NARBONNE, France — Halfway through the Tour de France, Lance Armstrong has yet to dominate cycling's showcase race as he has in the past.

He didn't shine in the Alps and their monstrous climbs — although he rode well enough to take the overall lead. And he's ahead by only 21 seconds after the 10th stage, with another four days looming on the punishing ascents of the Pyrenees.

The talk among some riders as they headed into Wednesday's rest day was that the four-time champion is not the dominant force he once was as he goes for a record-tying fifth Tour win.

"It's perhaps the first time in four years where coming out of the Alps he's left a glimmer of hope," said Christophe Moreau, who is 4 minutes, 4 seconds behind Armstrong and 12th overall. "It's not what we expected."

Armstrong's closest rival, Alexandre Vinokourov, powered away on the legendary climb to the ski resort of L'Alpe d'Huez on Sunday, finishing second to Iban Mayo of Spain.

The next day, Vinokourov won the last alpine stage to the town of Gap. He is starting to believe he could be wearing the winner's yellow jersey at the finish in Paris on July 27.

"Lance was a bit stronger than me last year. I didn't even try to beat him," said Vinokourov, whose stage victory Monday was his first on the Tour. "But going into the Pyrenees, the gap isn't very big and I am in good condition."

Armstrong himself conceded after placing third at L'Alpe d'Huez that he's perhaps not as strong as when he won from 1999-2002.

View Comments

He's hardly had an easy Tour. He battled stomach flu in the weeks before the race, was bruised in a crash on the Tour's second day and struggled with a faulty brake over the 8,728-foot Col du Galibier.

Armstrong's race could have been over had he not reacted quickly to another crash. Rider Joseba Beloki skidded right in front of him on sun-melted tarmac Monday, and Armstrong only managed to avoid him by plowing into a field next to the road. Beloki broke his right leg, wrist and elbow, ending his Tour.

Leading up to his first two Tour wins, Armstrong was well out in front after the 10th stage — leading by more than four minutes in 2000 and seven minutes in 1999.

Armstrong's next big day on this Tour comes at Friday's individual time trials, when riders race against the clock.

Join the Conversation
Looking for comments?
Find comments in their new home! Click the buttons at the top or within the article to view them — or use the button below for quick access.