David Zabriskie (CSC) has drawn
first blood in the Dauphine Libere. Zabriskie dashed over the flat,
out-and-back, 4.1-km prologue course in Annecy in 4:35. George Hincapie
(Discovery Channel) finished second at 0:02, and Stuart O’Grady, Zabriskie’s
teammate, took third at 0:06.
Dave Zabriskie. Photo copyright Fotoreporter Sirotti.
Rony
Martias (Bouygues Telecom) set the early standard. He posted a 4:52, but
Christophe Edaleine (Credit Agricole) bettered it with a 4:49. Edaleine held the
race lead for about 45 minutes before Vladimir Gusev (Discovey Channel) crossed
the finish line in 4:43.
Joost
Posthuma (Rabobank) took the lead with a 4:43, but Sebastian Lang (Gerolsteiner)
pipped the Dutchman by 0:01. About 40 minutes later, O’Grady stopped the clock
at 4:41 to take the lead.
O’Grady,
who won two stages of the 2004 Dauphine Libere, was a potential prologue winner.
Zabriskie, however, blew the Australian’s time away with his 4:35. On the road,
however, were Hincapie, who won last year’s Dauphine Libere prologue, and
Leipheimer, who is a good racer against the clock.
Hincapie’s
effort was impressive, but he came up short. The Discovery Channel man had to
settle for second at 0:02. Hincapie, however, must be encouraged by his result
in his first race since crashing out of Paris-Roubaix.
Leipheimer
was not as strong as he usually is in time trials. His 16th at 0:16.
Leipheimer, however, knows that with mountaintop finishes at Mont Ventoux, the
Col d’Izoard, and La Tossuire, along with a 43-km time trial in Stage 3, that
those 16 seconds can be made up.
Stage 1
will not be decisive. It will be a rolling, 207-km run from Annecy to
Bourgoin-Jallieu. A field sprint should decide matters. Who will win it? Check
in at http://www.roadcycling.com/ and
find out!