User:Forward Unto Dawn/sandbox
Race details | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Dates | July 2–July 24, 2005 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stages | 21 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distance | 3,592.5 km (2,232 mi) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Winning time | 86h 15' 02" | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Results | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The 2005 Tour de France was the 92nd Tour de France, taking place from July 2 to July 24, 2005. It comprised 21 stages over 3592.5 km, the winner's average speed was 41.654 km/h.[1] The first stages were held in the département of the Vendée, for the third time in 12 years. The 2005 Tour was announced on October 28, 2004. It was a clockwise route, visiting the Alps before the Pyrenees. Lance Armstrong won this Tour, making it his seventh consecutive Tour victory. He was accompanied on the podium by Ivan Basso and Jan Ullrich, but in 2012 Ullrich's results were annulled.[2] As of 11 February 2012, the Union Cycliste Internationale has not commented if the third place would remain empty, or fourth-place finisher Mancebo would be upgraded to third place.[3] The points classification was won by Thor Hushovd, and the mountains classification by Michael Rasmussen.
On 24 August 2012, the United States Anti-Doping Agency announced that they had disqualified Armstrong from all his results since 1998, including his victory in the 2005 Tour de France. The Union Cycliste Internationale, responsible for the international cycling, did not immediately take over this verdict. Ultimately it did strip Armstrong of all his Tour titles on 22 October 2012.
Due to the fact that the top seven and ninth-placed GC riders either testing positive for performance-enhancing drugs during the race or in later years, the default top-three riders were Cadel Evans, Óscar Pereiro and Christophe Moreau.
The race was seen by 15 million spectators along the road, and by 2 billion viewers on TV.[4]
Route
[edit]The traditional prologue on the first day was replaced by an individual time trial of more than twice the length of a standard prologue.[5] This stage crossed from the mainland of France to the Île de Noirmoutier. The most famous route to this island is the Passage du Gois, a road that is under water at high tide. This road was included in the 1999 Tour. Several of the favorites crashed there that year, and ended that stage 7 minutes behind the peloton. This year they took the bridge to the island.
Later in the race, there was one more time trial, on the penultimate day. Also, there were just three uphill finishes (Courchevel, Ax-3 Domaines and Pla d'Adet), a lower number than in previous years. The finish line of the last stage was, as has been since 1975, on the Champs-Élysées in Paris.
The Tour commemorated the death of Fabio Casartelli. During the 15th stage the riders passed the Col du Portet d'Aspet, where Casartelli died exactly 10 years earlier, in the 1995 Tour de France.[5] The Tour also commemorated the first time there was an official mountain climb in the Tour, the Ballon d'Alsace.[6] During the 9th stage this mountain was passed again, exactly 100 years after the first ascent in the Tour.
Participants
[edit]In 2005, the UCI had started the ProTour: 20 teams were given a ProTour licence, and were required to start in all ProTour races, which included the Tour de France. The Tour de France organisation was not happy with this rule, as they wanted to be able to decide which teams would join their race. While negotiations were still ongoing, it was decided to use the UCI rule for the 2005 Tour, so all 20 ProTour teams were automatically invited. The Tour organisation could invite one extra team with a wildcard, and used this to invite the Ag2R team.[7]
All teams were composed of nine cyclists, so 189 riders in 21 teams commenced the 2005 Tour de France. Of them, 155 riders finished.
