Stage 13 Is Lucky for Garcia-Acosta

ByABC News
July 14, 2000, 9:18 AM

July 14 -- Jose Vicente Garcia-Acosta of Spain broke away early from the main pack and held on take the 13th stage of the Tour de France, while American Lance Armstrong remained in yellow jersey as the overall leader.

Garcia-Acosta finished the rolling 185-kilometer (115-mile) stage from Avignon to Draguignan, France, in 4 hours and 3 minutes. Frenchman Nicolas Jalabert took second, 25 seconds behind Garcia-Acosta, while countryman Pascal Herve finished third 2 seconds later.

The overall standings, meanwhile, were largely unchanged, with the leaders resting in the main pack after Thursdays brutal mountain stage. Armstrong is in first place, German Jan Ullrich is second, at 4:55, and Spains Joseba Beloki in third at 5:42.

Italian Marco Pantani, who won Thursdays stage, ahead of Armstrong, was in 13th place at 10:26.

French Hope for Countryman to Win

Todays stage fell on Bastille Day, Frances most cherished nationalholiday and, from the start, French riders were vying for a win. The attacks began within the first kilometers, as Garcia-Acosta and others charged off the front of the main pack in the hopes of building a sustainable lead.

For the first few hours, the pack, driven mainly by Armstrongs U.S. Postal Team, kept the pace high and reeled in each of the attacking riders.

But near the halfway point, a group of 12 riders, including Garcia-Acosta, American Frankie Andreau, Belgian Marc Wauters, and Jalabert successfully escaped, working together to build up a solid gap on the main pack.

Most of the breakaway riders were too far behind Armstrong to threaten his overall lead. But Wauters had begun the day in 17th place overall, 12:15 behind the American. If the breakaway gained much time, Wauters might actually become a problem for Armstrong.

Wauters Came Up Big

Seeking to prevent that, Armstrongs team stepped up the pace. But thebreakaway group pushed on, building a gap that at one point reached more than 10 minutes.