Another record ride for Armstrong
LEADVILLE, Colo. - Lance Armstrong can't remember the last time he raced 65 miles by himself.
"I don't know, maybe when I was a young, young kid," he said. "You would never do that on the Tour, so none of the Tours I won.
"Quite literally in those Tours, excluding time trials, I probably rode alone for 20 miles. ... It's been a long time since I was time trialing for that long."
So strong was Armstrong on Saturday that he left the rest of the field in the mud just 35 miles into the lung-searing Leadville 100 mountain bike race, winning the nation's highest-altitude endurance test in record time.
Despite racing through freezing rain at the start, which made it difficult to shift gears on the foreboding descents on a flat back tire for the final 10 miles, Armstrong shaved nearly 17 minutes off the record, winning in 6 hours, 28 minutes, 50 seconds.
He dethroned six-time defending champion Dave Wiens, who came in second in 6:57:01 a year after holding off the seven-time Tour de France champ by about two minutes.
"He's Lance Armstrong. And he's just off of the Tour," Wiens said. "Last year he was just off of the couch. That made it a pretty fair fight for he and I. This year I rode fantastic today. I'm happy.
"He killed it. He got away from Ben Sonntag and time trialed it for 65 miles."
Last year, Wiens won in a record time of 6:45:45, but that was before Armstrong began training in earnest for his return to the Tour this year.
The race featured 1,400 mostly amateur cyclists and began with snow-crested peaks as a backdrop. Armstrong and Wiens were in a pack of pro racers that broke away early, but they fell back one by one, including Tinker Juarez because of a broken seat clamp 30 miles into the race.
"Of all things, a seat clamp," Juarez said. "I was just beginning to get my confidence up. I couldn't believe what happened. How could something that simple take me out?
"I was ready for this. I felt I was ready to hang it all out with these guys."
Nobody could keep up with Armstrong, who found himself all alone well before he even climbed to the Columbine Mine turnaround that sits atop a peak halfway through the 50-mile out-and-back course that winds its way through the Rockies and features lung-burning climbs and technical descents.
On his way back down, he saw Wiens struggling in second place.
Armstrong, who said he was somehow more nervous for this race than he ever was for the Tour, would rather have had company on his way back to the tiny mining town of Leadville that sits at 10,152 feet.
"I sort of had to decide what to do, if you wait for the other guys or if you just try to go the rest of the race by yourself," Armstrong said. "And it's a little risky to do that. At the end you're wasted. Buy I rolled the dice a little bit. Plus, I was freezing. I wanted to start riding hard because I was about to freeze."
Armstrong was so spent at the end that he wolfed down as many candy bars and sodas that his handlers could round up.
"I felt better than last year. Obviously, I'm more prepared than I was last year, but that cold start was brutal," Armstrong said. "The dirt was nice and tacky, so that helped. You could ride Powerline (where the rest of the field always walk their bikes up the gravel trail) pretty easily. So, no complaints."
Except for his flat tire.
Armstrong was so safely in front of Wiens that he didn't worry when he heard a hissing in his back tire while coming down the last descent toward the finish.