Sanchez in yellow as Contador fades

Eurosport - Sun, 15 Mar 16:14:00 2009

Luis Leon Sanchez took the lead in the Paris-Nice race with victory in the seventh stage after fellow Spaniard Alberto Contador collapsed at the end of the 191-km trek from Manosque to Fayence.

Caisse D'Epargne's team rider Luis-Leon Sanchez of Spain holds up his arms as he wins the seventh stage of Paris-Nice race - 0

Caisse d'Epargne rider Sanchez, who won the Tour of the Mediterranean last month, attacked a leading group of six with 15 kms to go before finishing 50 seconds ahead of compatriot Antonio Colom of Katusha.

Luxemburg's Frank Schleck of the Saxo Bank team was third, also 50 seconds adrift.

Contador tired dramatically with four kms left, crossing the line on his own two minutes and 53 seconds adrift of Sanchez. The Spaniard had to then be helped off his bike by an Astana team assistant.

The 2007 Tour de France winner, who claimed a rare Giro and Vuelta double last year, dropped to fourth overall, one minute and 50 seconds behind Sanchez.

"I wanted to win the stage. I also had cramps with one km to go. I learnt Contador was dropped but I did not have to think about it," Sanchez said.

The Spaniard leads France's Sylvain Chavanel by one minute and nine seconds with Schleck in third, 12 seconds further back.

Contador will have little choice but to attack in the first of the three category-one climbs in Sunday's final stage over 119 kms around Nice if he is to avoid defeat in a stage race for the first time since the 2007 Tour of Valencia.

However, his Astana sports director Alain Gallopin said: "It's over. He is not a superman. This Paris-Nice is extremely tough."

In Sunday's stage, which featured nine climbs, 19 riders pulled out.

Earlier, a group of nine opened a gap of three minutes, with Slovakia's Martin Velits going solo at the foot of the category-one climb to the Col de Bourigaille.

His efforts were in vain as the Caisse d'Epargne team blasted the peloton with a sudden acceleration that left Kevin Seeldrayers, seventh overall, far behind.

Colom attacked midway through the ascent and was followed by former Astana team mate Contador with Sanchez joining them before the summit where Velits was caught out.

Sanchez and Contador were seen chatting and the Caisse d'Epargne rider said they sealed a deal.

"We had a non-aggression pact but he never told me he was feeling bad," said Sanchez.

In the descent, Saxo Bank's Jens Voigt, Schleck and Quickstep's Chavanel caught the leading trio with a group led by Cadel Evans a further 35 seconds behind.

Sanchez made his move with 15 kms remaining and Contador let him go. When the lead gradually increased, he stepped up a gear to keep his yellow jersey but the efforts eventually cost him too much.

Contador cracked and finished without any team mate to help him in the final climb.

Lance Armstrong, who is back from three and a half years of retirement and will ride with Contador in the Tour de France, said he watched the stage on TV.

"Unfortunate day for Alberto. Amazing talent but still a lot to learn," the American said on his Twitter feed. "Appears Alberto 'bonked'. Not that uncommon in endurance sports. It's miserable. He'll be back fightin' tomorrow."

Stage seven results:

1. Luis Leon Sanchez (Spain / Caisse d'Epargne ) 4h 43m 34s

2. Antonio Colom (Spain / Katyusha ) +50s

3. Frank Schleck (Luxembourg / Saxo Bank )

4. Sylvain Chavanel (France / Quick-Step )

5. Jens Voigt (Germany / Saxo Bank ) +56"

6. David Moncoutie (France / Cofidis ) +1m 31"

7. Hubert Dupont (France / AG2R )

8. Jurgen Van den Broeck (Belgium / Silence - Lotto )

9. Christophe Moreau (France / Agritubel )

10. Amael Moinard (France / Cofidis )

Overall standings:

