Alejandro Valverde of Spain won the first stage of the Tour de
France on Saturday with a ride through flat country, the opening of a
three-week race trying to restore its luster after years of doping
scandals.
He broke away from the pack at the end of the 123-mile leg from
Brest to Plumelec and now has the distinction of wearing the leader's
yellow jersey.
Valverde, who rides for the Caisse d'Epargne team and won the
Dauphine Libere warmup race last month, was followed by Philippe
Gilbert of Belgium and Jerome Pineau of France.
"My first impression is beyond my imagination _ to win the stage and
wear the yellow jersey,'' Valverde said. "The important thing is to
have the yellow jersey in Paris.''
The 2,175-mile race ends July 27 in the French capital.
The Tour's 95th edition got off to an unsettling start. Valverde
said his strategy was to avoid the crashes that often occur in the
flat, early stages.
One of the four crashes took down Juan Mauricio Soler, the Colombian
who was the Tour's best climber last year. He finished more than two
minutes behind Valverde.
France's Herve Duclos-Lassalle of the Cofidis team became the first
rider in the 180-man field forced from the race. He crashed and broke
his wrist after a rider's food bag got stuck in his front-wheel
spokes.
Valverde is among the favorites for the title, along with
Australia's Cadel Evans and Russia's Denis Menchov.
Spain's Alberto Contador is not competing, the second straight year
the race has begun without a defending champion. His Astana team was
banned by organizers after doping infractions by other riders. Floyd
Landis was stripped of his 2006 title after testing positive for
synthetic testosterone.
Other top names out this year are Kazakhstan's Alexandre Vinokourov,
who was removed from the Tour last year for a positive test for a
blood transfusion, and Astana rider Levi Leipheimer.
Ivan Basso, the 2006 Giro d'Italia winner and two-time Tour podium
finisher, is also absent. The Italian is serving the last few months
of a two-year ban he received after acknowledging involvement in the
Spanish blood-doping investigation.
(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)