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Stefan Schumacher takes yellow jersey after winning Tour de France time trial Print E-mail
Written by Naomi Koppel, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS   
Tuesday, 08 July 2008
IN STORY NEWS
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New overall leader Stefan Schumacher of Germany reacts on the podium after winning the fourth stage the Tour de France cycling race, an individual time trial over 29.5 kilometers (18.3 miles) with start and finish in Cholet, western France, Tuesday July 8, 2008. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/Bas Czerwinski

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CHOLET, France - German rider Stefan Schumacher had the biggest day of his career Tuesday, taking the first individual time trial of the Tour de France and the overall leader's yellow jersey.

Schumacher completed the 29.5-kilometre trial in 35 minutes 44 seconds. Kim Kirchen of Luxembourg and David Millar of Britain were both 18 seconds back.

The time trial began and ended in Cholet.

Schumacher took the yellow jersey from France's Romain Feillu, who won it on Monday following a daylong breakaway.

Time-trial world champion Fabian Cancellara of Switzerland, who was the favourite for the stage, struggled from the beginning and finished fifth.

"My head is down, but you have to keep your head up when you see things you can do better for the next time trial," Cancellara said.

"It wasn't my day today, I think. I couldn't find the rhythm and the sensations I normally have."

In the overall classification, Schumacher is 12 seconds ahead of both Millar and Kirchen.

Schumacher will likely hold the yellow jersey at least for another day as Wednesday's stage favours the sprinters and the pack is expected to stay together. The 232-kilometre stage from Cholet to Chateauroux is the longest and flattest stage of the race.

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

Millar was happy with his third place.

"I felt good, everything went perfect," Millar said. "I was at 100 per cent."

But the day's big winner appeared to be Cadel Evans, who saw all his main rivals for the overall title lose time to him.

The Australian finished fourth, while Alejandro Valverde of Spain was 23rd, more than a minute back, with his compatriot Carlos Sastre a further five places and nine seconds behind.

Feillu, who finished nearly five minutes behind Schumacher, acknowledged that he had not been strong enough to hold on to the yellow jersey.

"I gave a lot yesterday, and I was very nervous today. I didn't have the strength," he said.

Schumacher is a controversial rider in this year's Tour. In January, German police announced that they had detected amphetamines in his blood when he was stopped for drunk driving on October 7, six days after he won a bronze medal at the road race world championships.

He was not sanctioned by cycling authorities because the use of amphetamines outside of competition times is not considered to be a doping offence. Schumacher denied that he had ever taken drugs.

"For sure it wasn't easy," Schumacher said Tuesday. "I was really not proud that I went into the car drunk. 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."

Schumacher said he did not consider his case to be the same as that of Belgian Tom Boonen, who was banished from the Tour after testing positive for cocaine in an out-of-competition control in May.

"Mine was a police control, it was microscopic," Schumacher said. "I didn't consume (the drugs)."

Schumacher added, however, that he felt sorry for Boonen because he did not appear to have broken international anti-doping rules.

-

AP Sports Writer Jerome Pugmire contributed to this report from Cholet, France.
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