Totally focused on winning a record sixth Tour de France, Lance Armstrong said Thursday he'll skip the Athens Olympics so he can return home to his children after months away training for cycling's toughest test.
The Texan, speaking on the day when he willingly surrendered the lead in the Tour, at least temporarily, said he didn't want to take part in next month's Summer Games if his heart wasn't in it.
"I've done the Olympics many times and if I don't have 100 percent motivation for something that's an important event, a very important event, then I don't want to take somebody else's spot," he said.
PHOTO: AP
In training for the Tour, Arm-strong said he had spent a total of five months away from his son, Luke, and twins Grace and Isabelle.
"It's really hard to do and so I want to go home," said the bronze medalist in the 2000 Sydney Games, his best showing in three Olympic appearances.
At the Tour itself -- the race Armstrong trains all year to win -- the five-time champion conceded the overall lead in Thursday's fifth stage to a promising French cyclist, Thomas Voeckler.
But Armstrong said it's all part of his strategy to win the three-week race.
He is saving himself and his US Postal Service team for a brutal last week, when the Tour veers into the Alps and climaxes with a punishing time trial.
Until then, Armstrong is willing to let second-tier riders like Voeckler and his Brioches La Boulangere team shoulder the pressure of being in the lead, confident he'll have overtaken them by the time that race finishes in Paris on July 25.
"Tactically, it's a great move for us with Brioches La Boulangere in the yellow jersey," Armstrong said. "Voeckler is a good young rider, he's French and I think it's a good thing."
With nerves, wind-swept rain and crashes troubling riders, Armstrong and crew decided not to chase Voeckler as he and four other riders broke away from the main pack.
Armstrong said he believed Voeckler may be able to defend the lead into the Pyrenees at the end of week two, but said he expects the 25-year-old rider to buckle under the race's grueling demands.
"A team like Brioches will work really hard to defend," said Armstrong. But "we're confident with the gap where it is. This bike race is so much different from any other race, the intensity of the climbs is a lot greater than anything."
Voeckler acknowledged that he's no match for cycling's dominant rider.
"Oh. I don't think he's worried about me," he said.
Stuart O'Grady of Cofidis, who escaped the pack with Voeckler and three others, won Thursday's stage, a 200.5km trek from Amiens to Chartres.
O'Grady, a 31-year-old Australian, dedicated his second-ever Tour stage victory to his team, which has been embroiled in a doping scandal that led Tour organizers to ban British star David Millar.
"It's just been an emotional roller-coaster," O'Grady said. "We really needed this win."
The breakaway riders finished 12 minutes, 33 seconds ahead of Armstrong and the pack. The Texan -- who was 24th -- fell to 6th overall, 9 minutes and 35 seconds off Voeckler's pace.
Mishaps like flat tires, derailed chains and spills on rain-soaked roads marred much of the course along bucolic wheat fields and rolling hills west of Paris.
Voeckler, riding in his third Tour, epitomized how fickle the race can be from one day to the next. He entered the stage three minutes behind Armstrong in 59th place.
At one point, the escapees chiseled out a 17-minute lead. They included France's Sandy Casar, Dane Jakob Piil and Magnus Backstedt, a 99kgSwede -- the Tour's heaviest rider. O'Grady once said that trailing Backstedt was like riding behind a truck.
Stuart O'Grady dedicated his stage win Thursday to David Millar, the British world champion excluded from the three-week Tour de France after he admitted to doping.
O'Grady, an Australian, said the last few months have been hard for his Cofidis team, with a doping investigation that embroiled several current and former members of the French squad, including Millar.
"It's just been an emotional roller-coaster," said O'Grady, who won the fifth stage from Amiens to Chartres. "We really needed this win."
He said he'd wanted a victory "to thank everyone who has supported the team, myself, through the tough times we've had."
Cofidis temporarily took itself out of racing earlier this year because of the doping investigation enveloping the team.
Millar, the defending world time trial champion, was among those questioned and admitted to police that he has used the performance enhancer EPO.
US track and field athletes have about four dozen pieces to choose from when assembling their uniforms at the Olympics. The one grabbing the most attention is a high-cut leotard that barely covers the bikini line and has triggered debate between those who think it is sexist and others who say they do not need the Internet to make sure they have good uniforms. Among those critical or laughing at the uniforms included Paralympian Femita Ayanbeku, sprinter Britton Wilson and even athletes from other countries such as Britain’s Abigail Irozuru, who wrote on social media: “Was ANY female athlete consulted in
Four-time NBA all-star DeMarcus Cousins arrived in Taiwan with his family early yesterday to finish his renewed contract with the Taiwan Beer Leopards in the T1 League. Cousins initially played a four-game contract with the Leopards in January. On March 18, the Taoyuan-based team announced that Cousins had renewed his contract. “Hi what’s up Leopard fans, I’m back. I’m excited to be back and can’t wait to join the team,” Cousins said in a video posted on the Leopard’s Facebook page. “Most of all, can’t wait to see you guys, the fans, next weekend. So make sure you come out and support the Beer
Former US Masters champion Zach Johnson was left embarrassed after a foul-mouthed response to ironic cheers from spectators after a triple bogey at Augusta National on Friday. Johnson, the 2007 Masters winner, missed the cut after his three-over-par round of 75 left him on seven-over 151 for 36 holes, his six on the par-three 12th playing a big role in his downfall. Television footage showed Johnson reacting to sarcastic cheers and applause when he tapped in for the triple bogey by yelling: “Oh fuck off.” Such a response would be considered bad form in any golf tournament, but is particularly out of keeping
The sacred flame for the Paris Olympics was lit yesterday in Olympia, Greece, the birthplace of the ancient Games, in a ceremony inspired by antiquity and marked by messages of hope amid multiple global crises. “In ancient times, the Olympic Games brought together the Greek city states, even — and in particular — during times of war and conflict,” International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach said. “Today, the Olympic Games are the only event that brings the entire world together in peaceful competition. Then as now, the Olympic athletes are sending this powerful message — yes, it is possible to compete fiercely