Cyclist Lance Armstrong answers a question at a news
conference as young rider Tayler Phinney (R) listens during the Clinton Global
Initiative, in New York yesterday.- Xinhua/Reuters
Seven-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong will join Team Astana for
his return to competitive cycling, the Kazakh Cycling Federation said yesterday.
Federation deputy chief Nikolai Proskurin said from Almaty that Armstrong
agreed to ride for the Kazakhstan-based team for free the first year and has
signed up to take part in five races, including the Tour de France.
"If people say that they want to join this team, it is a sign that they must
hold Kazakhstan in great regard," Proskurin said. "He is coming to Team Astana,
he's doing it only so he can continue to win."
Astana's team leader is Johan Bruyneel, who was Armstrong's team director for
all of his Tour de France victories with the US Postal and Discovery teams. The
two are close friends.
Armstrong's first race will be the Tour of California from Feb. 14-22,
Proskurin said. But, Australian officials announced earlier Wednesday that
Armstrong would ride in the Tour Down Under from Jan. 20-25.
Armstrong announced on Sept. 9 that he would return to cycling after three
years in retirement and would attempt to win the Tour de France an eighth time.
The deal is a coup for the Kazakh team, which was thrown out of last year's
Tour de France after Alexander Vinokourov tested positive for a blood
transfusion.
There were reports on Tuesday that 2007 Tour de France winner Alberto
Contador of Spain would leave if Armstrong joined Astana.
"I've earned the right to be the leader of a team without having to fight for
my place," Contador told AS newspaper. "And with Armstrong, some difficult
situations could arise in which the team would put him first and that would hurt
me."
Contador won the Spanish Vuelta on Sunday. Combined with his 2008 Giro
d'Italia title, he became just the fifth cyclist to win the three
highest-regarded Tours.
"My intention is to stay (at Astana) because I have a contract until 2010,
but I have already received a good number of offers from other teams," he said.
Contador said he got no help in his Vuelta victory from American teammate
Levi Leipheimer, who finished 46 seconds behind the 25-year-old Spanish rider.