Of the competitors in the 2005 Tour, the tallest rider was Johan Van Summeren at 1.98 metres and the shortest was Samuel Dumoulin at 1.58 metres. The heaviest rider was Magnus Bäckstedt at 95 kg, the lightest was Leonardo Piepoli at 57 kg. Christopher Horner and Laurent Lefevre shared the lowest resting heart rate, 35 beats per minute. The "average" rider in 2005 was 1.79 metres tall, weighed 71 kg, and had a resting heart rate of 50 beats per minute. {{citation}}
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Favourites
[edit]The main favourite was six-time winner Armstrong. Armstrong had had doubts if he should start the 2005 Tour,[8] but decided in February 2005 that he would race. His main rival Ullrich was happy with this decision, as he thought it would be a better race with Armstrong present.[7]
In previous years, Ullrich never had the full support of his team to win the general classification, as his team was also aiming for stage victories. In 2005, Erik Zabel, who had won the points classification six times, was left out of the team, and Ullrich was supported by Klöden and Vinokourov, who both had already reached the podium on the Tour.[7]
On the day before the Tour started, Ullrich crashed into his team director's car, but was not seriously injured.[7]
Race details
[edit]In Stage 1, David Zabriskie, a former team mate of Lance Armstrong, beat Armstrong by two seconds.[9] In the team time trial of stage 4, Zabriskie fell in the last kilometers, and Armstrong took over the lead.[9]
Armstrong initially refused to wear the yellow jersey in the fifth stage,[10] but was forced by the Tour organisation, who threatened to remove him from the race.[7]
In the tenth stage, the start was moved from Grenoble to Froges.[11]
Before the 20th stage, an individual time trial, Michael Rasmussen occupied the third place in the general classification. During that stage, Rasmussen fell multiple times and changed bicycles multiple times, and lost so much time that he ended up at the seventh place in the general classification.[9] The race jury invoked the 'rain rule'[12] for the Champs-Élysées, meaning that Lance Armstrong became the winner of the General classification the first time the race passed the finish line, rather than the eighth time as normal. The time bonification for the winner of the stage was still given, and Alexandre Vinokourov profited from this as he won the stage after an escape in the last kilometer (the first time since 1994 that the final stage did not end in a sprint[9]), and passed Levi Leipheimer in the general classification to end fifth.
During the final ceremonies in Paris, Armstrong was allowed to talk to the crowds, the first time in the Tour's history that a winner was given this chance.[13] It has since become a regular occurrence.
Stages
[edit]The 2005 Tour de France was divided into 21 stages. These stages belong to different categories: 8 were flat stages, 5 were medium mountain stages, 5 were high mountain stages, 2 were individual time trials and 1 was a team time trial.[6] The distinction between flat stage, medium mountain stage and high mountain stage is important for the points classification. There were two rest days, in Grenoble and in Pau.[11]
