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

Contador's win is the 12th Tour win for Spain

By Justin Davis, AFP
Published: Jul. 26, 2009

Alberto Contador took Spain's tally to 12 wins in 96 editions of the Tour de France when he wrapped up his second victory of the Tour here on Sunday.

Reputed climber Federico Bahamontes, nicknamed the 'Eagle of Toledo,' broke new ground for his countrymen by winning the race in 1959 after years of domination by the French, the Italians and Belgians.

Following in Bahamontes' trail, albeit 14 years later, was the great Luis Ocana, who claimed his only win in 1973 in an era dominated by Belgian great Eddy Merckx.

It took another 15 years for Spain to hail a winner, in the shape of Pedro Delgado, in 1988.

Only three years later, in 1991, Miguel Indurain showed a pioneering streak by crushing his rivals in the race's time trials while proving solid in the mountains stages.

Those skills allowed him to become the first five-time consecutive winner, his reign lasting until halfway through the 1996 race.

It took another 11 years for Spain to hail a new yellow jersey champion, and it came in controversial fashion.

Spaniard Oscar Pereiro finished second in the 2006 race, but was proclaimed champion a year later when American Floyd Landis, who tested positive for testosterone during the race's stage 17, was officially disqualified.

Similarly, Alberto Contador claimed his first Tour victory in 2007 when he inherited the yellow jersey late in the race after Denmark's race leader Michael Rasmussen was ejected for suspected doping.

Contador secured his first Tour de France triumph in the penultimate stage time trial to beat Australia's Cadel Evans by 23 seconds.

In 2008 another Spaniard triumphed, and again Evans was the runner-up when Carlos Sastre, then riding for the CSC team, claimed his first victory in the race.

After missing the race in 2008 because Astana was not invited, Contador started as the pre-race favorite in 2009 and, despite the presence of cycling
icon Lance Armstrong on his team, the Spaniard was a class above the rest.

Wins by country after 96 editions
36: France
18: Belgium
12: Spain
10: United States
9: Italy
4: Luxembourg
2: Netherlands, Switzerland
1: Germany, Denmark, Ireland

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