Hushovd wins rain-soaked Barcelona stage

BARCELONA, (Reuters) – Thor Hushovd has always  relished tough finishes and rainy conditions, both of which  helped the Norwegian snatch his seventh Tour de France stage win  in Barcelona yesterday.

He surged in last stretch of the 181.5-km sixth stage from  Girona to overpower two Spaniards in front of the 1992 Olympic  Stadium — pre-stage favourite Oscar Freire and Jose Joaquin  Rojas.

Swiss Fabian Cancellara crossed the line in 10th place and  retained his overall leader’s yellow jersey. Seven-times  champion Lance Armstrong, who came back from retirement in  January, stayed in second.

“It was very nervous,” Armstrong told reporters. There have  not been many days I regretted my decision (to return to  cycling). This might be one of them.

“We were always on the edge, with crashes all around,  dangerous hills. There is one word to describe the day — scary.  It was nerve-wracking.”

Hushovd’s victory gave his team Cervelo their first win in  the race.

“I knew I could do something in this stage but it was very  hard because of the weather conditions and the slippery roads,”  the 31-year-old said.

“It was Cervelo’s first goal to win a stage, now we can  concentrate on helping Carlos Sastre retain his Tour crown,” he  added.

Spain’s Sastre was one of many riders to crash during the  rain-soaked stage, but he made it back on his bike unhurt.

Belgian champion Tom Boonen also hit the tarmac shortly  before the last climb, squandering his chance of fighting for  stage victory.

Boonen, who was giving a last minute go-ahead for the Tour  after an out-of-competition test for cocaine, was in the leading  bunch chasing Briton David Millar.

Millar, winner of three stages before his two-year  suspension in 2004 for doping, had broken with less than 30 km  to go.

He was caught with less than two kilometres to go when the  climb became steepest.

“The stage started from my home town of Girona and I know  the roads in the area very well. I rode emotionally, with my  heart rather than my head,” the 32-year-old told reporters.

“When I saw the large roads in the last five kilometres, I  told myself the peloton would have plenty of room to get  organised. In the climb, I knew it was over, but it was still a  good day,” the Garmin-Slipstream rider added.

Millar initiated the most serious break of the day,  alongside Frenchmen Stephane Auge and Sylvain Chavanel — two of  his former team mates at Cofidis — who were later joined by  Spaniard Amets Txurruka.

Their lead culminated at some three minutes before the main  bunch reacted.

The first mountain stage of the Tour is today, over 224  km from Barcelona to Andorra-Arcalis.

“I’m going to try and defend my yellow jersey as long as I  can,” said Cancellara.

“I proved in the Tour of Switzerland I had some climbing  skills. If they’re not enough, I’ll pay back the team for what  they’ve done for me and work for Frank and Andy Schleck,” he  added.

But most eyes will be on Armstrong and his Astana team  leader Alberto Contador, who are expected to settle their  friendly feud on the 10.6-km final climb to the ski resort of  Arcalis.

“Tomorrow’s stage is not the most important day but it’s a  big appointment of this Tour,” Armstrong said.