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Tour de France 2009 stage 18: Contador wins with awesome display

Overall: Schleck A holds second, Armstrong back in third, Wiggins fourth

Alberto Contador further stamped his authority on this year's Tour de France with a ride of incredible power to win the time trial in Annecy today. Contador put time in to all his rivals for the general classification. Behind him Andy Schleck consolidated his position in second place and Lance Armstrong moved back into a podium position at the expense of Frank Schleck and team mate Andreas Kloden - who is equal fourth with Brtain's Bradley Wiggins. 

Tour de France Stage 18 gallery

Such was the emphatic nature of his win, coming home 3 seconds clear of pre-stage favourite, Fabian Cancellara, in a time of 48:31 that even Contador admitted afterwards the result had taken him by surprise.

By the standards of this week the Annecy time trial stage was pretty much pancake flat, okay it included the not very French sounding category 3, Bluffy Climb, but that was no more than a pimple compared to the monsters the riders had faced earlier in the week and the one that lies in wait on Saturday.

It was a mixed day for Bradley Wiggins he pulled himself back up into fourth place but he faded on the return leg of the course to finish a disappointing sixth on the stage – two seconds back on his Garmin team mate David Millar. Behind him Lance Armstrong was able to limit his losses to Wiggins to such an extent that he moved back into third position, and with the Ventoux to come the Texan will be confident of holding on to that. To go higher he will need to dislodge Andy Schleck and that may be a tall order – the Luxembourger didn't have a bad day at the races in Annecy either and he will certainly be looking to do well on the Ventoux as well.

On paper Annecy route was made for TT specialists like Bradley Wiggins, David Millar, and of course Fabian Cancellara. Nowhere near as technical as the much shorter opening prologue in Monaco, which suited a consumate bike handler like Cancellara more of a course for the all out speed merchant… like Fabian Cancellara, or indeed Bradley Wiggins.

The Tour weather gods decided that today was not going to be a fast run in the sun, conditions weren't easy with a blustery wind and rain prompting Chris Boardman to Tweet from the course "The wind is up and down, having a big effect on times, some getting head wind, some not. Rain will make fast descent risky." Too right Chris.

Of the other contenders for the overall this was going to be a day of damage limitation for the Schleck bros, the race of truth is not their natural habitat. The same could not be said for the three Astana riders, Armstrong, Contador and Kloden have all shown themselves to be accomplished time triallists, and the course and distance in particular looked like it might suit the German a point made by Armstrong in a pre-stage Tweet “ Watch Kloden fly today...”

Millar and Cancellara were both out relatively early and true to form the Swiss rider posted the fastest time so far 48: 34 overhauling the Russian TT specialist Mikhail Ignatiev (Katusha) despite being 18 seconds down at the first checkpoint, Millar came back in 49:11 to place third place, and fellow Garmin rider Dave Zabriskie, also a useful man on a TT bike was fourth with a time of 49:32. Of the other notable speed merchants Michael Rogers (Columbia HTC) had a day to forget finishing in 50:09.

A slew of riders then gave it their best shot and aside from Gustav Larsson pushing Millar down into fourth place made no real impression on the top of the standing.

Then we were in to the Top 10 on General Classification Kloden looked powerful at the start, and Wiggins looked good too with a superb position on the bike, then it was Armstrong's turn on his Livestrong TT bike (a hint there about his 'new' team perhaps?).

Wiggins scorched through the first time check in the lead one second up on Ignatiev in 20:20, Kloden was next of the big contenders through 19 seconds down on Wiggins. Armstrong then went through in 20:29 just nine seconds back on Wiggins. Next came the Schlecks, Frank was first through 44 seconds back on Wiggins, Andy Schleck went through only 26 seconds down. Everyone was now waiting for Contador… if Wiggins was on fire Contador had gone thermo nuclear going through in a stunning time of 20:02.

So what would the next time check hold? In Monaco Contador faded in the second half while Cancellara got faster could the same thing happen here. At the second time check Wiggins went through the 25Km time check just behind Ignatiev, Armstrong was 19 seconds back on Wiggins. Franch Schleck went through 1:13 behind Wiggins. Contador passed the check 7 seconds up on Wiggins, but behind Ignatiev and slowing.

The Brit was first at the top of the Cote de Bluffy, Kloden topped the climb 16 seconds down on Wiggins, Armstrong lost time on the climb hitting the top 42 seconds back. At first the Schlecks looked to be suffering on the climb of the Bluffy Frank went through 1:16 back on Wiggins – so not suffering that much. Contdador hits the top of the Bluffy in a storming time of 36:50, 30 seconds up on Wiggins. Wow!

That climb had taken it out of Wiggins though, he went through the fourth time check in fourth place in a time of 45:49, Kloden was 11 seconds back on the Brit and he held that gap to the finish Armstrong was 44 seconds back.

Wiggins came home in 49:13 he'd slowed on the final run in Kloden came back in 49:24, Armstrong roared home in 50:00 dead enough to get him back on the podium. As expected Franck Schleck coming home in 51:04, brother Andy came home in 50:15 enough to keep in second overall

With one man left out on the course Cancellara's 48:34 was still the time to beat for the stage but that man was Alberto Contador and he was roaring back tearing through the final time check 15 seconds up on Cancellara and he stomed home in 48:30 to win by three seconds.

Top 10 Stage 18 2009 Tour de France

1) Alberto Contador Velasco (Astana)               0:48:31  
2) Fabian Cancellara (Team Saxo Bank)              0:00:03  
3) Mikhail Ignatiev (Team Katusha)                 0:00:15  
4) Gustav Erik Larsson (Team Saxo Bank)            0:00:32  
5) David Millar (Garmin - Slipstream)              0:00:40  
6) Bradley Wiggins (Garmin - Slipstream)           0:00:42  
7) Luis León Sánchez Gil (Caisse d'Epargne)        0:00:43  
8) Christophe Moreau (Agritubel)                   0:00:45  
9) Andreas Klöden (Astana)                         0:00:53  
10) David Zabriskie (Garmin - Slipstream)          0:01:01

Top 10 on General Classification after Stage 18

1) Alberto Contador Velasco (Astana)              73:15:39 
2) Andy Schleck (Team Saxo Bank)                   0:04:11 
3) Lance Armstrong (Astana)                        0:05:25 
4) Bradley Wiggins (Garmin - Slipstream)           0:05:36 
5) Andreas Klöden (Astana)                         0:05:38 
6) Fränk Schleck (Team Saxo Bank)                  0:05:59 
7) Vincenzo Nibali (Liquigas)                      0:07:15 
8) Christian Vande Velde (Garmin - Slipstream)     0:10:08 
9) Mikel Astarloza Chaurreau (Euskaltel - Euskadi) 0:12:38 
10) Christophe Le Mevel (Française des Jeux)       0:12:41 

road.cc's founder and first editor, nowadays to be found riding a spreadsheet. Tony's journey in cycling media started in 1997 as production editor and then deputy editor of Total Bike, acting editor of Total Mountain Bike and then seven years as editor of Cycling Plus. He launched his first cycling website - the Cycling Plus Forum at the turn of the century. In 2006 he left C+ to head up the launch team for Bike Radar which he edited until 2008, when he co-launched the multi-award winning road.cc - finally handing on the reins in 2021 to Jack Sexty. His favourite ride is his ‘commute’ - which he does most days inc weekends and he’s been cycle-commuting since 1994. His favourite bikes are titanium and have disc brakes, though he'd like to own a carbon bike one day.

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