1. Luis Leon Sanchez (Spain / Caisse d'Epargne ) 28h 05m 45s

2. Sylvain Chavanel (France / Quick-Step ) +1m 09s

3. Frank Schleck (Luxembourg / Saxo Bank ) +1:21"

4. Alberto Contador (Spain / Astana ) +1:50"

5. Jens Voigt (Germany / Saxo Bank ) +1:59"

6. Antonio Colom (Spain / Katyusha ) +2:16"

7. Kevin Seeldraeyers (Belgium / Quick-Step ) +2:29"

8. Jonathan Hivert (France / Skil - Shimano ) +2:57"

9. Yury Trofimov (Russia / Bbox - Bouygues ) +3:37"

10. Christophe Le Mevel (France / Francaise des Jeux ) +4:00"

Reuters

Comment 1 - 12 of 12

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  1. I have a feeling, having read Bruyneel and Armstrongs­ comments post Paris-Nice, and Contador's friendship­ with Sanchez, he'll be a Caisse D'epargne rider­ come 2010.

    From demi162, on Mon 16 Mar 10:26AM
  2. ha ha ha all of u going on about alberto being the best­ rtider in the world well eat your hearts out, he proved­ he is as fallible as any other, this summer there will­ be the return of the old master lance, contador still­ has a lot to learn maybe once he has riden with lance­ he will learn enough to be a real leader in the future.­ the winner of this tour was lance he surely will have­ received a confidence boost for the tour, vive le tour­ vive le lance.

    From ralph, on Mon 16 Mar 7:02AM
  3. Astana have been no help to Contador during this race­ apart from seeing Popovich on the front for a while a­ few days ago. But Contador showed he lacks experience -­ why did he use all that energy chasing down Colomb who­ was no real threat on GC - then he says he forgot to­ eat.
    The stars of this race have been Chavanel &­ Voigt who have come out to race hard each Day.
    Sanchez­ is definitely a star for the future - chapeau to­ him.
    This promises to be a great season of bike racing­ - let`s hope we have no bad publicity by the idiots­ like Ricco, Shumacher & the other tw....t Khol who­ stole the KOM jersey in last years TDF

    From Bikefan, on Sun 15 Mar 9:23AM
  4. Ian I do not want any suprises either but Contador­ looked finished yesterday the laughing bunch where­ passing him in the last km, I live in Spain and the­ press have him in yellow in Paris allready but at the­ moment the team he has around him is not good enough to­ win a 7 day race never mind a 3 week one. Caisse look­ very strong as do garmin and saxobank and we have not­ even seen Basso yet, Astana need Lance to start kicking­ @#$% and shape up this team and I do not expect any of­ them except contador start in July.

    From paulandlyndsay, on Sun 15 Mar 7:28AM
  5. webbski this is the way it is sometimes the last climb­ you are on your own. Armstrong has been isolated in­ this situation several times throughout his career.­ Maybe you can go carry Contador over the last climb.

    From chad, on Sun 15 Mar 4:54AM
  6. This is good for cycling lets not have any little­ suprises paul and lyndsay

    From iancampbell11, on Sun 15 Mar 12:12AM
  7. If Contador bounces back tomorrow they must still have­ some of that recovery shake they used in the tour 2007­ when their star rider was whacked one day and the next­ he flew.

    From paulandlyndsay, on Sat 14 Mar 9:33PM
  8. Bad luck for Contador, Its never nice to see a rider­ hitting the wall like that. Im sure he will see out­ tomorrow and bounce back for the rest of the season.­

    It proves he is human after all.....

    Great win for­ Sanchez though, Chapeau!

    From davidcarter20, on Sat 14 Mar 9:18PM
  9. Tomorrow

    From bobcha78, on Sat 14 Mar 6:24PM
  10. all in the group with Contador dont want to work,­ Contador is tried alone, and this it happend. Tomorrow­ is new day

    From bobcha78, on Sat 14 Mar 6:20PM
  11. the other astana team mates should get no pay. They­ were useless at helping contador. Look at Armstrong in­ the Tour de France, US Postal and Discovery used to­ practically carry him around. If you are reading this­ Astana, I offer you my services.

    From webbski, on Sat 14 Mar 5:53PM
  12. feel sry for Contador...

    From tomusilovicm, on Sat 14 Mar 5:11PM
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