PARIS -- The craziest Tour de France in memory ended Sunday the same way the last seven had: with an American wearing the yellow jersey, this time with a Landis instead of a Lance.
After stunning feats of willpower and woeful cracks of concentration, Floyd Landis' arthritic hip held up and he held on for the ceremonial ride over the cobblestones of the Champs-Elysees.
"I kept fighting, never stopped believing," Landis said after leaving the winner's podium with his daughter, Ryan.
But plenty of race fans surely had their doubts, especially after his wild ride in the Alps last week.
Landis had tried to apply Armstrong's meticulous strategy for winning, but that went awry when he flat out cracked in the final climb of Stage 16 on Wednesday, giving up a lead and falling 8 minutes, 8 seconds behind Spain's Oscar Pereiro.
All but written off, he managed a stunning rebound the very next day in the last mountain stage, pedaling like a madman and closing the gap to 30 seconds.
|
|
| Floyd Landis turned the race around with a heroic effort Thursday in the mountains. (AP) |
The comeback was read by many as a master stroke, instantly enshrining Landis in cycling's pantheon alongside greats like five-time Tour champion Eddy Merckx of Belgium for his show of both human frailty and superhuman courage in the span of 24 hours.
The 30 seconds put Landis, who hails from eastern Pennsylvania's Dutch country, in position to win by outpacing Pereiro in the final time trial Saturday.
And by the time he was done, the race was reborn -- injected with the drama and swashbuckling flavor of years past, something that was lacking for nearly all of Armstrong's seven victories.
Not that the two men won't be inextricably linked.
A former mountain biker, Landis toiled for three years as a U.S. Postal Service team support rider for Armstrong -- then broke out on his own to lead the Swiss Phonak squad.
Now, Armstrong wants him back with the Discovery Channel team, of which he is part owner.
