DaveInDaytona

Pro
Posts: 1696
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posted July 28, 2002 11:49 AM
Congratulations to a different type of bike rider

PARIS (AP) - Lance Armstrong won his fourth straight Tour de France on Sunday, handily beating the world's best cyclists in a grueling three-week event he has turned into his personal showcase.
The 30-year-old cancer survivor crossed the finish line on the Champs-Elysees in the bright yellow leader's jersey he has worn since taking control of the race 10 days ago.
Armstrong's tranquil ride to the finish mirrored the rest of the Tour, in which neither rivals nor the demanding course of 2,032 miles seemed to test him.
His final winning margin over second-place Joseba Beloki of Spain was 7 minutes, 17 seconds, making it Armstrong's second-biggest victory. He beat Alex Zuelle by 7:37 in 1999 for his first Tour de France championship.
Raimondas Rumsas of Lithuania was third overall this year, 8:17 back. No other rider finished within 13 minutes of Armstrong.
"I'm really happy to finish," the Texan said. "It's a difficult race, three weeks. It's difficult, mentally. It's good to finish."
On Sunday, he finished in the main pack of riders as they completed the largely ceremonial 20th stage from Melun, outside Paris, to the tree-lined Champs-Elysees.
Thousands of fans watched, many waving U.S. flags, as Armstrong moved within one of the Tour record of five titles. He's the first American to win four (Greg Lemond, the only other U.S. rider to win the Tour, did so three times).
As he went up to the podium for the victory ceremony, Armstrong waved at the crowd, which roared its approval. He smiled broadly when he was presented with a bouquet of yellow flowers that matched his jersey.
Armstrong stood with his cap pressed against his heart as the "Star Spangled Banner" played.
Later, he spoke on the phone with President Bush ( news - web sites).
"He's really a sportsman. He said, 'Come, come with me to the White House,'" Armstrong said in French. "He's really a good guy, a fellow Texan."
Armstrong was joined at the victory ceremony by his wife, Kristin, and three children: 2-year-old Luke and 8-month-old twins Isabelle and Grace. The twins were dressed in identical white dresses and white bonnets, to protect them against 91-degree heat.
Armstrong nestled one of the twins in his arms as he left the podium.
Robbie McEwen of Australia well back in the overall standings won Sunday's 89.3-mile stage and took the green jersey for the Tour's best sprinter. Laurent Jalabert of France won the red spotted jersey as best climber, while Ivan Basso of Italy won the white jersey for best young rider.
Armstrong, meanwhile, was simply the best.
He seized the lead in the first mountain leg at La Mongie in the Pyrenees, and nearly doubled it by sprinting up a tough climb to the Plateau de Beille in the next day's 12th stage.
On the formidable Mont Ventoux in the southern Provence region, he placed third but took a comfortable lead of 4:21 by finishing nearly 2 minutes in front of Beloki.
"Armstrong has shown he has the blood of champions flowing through his veins," the head of Beloki's team, Manolo Saiz, said after the Ventoux stage.
"He is much stronger than us. We see it day after day."
It was Armstrong's fifth unsuccessful attempt at winning on the Ventoux, but what mattered was stretching his race lead, rather than taking spectacular and tiring stage victories.
"The smart thing to do is to ride conservative now," the U.S. Postal Service rider said as he headed to the Alps. "This is not a race to win by as many seconds or minutes as possible, it's a race just to win. So there's no need to be aggressive."
That didn't stop from him adding 45 seconds in the last three mountain stages and winning the final time trial Saturday by nearly a minute.
"I can remember in 1999 being so nervous every day and worried that I would lose the race in an instant," Armstrong said Saturday. "I don't have those fears any more."
Next year, Armstrong will try to tie Miguel Indurain's record of five straight Tour titles (three other men also have won the race five times, though not consecutively).
But Armstrong, diagnosed in 1996 with testicular cancer, knows he already has made his mark on cycling.
"Regardless of one victory, two victories, four victories, there's never been a victory by a cancer survivor," he said. "That's a fact that hopefully I'll be remembered for."
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DaytonaSportbikes Forum
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22348bCVC

Zone Head
Posts: 798
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posted July 28, 2002 01:03 PM
When will the US Postal Service make a commemorative stamp for the champ?...AWESOME STUFF!
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...just relax...my dog wants to use only one of your legs...
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muzbgreen
Expert Class
Posts: 131
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posted July 28, 2002 01:55 PM
Edited By: muzbgreen on 28 Jul 2002 17:24
Is this why postage went to 37 cents?
You would think that our USPS could spend
our money on better
things like sponsoring a drag bike
Armstrongs is an excellent athlete in his
field but the guy just doesn't do it for me.
I've seen him on interviews and it appears
he's really pissed off about something?
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Zhooligan

Moderator
Post Whore Extraordinaire!
Posts: 3829
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posted July 28, 2002 03:59 PM
I think you will find it is the Postal Workers Union.
And considering the other crap we pay for with our tax dollars at least this is someone we can take pride in.
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To those who do not count their life in years, but in how life
has touched them in the past and how much it can hold in the
future; -- Youth is forever.
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22348bCVC

Zone Head
Posts: 798
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posted July 28, 2002 04:41 PM
...maybe he's just tired...why pedal when you can just twist your wrist?
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...just relax...my dog wants to use only one of your legs...
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TReMor
Expert Class
Dazed and Confused
Posts: 115
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posted July 28, 2002 08:03 PM
He's an amazing guy, and to come back through all he's been through the way he has is just amazing. I don't know if any of you have read his book, but if you get the chance (and have the inclination) pick it up. It's a great read.
Tim
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muzbgreen
Expert Class
Posts: 131
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posted July 28, 2002 08:20 PM
Edited By: muzbgreen on 29 Jul 2002 06:23
22348bCVC LMAO
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Wildman

Expert Class
I only look confused
Posts: 318
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posted July 28, 2002 08:32 PM
I've been watching this race for the last couple of weeks. (Can't work with a broken elbow, lotta TV)
Congrats to US Postal and Mr Armstrong for a fantastic job!
Ummmm, Lance has been kinda angry about all the drunks yelling shit about him being on drugs while cheering for a guy who did a suspension for drug use. Armstrong has never failed a drug test. Bottom line, being given a second chance at life seems to have given him extraordinary motivation to excell at his sport.
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If you build something Idiot Proof, The world will build a better Idiot.
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