Stage | Date | Route | Terrain | Length | Winner |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 July | Fromentine – Noirmoutier-en-l'Île | Individual time trial | 19.0 km (11.8 mi) | David Zabriskie (USA) |
2 | 3 July | Challans – Les Essarts | Plain stage | 181.5 km (112.8 mi) | Tom Boonen (BEL) |
3 | 4 July | La Châtaigneraie – Tours | Plain stage | 212.5 km (132.0 mi) | Tom Boonen (BEL) |
4 | 5 July | Tours – Blois | Team time trial | 67.5 km (41.9 mi) | Discovery Channel (USA) |
5 | 6 July | Chambord – Montargis | Plain stage | 183.0 km (113.7 mi) | Robbie McEwen (AUS) |
6 | 7 July | Troyes – Nancy | Plain stage | 199.0 km (123.7 mi) | Lorenzo Bernucci (ITA) |
7 | 8 July | Lunéville – Karlsruhe | Plain stage | 228.5 km (142.0 mi) | Robbie McEwen (AUS) |
8 | 9 July | Pforzheim – Gérardmer | Hilly stage | 231.5 km (143.8 mi) | Pieter Weening (NED) |
9 | 10 July | Gérardmer – Mulhouse | Hilly stage | 171.0 km (106.3 mi) | Michael Rasmussen (DEN) |
10 | 12 July | Grenoble – Courchevel | Stage with mountain(s) | 177.0 km (110.0 mi) | Alejandro Valverde (ESP) |
11 | 13 July | Courchevel – Briançon | Stage with mountain(s) | 173.0 km (107.5 mi) | Alexandre Vinokourov (KAZ) |
12 | 14 July | Briançon – Digne-les-Bains | Hilly stage | 187.0 km (116.2 mi) | David Moncoutié (FRA) |
13 | 15 July | Miramas – Montpellier | Plain stage | 173.5 km (107.8 mi) | Robbie McEwen (AUS) |
14 | 16 July | Agde – Ax 3 Domaines | Stage with mountain(s) | 220.5 km (137.0 mi) | Georg Totschnig (AUT) |
15 | 17 July | Lézat-sur-Lèze – Saint-Lary-Soulan | Stage with mountain(s) | 205.5 km (127.7 mi) | George Hincapie (USA) |
16 | 19 July | Mourenx – Pau | Stage with mountain(s) | 180.5 km (112.2 mi) | Óscar Pereiro (ESP) |
17 | 20 July | Pau – Revel | Plain stage | 239.5 km (148.8 mi) | Paolo Savoldelli (ITA) |
18 | 21 July | Albi – Mende | Hilly stage | 189.0 km (117.4 mi) | Marcos Antonio Serrano (ESP) |
19 | 22 July | Issoire – Le Puy-en-Velay | Hilly stage | 153.5 km (95.4 mi) | Giuseppe Guerini (ITA) |
20 | 23 July | Saint-Étienne – Saint-Étienne | Individual time trial | 55.5 km (34.5 mi) | Lance Armstrong (USA) |
21 | 24 July | Corbeil-Essonnes – Paris (Champs-Élysées) | Plain stage | 144.5 km (89.8 mi) | Alexandre Vinokourov (KAZ) |
In the stages that were not time trials, there were intermediate sprints. Cyclist who crossed the intermediate sprints first received points for the points classification, and bonification seconds for the general classification. Until stage 8, there were three intermediate sprints, and from stage 9 on there were two.[16]
Classification leadership
[edit]- Jersey wearers when one rider is leading two or more competitions
- In stage 1, Lance Armstrong wore the green jersey.
Final Standings
[edit]General classification
[edit]Rank | Name | Team | Time |
---|---|---|---|
1 | |
Discovery Channel | 86h 15' 02" |
2 | Ivan Basso (ITA) | Team CSC | +4' 40" |
3 | |
T-Mobile | +6' 21" |
4 | Francisco Mancebo (ESP) | Illes Balears-Caisse d'Epargne | +9' 59" |
5 | Alexandre Vinokourov (KAZ) | T-Mobile | +11' 01" |
6 | |
Gerolsteiner | +11' 21" |
