Riders head for the mountains



The next few days should make sense of a wide-open race.
DAX, France (AP) -- Now for the hard part.
Having made it through fast and dangerous racing during the opening flat stages of the Tour de France, riders veer today into the Pyrenees for their first encounter with the high mountains.
The steep, long, hard climbs should help separate true contenders to succeed seven-time winner Lance Armstrong from those who can't make the gradient, offering a little clarity to a race devoid so far of any standout favorite.
The spotlight will move away from sprint specialists like Oscar Freire, winner of Tuesday's pancake-flat stage nine. Lithe climbers and riders eyeing the overall title, who need to get over the humps well if they are to win in Paris on July 23, will move to the fore.
Tuesday's winner
Freire, a three-time former world champion, flashed past current world champion Tom Boonen and held off a late-surging Robbie McEwen of Australia to triumph in a grouped sprint finish Tuesday at Dax in southwest France. The 105-mile ride started in Bordeaux.
The win was the Spaniard's second of this Tour -- consolation for missing the expected birth of his first child in coming days.
"It's better to be here winning, while not being at home, than being here losing," he said.
Contenders for the overall title did what they nearly always do in flat stages -- stay safely out of the sprinters' way. The gap between race leader Serhiy Honchar of Ukraine and next best overall Floyd Landis of the United States remained unchanged at 1 minute.
Struggling
American Levi Leipheimer's bad Tour got worse. He had a tire problem in the final stretch that cost him 26 seconds, adding to the large deficit he built up in the first long time trial last weekend. He is now 6:43 behind Honchar, which could rule him out of the title race.
Landis said riding consistently in the mountains would be key.
"All of the mountain stages can be potentially disastrous if you have a bad day," he said.
That comment came at a news conference Monday when he announced that he is racing with a painful arthritic hip that will need to be replaced after the three-week Tour, clouding his long-term career prospects.
His friend David Zabriskie, a fellow American riding for a rival team, said he thinks Landis will be fine.
"He's a tough guy, he'll be all right," Zabriskie said Tuesday.
Race strategy uncertain
Because the race is so open this year, a problem for Landis and other riders is identifying which of their rivals they need to watch closely in the mountains and not let get too far ahead.
The hierarchy at the Tour has been thrown into disarray not only by Armstrong's retirement but also by a doping scandal that forced the withdrawal of top contenders before the start on July 1. Crashes since then have also whittled down the field.
"It's hard to make a strategy when you don't know how the race is gonna go," said Cadel Evans, an Australian among those who could challenge for the podium. He trails Honchar by 1:52.
He was among those relieved to get off the fast flats where the pack speeds to the line together.
"You have to fight for position with your elbows," he said.
Landis said that he expects the Alps, which come in week three, to be more of a determining factor on the outcome of the race than the Pyrenees.
Nevertheless, the mountains that straddle France and Spain are no cakewalk.
Wednesday's stage from Cambo-les-Bains to Pau has three climbs. The hardest, to the Soudet pass, ascends to more than 5,000 feet and is so tough that it is rated "hors categorie," or defying classification on the scale the Tour uses to measure the difficulty of ascents.
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