As the Tour de France winds on toward the end of its second week, the stages are often more about the big losers than the big winners.
Count Christophe Moreau among the former and Robert Hunter among the latter.
Moreau had made the French believe that they might get a new home-grown winner at the Tour de France.
PHOTO: AP
But that hope was dealt a serious setback in Thursday's 11th stage, when Moreau was dropped behind by a pack that was speeding away and led by stage winner Robert Hunter of South Africa.
Overall leader Michael Rasmussen of Denmark kept up with the pack and his advantage didn't change against his main rivals -- except Moreau, who dropped to 14th place from sixth and whose deficit nearly doubled, to 6 minutes, 38 seconds.
"I think he definitely lost his chance of winning the Tour today," Rasmussen said of Moreau, almost gleeful over having one less challenger to worry about.
PHOTO: AP
Rasmussen was less enthused about an announcement from the Danish cycling federation that he had been dropped from the national team for failing to keep authorities informed over his whereabouts. The sport's rules require riders to tell sports officials where they are so they can be available for possible unannounced doping tests.
Hunter became the first South African to win a stage at the Tour, winning Thursday's sprint finish after the 182.5km route from Marseille to Montpellier.
Hunter isn't a threat to Rasmussen, who leads two Spaniards in second and third -- Alejandro Valverde was 2 minutes, 35 seconds back and Iban Mayo trailed by 2 minutes, 39 seconds. Other chasers include Cadel Evans of Australia and US rider Levi Leipheimer.
Moreau was the day's biggest loser, much like one-time favorite Alexandre Vinokourov was after a crash in Stage 5 dealt a big blow to his victory ambitions.
And it could have been worse for Moreau.
He crashed in Thursday's hot, wind-swept ride along the Mediterranean from Marseille to Montpellier, shredding his blue, white and red national champion's uniform over his left thigh as if he had been attacked by a large dog.
It was the latest nasty spill at the race this year. The most banged-up squad, T-Mobile, lost leader Michael Rogers of Australia and Britain's Mark Cavendish to crashes. Patrik Sinkewitz was hospitalized back home in Germany after he collided with a fan after last Sunday's stage, and Markus Burghardt ran into a spectator's dog Tuesday but remains in the competition. The dog was OK.
After his mishap on Thursday, Moreau got back on his bike and returned to the pack, but Vinokourov's Astana team cranked up the peloton's pace -- leaving the French veteran in its dust.
Moreau has given the French hope before. He finished in the top 12 in each of the last three Tours. For two days in 2001, he donned yellow after winning the prologue time-trial.
Even at 36, the AG2R team leader had shown his best form in years heading into this Tour. He won the Dauphine Libere stage race -- a key Tour tuneup -- in June, and stunningly won France's road championship a week before the big event.
Five-time champion Bernard Hinault was the last Frenchman to win the Tour, in 1985. Four years later, Laurent Fignon placed second to Greg Lemond by a record-low 8 seconds. The last French podium finish was Richard Virenque's second in 1997.
With seven-time winner Lance Armstrong retired in 2005, Moreau had been among those looking to fill the void. A string of doping scandals over the last year thinned the field of contenders and improved his chances.
In his role as perennial French hope, Moreau had said he wasn't going to give himself any undue pressure to win this year.
On Thursday, he tried to make the best of losing ground to the leader Rasmussen.
"It's not over. I was hurting in my hip, my morale took a blow," Moreau said. "But three minutes -- it's limited ... I'm going to try to put myself together before the big mountain stages."
Challengers like Moreau are looking to today's time-trial in Albi for a chance to make up ground against Rasmussen, who admits he is a "pure climber" and doesn't fare well in races against the clock.
One former French star said Moreau's not likely to be on the podium after Thursday's drab performance.
"For winning the Tour, his chances are nil," said Bernard Thevenet, who won in 1975 and 1977. "All that we want is a French winner ... it's not for this year. We'll wait some more."
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