7 | Michael Rasmussen (DEN) | Rabobank | +11' 33" |
8 | Cadel Evans (AUS) | Davitamon-Lotto | +11' 55" |
9 | Floyd Landis (USA) | Phonak | +12' 44" |
10 | Óscar Pereiro (ESP) | Phonak | +16' 04" |
11 | Christophe Moreau (FRA) | Crédit Agricole | +16' 26" |
Final general classification (11–154) | |||
---|---|---|---|
Rank | Name | Team | Time |
12 | Yaroslav Popovych (UKR) | Discovery Channel | +19' 02" |
13 | Eddy Mazzoleni (ITA) | Lampre | +21' 06" |
14 | George Hincapie (USA) | Discovery Channel | +23' 40" |
15 | Haimar Zubeldia (ESP) | Euskaltel | +23' 43" |
16 | Jörg Jaksche (GER) | Liberty Seguros | +24' 07" |
17 | Bobby Julich (USA) | Team CSC | +24' 08" |
18 | Óscar Sevilla (ESP) | T-Mobile | +27' 45" |
19 | Andrey Kashechkin (KAZ) | Crédit Agricole | +28' 04" |
20 | Giuseppe Guerini (ITA) | T-Mobile | +33' 02" |
21 | Carlos Sastre (ESP) | Team CSC | +34' 24" |
22 | Xabier Zandio (ESP) | Illes Balears-Caisse d'Epargne | +36' 20" |
23 | Leonardo Piepoli (SUI) | Saunier Duval | +36' 20" |
24 | Michael Boogerd (NED) | Rabobank | +38' 29" |
25 | Paolo Savoldelli (ITA) | Discovery Channel | +44' 30" |
26 | Georg Totschnig (AUT) | Gerolsteiner | +49' 14" |
27 | Mikel Astarloza (ESP) | Ag2r | +54' 03" |
28 | Laurent Brochard (FRA) | Bouygues Telecom | +55' 29" |
29 | Sandy Casar (FRA) | Française des Jeux | +56' 47" |
30 | José Bento Azevedo (POR) | Discovery Channel | +59' 48" |
31 | Alberto Contador (ESP) | Liberty Seguros | +1h 03' 25" |
32 | Stefano Garzelli (ITA) | Liquigas | +1h 04' 49" |
33 | Chris Horner (USA) | Saunier Duval | +1h 07' 57" |
34 | Stéphane Goubert (FRA) | Ag2r | +1h 10' 53" |
35 | José-Luis Rubiera (ESP) | Discovery Channel | +1h 11' 48" |
36 | Pietro Caucchioli (ITA) | Crédit Agricole | +1h 16' 21" |
37 | Maxim Iglinsky (KAZ) | Domina Vacanze | +1h 18' 44" |
38 | Jörg Ludewig (GER) | Domina Vacanze | +1h 19' 05" |
39 | Axel Merckx (BEL) | Davitamon-Lotto | +1h 20' 15" |
40 | Marcos Antonio Serrano (ESP) | Liberty Seguros | +1h 21' 31" |
41 | Michael Rogers (AUS) | Quick Step | +1h 24' 32" |
42 | Alexandre Moos (SUI) | Phonak | +1h 25' 35" |
43 | Jérôme Pineau (FRA) | Bouygues Telecom | +1h 31' 38" |
44 | Cédric Vasseur (FRA) | Cofidis | +1h 33' 17" |
45 | Roberto Heras (ESP) | Liberty Seguros | +1h 38' 33" |
46 | Pierrick Fédrigo (FRA) | Bouygues Telecom | +1h 41' 14" |
47 | Franco Pellizotti (ITA) | Liquigas | +1h 41' 38" |
48 | Egoi Martínez (ESP) | Euskaltel | +1h 42' 29" |
49 | José Enrique Gutierrez (ESP) | Phonak | +1h 42' 35" |
50 | Vladimir Karpets (RUS) | Illes Balears-Caisse d'Epargne | +1h 43' 45" |
51 | Santiago Botero (COL) | Phonak | +1h 49' 22" |
52 | Patrice Halgand (FRA) | Crédit Agricole | +1h 53' 26" |
53 | David Arroyo (ESP) | Illes Balears-Caisse d'Epargne | +1h 54' 12" |
54 | Dario David Cioni (ITA) | Liquigas | +2h 00' 39" |
55 | Daniele Nardello (ITA) | T-Mobile | +2h 02' 23" |
56 | Christophe Brandt (BEL) | Davitamon-Lotto | +2h 03' 10" |
57 | Matthias Kessler (GER) | T-Mobile | +2h 03' 56" |
58 | Sylvain Chavanel (FRA) | Cofidis | +2h 05' 20" |
59 | Patrik Sinkewitz (GER) | Quick Step | +2h 07' 48" |
60 | Iban Mayo (ESP) | Euskaltel | +2h 07' 48" |
