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Doping-plagued Tour tries fresh start

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From the Associated Press

BREST, France -- Here’s what victory will look like for Tour de France organizers: The riders reach the finish line in three weeks with no doping scandals.

Cycling’s most prestigious race begins today, trying to shake its history of drugs and cheating. The turmoil has left this year’s race without many of the sport’s big names. The loss of glamour, however, gives a new crop of riders a chance to step forward.

Cadel Evans, Alejandro Valverde, Carlos Sastre, Denis Menchov and Damiano Cunego are among the most likely to prevail in the 2,175-mile trek.

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“I’d rate myself as a pretty good chance to win,” said Evans, who has improved from eighth place in 2005 to fourth the next year and runner-up in 2007. One sign of potential stardom? He has the same bodyguard Lance Armstrong did.

The race begins with a 123-mile flat ride through Brittany. For the first time since 1967, the Tour will begin without an opening-day prologue.

It also starts without a defending champion for the second consecutive year. The team of 2007 winner Alberto Contador, Astana, wasn’t invited because of doping scandals it faced in the last two years. Floyd Landis was stripped of his 2006 title after testing positive for synthetic testosterone.

Other big names out are Kazakhstan’s Alexandre Vinokourov, who was removed from the Tour last year for a positive test for a blood transfusion that led to the ouster of his entire Astana team, 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 known as Operation Puerto.

“People are talking about the ones who are absent, but once the race starts, people will stop talking about them and start talking about those who are here,” said Patrice Leclerc, head of Tour organizer ASO.

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Some are making a statement about drug use. Cunego, winner of the 2004 Giro d’Italia, has a tattoo on his left arm that reads, “I’m doping free,” the Lampre team said.

Armstrong likes Evans’ chances to win and ruled out Cunego, saying he is not a strong enough climber or time-trial racer.

“He’ll never win the Tour . . . and that’s not a slap at him,” the seven-time champion told cyclingnews.com. “He’s a little guy. I just don’t think he’s a Tour rider.”

Evans said he’s most worried about Russia’s Menchov, the Tour’s best young rider in 2003. Sastre, a Spaniard who has finished in the top 10 for five of the last six Tours, has a strong CSC team, including the Schleck brothers -- Andy and Frank.

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(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX)

Tour de France at a glance

When: Today through July 27.

Where: 21 stages beginning in Brest on the Brittany coast; race covers 2,175 miles ending in Paris.

TV: Live daily coverage on Versus beginning 5:30 a.m. Pacific; expanded rebroadcast 5 to 8 p.m.

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Today’s stage: The first Tour since 1967 to start without a prologue takes the 180-rider pack on a 122.7-mile ride through the verdant flats of Brittany from Brest to Plumelec.

Whom to watch: Cadel Evans (Silence-Lotto), 31, Australia, runner-up to Alberto Contador in 2007; Carlos Sastre (CSC), 33, Spain, tough mountain climber; Alejandro Valverde (Caisse d’Epargne), 28, Spain, beat Lance Armstrong in a 2005 mountain stage; Damiano Cunego (Lampre), 26, Italy, daring young climber.

U.S. riders: George Hincapie (Team Columbia); Tyler Farrar (Team Garmin); Danny Pate (Team Garmin); Christian VandeVelde (Team Garmin); William Frischkorn (Team Garmin).

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From Times Staff and Wire Reports

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