You're in the Sports - Tour de France section

Schumacher fulfills his dream

German rider just happy to have yellow jersey.

Wednesday, Jul. 09, 2008 | 08:51 AM

tool name

close
tool goes here
0 comments

CHOLET, France - Stefan Schumacher of Germany took the yellow jersey at the Tour de France, and now says everything else is a bonus.

He knows his early lead won't last.

"Everybody dreams of this jersey," Schumacher said Tuesday. "It's incredible. The moment on the podium, you see it a thousand times on television, and to be there for yourself -- you can't imagine."

Schumacher captured the first time trial in the three-week race, but the big winner in the fourth stage may have been Australia's Cadel Evans. He gained more than a minute on his biggest challengers, a gap that will mean a lot when the decisive mountain stages arrive.

Schumacher finished the 18.3-mile individual trial in 35 minutes, 44 seconds. Kim Kirchen of Luxembourg and David Millar of Britain finished second and third, both 18 seconds back. That also is the order of the overall standings, where Schumacher leads by 12 seconds.

He probably will hold the lead in today's long, flat stage, but he is under no illusions about keeping the jersey.

"I didn't come to win the Tour," he said. "My goal was to wear the jersey one day and to win a stage. I reached this goal, so everything else is a bonus."

That Schumacher is riding the Tour at all remains contentious.

Stopped by German police for drunken driving in October, Schumacher's blood sample tested positive for amphetamines. He has consistently denied taking drugs.

He wasn't punished by cycling authorities because the use of the drug outside of competition is not considered to be an offense.

Belgian cyclist Tom Boonen also tested positive for a drug -- cocaine -- in an out-of-competition test. He was banned by Tour organizers, but Schumacher was allowed to ride.

Schumacher said he felt sorry for Boonen, but does not see a parallel in the cases. He notes that he was not caught in a doping test.

"I was really not proud that I went into the car drunk," he said. "I am a public personality and I also have to be an example for other guys. It wasn't good for me, but I didn't take drugs."

Evans, last year's runner-up, is in fourth place. He has a lead of 1:04 over his biggest challenger, 17th-place Alejandro Valverde of Spain, and a further 16 seconds over Carlos Sastre.

Two Americans now are well positioned. Christian Vandevelde is sixth, 41 seconds behind Schumacher. George Hincapie, the faithful lieutenant of seven-time champ Lance Armstrong, is one place and 6 seconds further back.

Tuesday's stage had seemed to be ideal for time-trial world champion Fabian Cancellara of Switzerland, but he struggled and finished fifth.

"There was wind, there were a lot of things, but I don't know what it was," Cancellara said. "Others were quicker than me."

Romain Feillu of France entered the day with the yellow leader's jersey, but finished nearly 5 minutes behind Schumacher's pace.


Similar stories:

  • Cyclist turned to sport to avoid drugs, but ended up doping

  • The Inside Line: Vettel, Red Bull aiming for fourth straight titles

  • Formula One - Australian Grand Prix Preview

  • Armstrong's blood data shows signs of doping, expert says

  • The latest news from the USOC - January 15

The Bee's story-comment system is provided by Disqus. To read more about it, see our Disqus FAQ page. If you post comments, please be respectful of other readers. Your comments may be removed and you may be blocked from commenting if you violate our terms of service. Comments flagged by the system as potentially abusive will not appear until approved by a moderator.

more videos »
Visit our video index