61 | Thomas Lövkvist (SWE) | Française des Jeux | +2h 07' 48" |
62 | Lorenzo Bernucci (ITA) | Fassa Bortolo | +2h 08' 37" |
63 | David Cañada (ESP) | Saunier Duval | +2h 08' 56" |
64 | Angel Vicioso (ESP) | Liberty Seguros | +2h 09' 37" |
65 | Sebastian Lang (GER) | Gerolsteiner | +2h 11' 18" |
66 | Juan Manuel Gárate (ESP) | Saunier Duval | +2h 15' 17" |
67 | David Moncoutié (FRA) | Cofidis | +2h 15' 23" |
68 | Walter Bénéteau (FRA) | Bouygues Telecom | +2h 17' 06" |
69 | Iker Camaño (ESP) | Euskaltel | +2h 22' 41" |
70 | Philippe Gilbert (BEL) | Française des Jeux | +2h 24' 00" |
71 | Nicki Sørensen (DEN) | Team CSC | +2h 24' 08" |
72 | Pieter Weening (NED) | Rabobank | +2h 24' 16" |
73 | Juan Antonio Flecha (ESP) | Fassa Bortolo | +2h 24' 21" |
74 | José Luis Arrieta (ESP) | Illes Balears-Caisse d'Epargne | +2h 25' 27" |
75 | Joseba Beloki (ESP) | Liberty Seguros | +2h 26' 26" |
76 | Carlos De La Cruz (FRA) | Française des Jeux | +2h 26' 49" |
77 | Stuart O'Grady (AUS) | Cofidis | +2h 27' 19" |
78 | Andriy Grivko (UKR) | Domina Vacanze | +2h 28' 08" |
79 | Fabian Wegmann (GER) | Gerolsteiner | +2h 29' 32" |
80 | Massimo Giunti (ITA) | Fassa Bortolo | +2h 29' 34" |
81 | Tobias Steinhauser (GER) | T-Mobile | +2h 31' 02" |
82 | Didier Rous (FRA) | Bouygues Telecom | +2h 33' 10" |
83 | Joost Posthuma (NED) | Rabobank | +2h 33' 59" |
84 | Allan Davis (AUS) | Liberty Seguros | +2h 34' 40" |
85 | Denis Menchov (RUS) | Rabobank | +2h 35' 00" |
86 | Stephan Schreck (GER) | T-Mobile | +2h 35' 52" |
87 | Gorazd Štangelj (SLO) | Lampre | +2h 36' 13" |
88 | Nicolas Portal (FRA) | Ag2r | +2h 38' 01" |
89 | Kurt Asle Arvesen (NOR) | Team CSC | +2h 39' 27" |
90 | Yuriy Krivtsov (UKR) | Ag2r | +2h 39' 51" |
91 | Ronny Scholz (GER) | Gerolsteiner | +2h 43' 03" |
92 | Rubens Bertogliati (SUI) | Saunier Duval | +2h 45' 03" |
93 | Beat Zberg (SUI) | Gerolsteiner | +2h 46' 24" |
94 | Francis Mourey (FRA) | Française des Jeux | +2h 47' 14" |
95 | Pavel Padrnos (CZE) | Discovery Channel | +2h 49' 53" |
96 | Ludovic Turpin (FRA) | Ag2r | +2h 51' 28" |
97 | Anthony Geslin (FRA) | Bouygues Telecom | +2h 51' 58" |
98 | Alessandro Cortinovis (ITA) | Domina Vacanze | +2h 52' 02" |
99 | David Loosli (SUI) | Lampre | +2h 52' 41" |
100 | Iñigo Landaluze (ESP) | Euskaltel | +2h 52' 41" |
101 | Salvatore Commesso (ITA) | Lampre | +2h 53' 46" |
102 | Luke Roberts (AUS) | Team CSC | +2h 54' 12" |
103 | Bert Grabsch (GER) | Phonak | +2h 54' 35" |
104 | Volodymir Gustov (UKR) | Fassa Bortolo | +2h 54' 56" |
105 | Bradley McGee (AUS) | Française des Jeux | +2h 55' 59" |
106 | Sébastien Joly (FRA) | Crédit Agricole | +2h 56' 10" |
107 | Benjamin Noval (ESP) | Discovery Channel | +3h 00' 59" |
108 | Luis Leon Sánchez (ESP) | Liberty Seguros | +3h 03' 19" |
109 | Erik Dekker (NED) | Rabobank | +3h 03' 36" |
110 | Daniele Righi (ITA) | Lampre | +3h 04' 17" |
111 | Bram Tankink (NED) | Quick Step | +3h 05' 12" |
112 | Mario Aerts (BEL) | Davitamon-Lotto | +3h 07' 30" |
113 | Alessandro Bertolini (ITA) | Domina Vacanze | +3h 09' 13" |
114 | Samuel Dumoulin (FRA) | Ag2r | +3h 11' 02" |
115 | Sébastien Hinault (FRA) | Crédit Agricole | +3h 14' 33" |
116 | Thor Hushovd (NOR) | Crédit Agricole | +3h 15' 40" |
