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July 08, 2006
Stage 7 ITT underway
Early leader is once again Sebastian Lang, as in the prologue. He was the first man to go under 1:03, and leads Gustav Larsson and Joost Posthuma.
Some times from riders of interest who have already ridden: Viatcheslav Ekimov 1:04:23; Chris Horner 1:05:57; Jens Voigt has the slowest yet at 1:11:44, suggesting he may have plans to go stage-hunting in the next couple of days.
On the course now are Sandy Casar, Iban Mayo, Pietro Caucchioli, and Thomas Voeckler, among others.
Casar came in 1:05:11; Mayo 1:07:20 -- that's got to hurt. Thomas Voeckler 1:05:47. Caucchioli in 1:08:21.
Sastre, Leipheimer and Popovych are on the course. Julich is off.
Sastre is the first one to shake things up; at the first time check, he comes in at 20:22, 5 seconds ahead of Lovkvist's time.
Julich has crashed! He went down very hard at a left-right chicane, hitting the pavement and sliding into and over the curb. He's sitting by the side of the road, and may be the next casualty of the 2006 Tour. That's confirmed; Julich has been taken away in an ambulance. Liggett points out that the only other Tour Julich hasn't finished was because of an accident in the time trial, in 1999.
Menchov hits the 1st time check in 20:07, best so far, 15 seconds better than Sastre.
Zabriskie takes his start.
David Millar is out of the starthouse, slowly spinning up to speed.
Leipheimer reportedly hit the 1st time check at 1:32 behind Menchov! That's 61st-fastest at that point, with a lot of riders to come.
Cadel Evans is ready to roll, and he's off.
T-Mobile's Eddy Mazzoleni is 2nd fastest through the 16.5 kilometer 1st check, 8 seconds slower than Menchov.
Landis is in the start house on time, and he's off. His coach Robbie Ventura said they pre-raced the course at 75 percent this morning, and Landis likes his chances.
Klöden comes through Time Check 1 at 19:58!
Savoldelli is off; Hushovd is off; Hincapie awaits, looking solemn, and he's gone.
Zabriskie is 4th at TC 1, 15 seconds behind Klöden. Menchov sets the new fastest time at the 2nd check, a fraction of a second ahead of Larsson.
Michael Rogers is off, smelling yellow.
Moreau hits TC1 at 25 seconds.
Here goes McEwen, and Boonen is setting up in the start house, and he's off, last to leave as the yellow jersey.
It's a full-on, Michael Rasmussen-style disaster for Leipheimer. He's already been passed by Christian Vande Velde, his 2-minute man.
Landis reportedly had a bike swap. Sergei Honchar has come through TC1 at 19:37, setting a new benchmark. Landis hits TC1 in 19:54, 2nd best for now.
Menchov finishes his ride fading, at 1:03:27.
Zabriskie is 9th at the 2nd time check. There are reports the wind has picked up since the fast times this morning.
Hincapie is 15th at the first time check, 52 seconds down on Honchar. Rogers is only slightly better, 46 seconds down on Honchar at TC 1.
Vande Velde finishes in 1:04:57.
Leipheimer is coming in, tripping the sensors in 1:07:49. What a nightmare for Leipheimer.
Popovych finishes in 1:05:00.
Boonen is through the first time check (at 1:26), so Honchar's 19:37 is the fastest time there, followed by Landis at :17, Klöden at :22, Marcus Fothen at :29, and Denis Menchov at :30.
Zabriskie hits TC3 39 seconds slower than Lang; Sergei Honcar sets the new best time at the 2nd time check in 43:50, just flying!
Klöden is coming up to the line, and trips the clock in 1:03:26, 4th for now.
Landis at TC2 is 44:32, 42 seconds slower than Honchar, but faster than everyone else so far.
Zabriskie is finishing; he won't win the stage, and he finishes in 1:03:40.
Hincapie at TC2: 45:53, slower than Ekimov and Savoldelli.
David Millar hasn't factored in the intermediate checks at all, and finishes in 1:05:17. Christophe Moreau finishes close behind, in 1:03:47.
Rogers comes to TC2 in 45:06, more than 30 seconds behind Landis.
Honchar is fastest again at Time Check 3: 55:09 against Lang's previous-best 56:20.
Honchar is roaring up to the finish; there he comes in 1:01:43!
Landis is 57 seconds down at the 3rd time check on Honchar. He'll be finishing soon. Here he comes; he can't catch Honchar, but he's going to have a strong time, it's 1:02:44 for Landis. Honchar is almost guaranteed the stage win and the yellow jersey tonight.
Savoldelli is coming into the last kilometer and brings home a 1:03:55.
Hincapie is 23rd at the last time check, 2:32 off Honchar.
Rogers comes through the last time check in 56:31, so he's coming in strong.
Hincapie to the line in 1:04:25.
Rogers catches Hushovd, his 6-minute man, just outside the 1-kilometer mark. He won't match Landis: 1:03:07 for the world TT champion.
Boonen's taking his yellow jersey seriously; he caught McEwen on the road, and Boonen finishes his reign in 1:05:35, 41st on the day. McEwen closes out the day, in 1:08:10.
Sergei Honchar has a stage win and a yellow jersey for T-Mobile!
Posted by Frank Steele on July 8, 2006 in Andreas Klöden, Bobby Julich, Cadel Evans, Christian Vande Velde, Christophe Moreau, Dave Zabriskie, David Millar, Denis Menchov, Floyd Landis, George Hincapie, Iban Mayo, Jens Voigt, Levi Leipheimer, Michael Rogers, Paolo Savoldelli, Patrik Sinkewitz, Robbie McEwen, Sergei Honchar, Tom Boonen, Tour de France 2006, Vladimir Karpets, Yaroslav Popovych | Permalink
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