Cavendish rides to another win with rainy end
Britain’s Mark Cavendish won the eighth bicycle stage in a rain-soaked finish.
TOULOUSE, France (AP) — One day after doping hit cycling yet again, a team that knows the perils of drug scandals all too well sped to victory Saturday as the daunting climbs of the Pyrenees awaited Tour de France riders.
Britain’s Mark Cavendish captured the eighth stage in a rain-soaked finish, his second stage victory in the three-week race.
That was only part of the story for Team Columbia. Germany’s Gerald Ciolek took second place and Luxembourg’s Kim Kirchen held the leader’s yellow jersey. The white jersey for the race’s best young rider belonged to a Columbia rider, Sweden’s Thomas Lovqvist.
“To finish with a 1-2 and have Kim in yellow, you can’t do better than that,” Cavendish said. “When I’m there in the sprint and fired up, normally I can win.”
Kirchen was six seconds ahead of Cadel Evans of Australia in the overall standings, with Stefan Schumacher of Germany 16 seconds back and Christian Vandevelde of the United States 44 behind.
The Italian team Liquigas began the day without Spanish veteran Manuel Beltran, who tested positive for the blood-booster EPO after the first stage a week ago. Beltran was taken briefly into police custody and headed to the airport after his release.
“It still happens in 2008, first stage of the Tour de France. I could not believe it,” Silence-Lotto sporting director Marc Sergeant said. “It’s good that he is out. I hope he is the last. The only positive thing about it is that he has been caught.”
Liquigas sporting director Roberto Amadio said Beltran denied having taken EPO, and the team was insistent there was no organized doping in its ranks.
Bjarne Riis, the 1996 Tour winner who last year admitted to having taken EPO during his racing career, said Beltran has let down the sport.
“He has to leave. It is good that the controls are working,” said Riis, who owns the Danish-backed Team CSC. “I don’t think it is a scandal for cycling and the Tour. I think he is a scandal.”
For the Columbia riders who were at the Tour a year ago — when they rode as T-Mobile — the story was all too familiar.
During last year’s Tour, it was revealed that T-Mobile rider Patrik Sinkewitz had tested positive for testosterone a month before the race. Sinkewitz acknowledged taking the drug and was fired by the team and banned.
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