117 | Laurent Lefèvre (FRA) | Bouygues Telecom | +3h 16' 06" |
118 | Giovanni Lombardi (ITA) | Team CSC | +3h 18' 21" |
119 | Laszlo Bodrogi (FRA) | Crédit Agricole | +3h 18' 44" |
120 | Matthieu Sprick (FRA) | Bouygues Telecom | +3h 20' 47" |
121 | Stéphane Augé (FRA) | Cofidis | +3h 21' 30" |
122 | Iñaki Isasi (ESP) | Euskaltel | +3h 21' 50" |
123 | Matthew White (AUS) | Cofidis | +3h 23' 41" |
124 | Thomas Voeckler (FRA) | Bouygues Telecom | +3h 25' 32" |
125 | Marcus Ljungqvist (SWE) | Liquigas | +3h 25' 36" |
126 | Simon Gerrans (AUS) | Ag2r | +3h 27' 03" |
127 | Thierry Marichal (BEL) | Cofidis | +3h 30' 59" |
128 | Fabian Cancellara (SUI) | Fassa Bortolo | +3h 32' 40" |
129 | Frédérick Bessy (FRA) | Cofidis | +3h 34' 59" |
130 | Michael Rich (GER) | Gerolsteiner | +3h 37' 13" |
131 | Manuel Quinziato (ITA) | Saunier Duval | +3h 37' 31" |
132 | Fred Rodriguez (USA) | Davitamon-Lotto | +3h 37' 58" |
133 | Alessandro Vanotti (ITA) | Domina Vacanze | +3h 38' 43" |
134 | Robbie McEwen (AUS) | Davitamon-Lotto | +3h 41' 52" |
135 | Karsten Kroon (NED) | Rabobank | +3h 42' 03" |
136 | Johan Vansummeren (BEL) | Davitamon-Lotto | +3h 43' 05" |
137 | Mauro Gerosa (ITA) | Liquigas | +3h 44' 22" |
138 | Nicolas Jalabert (FRA) | Phonak | +3h 44' 26" |
139 | Guido Trenti (USA) | Quick Step | +3h 46' 24" |
140 | Marc Wauters (BEL) | Rabobank | +3h 46' 54" |
141 | Kjell Carlström (FIN) | Liquigas | +3h 47' 02" |
142 | Baden Cooke (AUS) | Française des Jeux | +3h 47' 17" |
143 | Bernhard Eisel (AUT) | Française des Jeux | +3h 47' 35" |
144 | Mauro Facci (ITA) | Fassa Bortolo | +3h 49' 30" |
145 | Michael Albasini (SUI) | Liquigas | +3h 51' 03" |
146 | Peter Wrolich (AUT) | Gerolsteiner | +3h 51' 50" |
147 | Rafael Nuritdinov (UZB) | Domina Vacanze | +3h 54' 14" |
148 | José Vicente Garcia (ESP) | Illes Balears-Caisse d'Epargne | +3h 56' 34" |
149 | Servais Knaven (NED) | Quick Step | +3h 59' 07" |
150 | Unai Etxebarria (VEN) | Euskaltel | +4h 00' 24" |
151 | Robert Förster (GER) | Gerolsteiner | +4h 01' 40" |
152 | Daniel Becke (GER) | Illes Balears-Caisse d'Epargne | +4h 02' 16" |
153 | Janek Tombak (EST) | Cofidis | +4h 03' 09" |
Wim Vansevenant (BEL) | Davitamon-Lotto | +4h 09' 25" | |
154 | Iker Flores (ESP) | Euskaltel | +4h 20' 24" |
Rank | Name | Team | Points |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Thor Hushovd (NOR) | Crédit Agricole | 194 |
2 | Stuart O'Grady (AUS) | Cofidis | 182 |
3 | Robbie McEwen (AUS) | Davitamon–Lotto | 178 |
4 | Alexandre Vinokourov (KAZ) | T-Mobile Team | 158 |
5 | Allan Davis (AUS) | Liberty Seguros–Würth | 130 |
6 | Óscar Pereiro (ESP) | Phonak | 118 |
7 | Robert Förster (GER) | Gerolsteiner | 101 |
8 | Lance Armstrong (USA) | Discovery Channel | 93 |
9 | Baden Cooke (AUS) | Française des Jeux | 91 |
10 | Bernhard Eisel (AUT) | Française des Jeux | 88 |
Rank | Name | Team | Points |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Michael Rasmussen (DEN) | Rabobank | 185 |
2 | Óscar Pereiro (ESP) | Phonak | 155 |
3 | Lance Armstrong (USA) | Discovery Channel | 99 |
4 | Christophe Moreau (FRA) | Crédit Agricole | 93 |
5 | Michael Boogerd (NED) | Rabobank | 90 |
