believe he's really savvy, talented, works hard, and rides clean).

    And then there's the whole "how can he be good on the climbs and the TT's" question, as if no other rider has ever been that way (LeMond, Indurain, Armstrong, Leipheimer, etc in my lifetime all seemed pretty good at both).

    Think about it. Contador is probably REALLY motivated to win this race. He's needs to put his team to the test. He's pretty smart about using his skills to their best advantage. He didn't crush the prologue. He attacked less than 2k from the finish, after his team did stellar work to set him up, and he gained all of 10 seconds on some pretty talented riders.

    I'm pretty jaded, but c'mon...some things can actually be shown to be reasonable if you apply a little logic. His performance so far seems pretty reasonable to me.
  • velo4eva
    Pay attention smarty pants, the climbs vs TT discussion is centered around his body size. Contador does NOT have the same body size of LeMond, Indurain, or Armstrong who are much bigger, muscular riders. Hence, that raises the question of a wispy climber that can TT like the big boys. Are you following along now?

    Ok, now you can go back to pounding your logic into our brains. Pshh!
  • I see. So body size implicates Contador as a doper in the ITT? Well then, how do explain a rider like Lance or Mig being able to climb so well? They CERTAINLY don't have the physique of a climber.

    See, two can play this game.
  • walker
    I'm tired of hearing Levi whine about the cold. Was it not cold for every other guy who spanked his ass up the hill? Just say you had a bad day. And Tommy D, still waiting man.....
  • velo4eva
    Amen on the Tommy D thing. I think he is done. He needs to settle into a good domestique roll on a team that will give him some freedom to hunt stages every now and then. Time's up on being a protected rider. He just doesn't have what it takes.
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