Stage 21 - July 26th
Montereau-Fault-Yonne—Paris Champs-Élysées (164km)

Stage 21 ResultsFinal ResultsLive Replay
  1. Alberto Contador (Astana) at 85:48:35
  2. Andy Schleck (Saxo Bank) at 04:11
  3. Lance Armstrong (Astana) at 05:24
  4. Bradley Wiggins (Garmin - Slipstream) at 06:01
  5. Frank Schleck (Saxo Bank) at 06:04
  6. Andréas Klöden (Astana) at 06:42
  7. Vincenzo Nibali (Liquigas) at 07:35
  8. Christian Vande Velde (Garmin-Slipstream) at 12:04
  9. Roman Kreuziger (Liquigas) at 14:16
  10. Christophe Le Mevel (Francaise Des Jeux) at 14:25

Stage 11 - By the numbers

Published: Jul. 16, 2008

Stage 11, Lannemezan to Foix, 167.5km

Weather
Warmer, with moderate northerly winds, highs in the upper 80s

Stage winner
Kurt-Asle Arvesen (CSC-Saxo Bank) shot away with under 3km to go and stabbed his bike across the line to win in a photo-finish ahead of Martin Elmiger (Ag2r-La Mondiale) in a four-up sprint. After winning two Giro stages, it’s the first Tour victory for the Norwegian national champion.

Yellow jersey
Cadel Evans (Silence-Lotto) finished 27th safely tucked in the main pack at 14:51 back to enjoy his first full day in the maillot jaune. Alexandre Botcharov (Credit Agricole) was the best-placed rider to work into the break and climbed to 18th at 6:07 back. There were no other major shakeups in the overall standings.

Green jersey
Oscar Freire (Rabobank) sprinted to third-place points at the day’s first sprint and fourth in the bunch sprint to defend the points jersey. Kim Kirchen (Columbia) remained second, 138-128, and finished just behind Freire in the main pack. Thor Hushovd (Credit Agricole) remained third with 117 points.

King of the Mountains
Riccardo Riccò (Saunier Duval-Scott) retained the polka-dot jersey as the day’s main breakaway gobbled up all the day’s points. Riccò leads teammate David de la Fuente, 77-65, with Sebastian Lang (Gerolsteiner) in third with 57 points.

Most aggressive rider
Tour rookie Amael Moinard (Cofidis) won the day’s prize.

Best Young Rider
Riccò retained his lead to Vicenzo Nibali (Liquigas) by 1:49 with Maxime Monfort (Cofidis) third at 4:18.

Best team
Team CSC-Saxo Bank moved back into the team’s classification lead thanks to Arvesen’s attack. Ag2r-La Mondiale is second at 4:49 with Saunier Duval-Scott slipping from first to third, now 10:11 back.

Top American
Christian Vande Velde (Garmin-Chipotle) finished safely in the main bunch and remained third overall, 38 seconds back.

Lanterne Rouge
Jimmy Casper (Agritubel) was last at 23:10 back. Wim Vansevenant (Silence-Lotto) remains last at 2h04:02 back.

The peloton
Moises Dueñas (Barloworld) didn’t start after testing positive for EPO
Paolo Longo Borghini and Felix Cárdenas (Barloworld) both crashed out, 166 riders remain

Medical report
Crash at 57km – Longo Borghini (Barloworld), fractured right clavicle, transported to hospital in Saint-Girons, Cárdenas (Barloworld), deep cut to left knee, DNF
Verdugo (Euskaltel-Euskadi), persistent throat pain
Hushovd (Credit Agricole), small ear problem
Barredo (Quick Step), thigh pain from earlier crash; Monfort (Cofidis), headache

Jury report
Kirchen, Burghardt and Ciolek (all Columbia), all fined 60 euros for missing sign-in
Tiralongo (Lampre), push at 33km
Cooke (Barloworld), push at 110km, both fined 30 euros and penalized five points and 10 seconds

Thursday’s Forecast
Mostly sunny, brisk 40kph westerly winds, highs in 90s.
Compiled by Andrew Hood