6 | Santiago Botero (COL) | Phonak | 88 |
7 | Alexandre Vinokourov (KAZ) | T-Mobile Team | 75 |
8 | Laurent Brochard (FRA) | Bouygues Télécom | 75 |
9 | George Hincapie (USA) | Discovery Channel | 74 |
10 | Pietro Caucchioli (ITA) | Crédit Agricole | 73 |
Óscar Pereiro was given the combativity award by the jury who chose him as the most attacking cyclist.[1]
Doping cases
[edit]During the race, 143 urine tests and 21 blood tests were conducted. None of them returned positive.[17] Still, there were fears that banned substances were being used; the boss of the Amore & Vita–Beretta team (not racing in the 2005 Tour) questioned the increase in velocities.[18]
In 2010, Hans Michael Holczer, the team boss of Gerolsteiner in 2005, said that the UCI had informed him that Leipheimer had shown blood values just under the doping limit, and that Holczer suspected that Leipheimer was using doping. The UCI advised Gerolsteiner to find a reason to remove Leipheimer from the race, but Holczer refused, because his team was still facing bad publicity from a previous doping case.[19]
The top five of the general classification of 2005 would not compete the 2006 edition. Armstrong had retired after the 2005 Tour, and a few days before the 2006 edition, after it became public that (among others) Basso, Ullrich and Mancebo were under investigation in the Operacion Puerto doping case, the Tour organisation and team leaders decided to exclude all cyclists under investigation from joining the Tour. Vinokourov, fifth-placed in 2005, was not under investigation, but his team was reduced to five cyclists, below the minimal required amount of six, so he could also not compete.[20]
In February 2012, the Court of Arbitration for Sport found Ullrich guilty of being engaged in Fuentes' doping program, and decided that Ullrich's results since May 2005, including his results from the 2005 Tour de France, would be disqualified.[2]
Subsequent to the Armstrong's statement to withdraw his fight against USADA's charges, on August 24, 2012, the USADA said it would ban Armstrong for life and stripped him of his record seven Tour de France titles.[21][22] Later that day it was confirmed in a USADA statement[23] that Armstrong was banned for life and would be disqualified from any and all competitive results obtained on and subsequent to August 1, 1998, including forfeiture of any medals, titles, winnings, finishes, points and prizes. Whether the USADA has the legal authority to enforce their ruling, remains in question.[24]
See also
[edit]- List of teams and cyclists in the 2005 Tour de France
- List of doping cases in cycling
- Road bicycle racing
References
[edit]25. ^ "Cycling’s governing body agrees to strip Lance Armstrong of his 7 Tour de France titles" http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/decision-time-finally-arrives-for-uci-to-say-whether-it-will-strip-armstrong-of-7-tour-titles/2012/10/22/32965fcc-1c1f-11e2-8817-41b9a7aaabc7_story.html?wpisrc=al_national
- ^ a b Augendre, Jacques (2009). "Guide Historique" (PDF) (in French). Amaury Sport Organisation. Archived from the original on 2009-10-09. Retrieved 30 September 2009.
