Evans to give Australia first Tour victory

Cadel Evans

GRENOBLE, France, (Reuters) – Cadel Evans was only a  short 95 km ride away from becoming the first Australian winner  of the Tour de France after he outclassed the Schleck brothers  in the penultimate stage time trial yesterday.

Runner-up in 2007 and 2008, Evans left nothing to chance  this time round and the 34-year-old is on the verge of becoming  the oldest champion since World War II of the most famous  cycling race.

The former mountain bike World Cup winner had checked out  yesterday’s 42.5-km course on four previous occasions and his  foresight paid off. Whereas Luxembourg’s Frank and Andy Schleck  only caught their first glimpse of the tricky, hilly route  yesterday morning, Evans capitalised on his knowledge to snatch  the yellow jersey off Andy’s back.

Cadel Evans

The Schlecks, who were first and second overall after the  Alps, were never in contention in Grenoble and will have to  settle for the honour placings when the race reaches Paris after  the 95-km final stage, which is traditionally nothing more than  a lap of honour on the Champs-Elysees.

After finishing two minutes, 31 seconds behind Evans in the  time trial, Andy Schleck was condemned to the runner-up spot for  a third successive year, 1:34 behind Evans.

Frank, his older brother, will finish on the Tour podium for  the first time after two fifth places, 2:30 off the pace.
The Tour itinerary, which featured several punishing  mountain stages and only one individual time trial, appeared to  favour climbing specialists such as the Luxembourg pair but  their skills against the clock were far too limited on the day  that mattered.
Evans, who had discovered the course on the Criterium du  Dauphine in June, finished second in the stage, seven seconds  behind

Martin was only five seconds slower than a month ago when he  won the Dauphine timed effort.

LONG WAIT
But the day belonged to Evans, undoubtedly the strongest man  from the start of the Tour in Vendee three weeks ago to the  finish, 3,400 kilometres later.

The Australian won the most difficult stage of the first  week in Mur de Bretagne and avoided seizing the Tour lead too  early, staying for days one second behind the yellow jersey.

In the mountains, Evans stayed true to his own tactics and  refused to panic when Andy Schleck or three-times champion  Alberto Contador attacked.

Consistency, power and a nerveless attitude propelled Evans  to victory and silenced those critics who had often slammed him  for his lack of aggression.

“I’ve worked so hard for so long with this event in mind.  Until these 42.5 kilometres. I just can’t believe what’s  happening to me,” said the tearful 2009 world champion, who had  the yellow jersey on his back at last.

“It’s exactly 20 years ago that I saw the Tour de France for  the first time on TV. I grew with this objective in mind.
“Everything I do, I do it for cycling which I love and for  those who believed in me, for my first coach Damian Grundy, for  Aldo Sassi, my team mates and those who supported me for the  last 20 years.”

It was a long wait for Evans, from his debut as a BMX and  mountain-bike rider trained by Grundy in Australia to his  apprenticeship as a road cyclist under Italian coach Sassi, who  died last year from a brain tumour.

It could also be a long wait for Andy Schleck, who humbly  conceded defeat: “I’m proud of finishing second. I have no hard  feelings. After all, I’m only 26. I’ll come back on the Tour to  win it,” he said.

Other distinctive jerseys were decided in Grenoble. France’s  Pierre Rolland, 24, secured the best young rider’s white jersey.
Olympic champion Samuel Sanchez of Spain was already certain  to take the King of the Mountains polka dot jersey to the  Champs-Elysees.

Only the points classification green jersey remains at  stake, with Briton Mark Cavendish the favourite to win it at  last.
One man will finish the Tour empty-handed — defending  champion Contador will not be on the podium for the first time  on a big Tour since 2007.

Third in the Grenoble stage, he will finish fifth overall,  3:57 behind Evans.