- ^ a b "Jan Ullrich given two year ban from CAS". Cyclingnews. Future Publishing limited. 9 February 2012. Retrieved 9 February 2012.
- ^ "Press Release: CAS decision in Jan Ullrich case - UCI statement". Union Cycliste Internationale. 9 February 2012. Retrieved 11 February 2012.
- ^ "Tour de France 2005: welcome on the official website". Archived from the original on 2009-10-09. Retrieved 2009-10-07.
- ^ a b Jean-Marie Leblanc (2005). "Edito". Amaury Sport Organisation. Retrieved 7 October 2009.
- ^ a b "The route". Amaury Sport Organisation. 2005. Retrieved 7 October 2009.
- ^ a b c d e McGann, Bill (2008). The Story of the Tour De France: 1965-2007. Dog Ear Publishing. pp. 305–316. ISBN 978-1-59858-608-4.
{{cite book}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ "Tour bosses announce 2005 route". BBC. 28 October 2004. Retrieved 28 March 2011.
- ^ a b c d e f "92ème Tour de France 2005" (in French). Memoire du Cyclisme. Archived from the original on 2009-10-09. Retrieved 7 October 2009.
- ^ It is a tradition that a cyclist who becomes the new leader because the previous leader was injured, does not wear the yellow jersey. Merckx did so in 1971 after Ocaña fell, Zoetemelk did so in 1980 after Hinault left, and LeMond did so in 1991 after Sørensen crashed.
- ^ a b Augendre, Jacques (2009). "Guide Historique, Part 4" (PDF) (in French). Amaury Sport Organisation. Retrieved 28 March 2011.
- ^ "Tour de France 2005 Newsflashes". letour.fr. Retrieved 2009-10-05.
- ^ Thompson, Christopher S. (2008). TheThe Tour de France: A Cultural History. University of California Press. p. 264. ISBN 978-0-520-25630-9.
- ^ a b "92ème Tour de France 2005" (in French). Memoire du cyclisme. Retrieved 15 August 2011.
- ^ Zwegers, Arian. "Tour de France GC Top Ten". CVCC. Archived from the original on 2009-06-10. Retrieved 15 Aug 2011.
- ^ "The Stakes". Amaury Sport Organisation. 2005. Retrieved 7 October 2009.
- ^ Thompson, Christopher S. (2008). TheThe Tour de France: A Cultural History. University of California Press. p. 262. ISBN 978-0-520-25630-9.
- ^ "Doping fears haunt Tour de France". Royal Society of Chemistry. 22 July 2005. Retrieved 28 March 2011.
- ^ Callahan, Ron (4 August 1010). "Gerolsteiner's Holczer implicates Leipheimer & UCI in doping scandal". Bike World News. Retrieved 28 March 2011.
- ^ "Four of top five '05 finishers won't start Tour this year". EPSN. 1 July 2006. Retrieved 28 March 2011.
- ^ "Lance Armstrong will be banned from cycling by USADA after saying he won't fight doping charges". The Washington Post. 24 August 2012. Retrieved 24 August 2012.
- ^ "USADA to ban Armstrong for life, strip Tour titles". CBS News. Retrieved 24 August 2012.
- ^ "Lance Armstrong Receives Lifetime Ban And Disqualification Of Competitive Results For Doping Violations Stemming From His Involvement In The United States Postal Service Pro-Cycling Team Doping Conspiracy". USADA. 24 August 2012.
- ^ "UCI asks USADA to explain case against Armstrong". Google hosted news. Retrieved 24 August 2012.