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Wiggins leaves Evans trailing after time trial

Tour de France leader Bradley Wiggins insisted the race for the yellow jersey is far from over despite taking a commanding lead with victory on stage nine.

Wiggins (Team Sky) clocked 51 minutes 24 seconds to triumph on the 41.5-kilometre race against the clock from Arc-et-Senans to Besancon, enhancing his hold on the fabled maillot jaune with his first Tour stage success.

The 32-year-old triple Olympic gold medal winner now leads defending champion Cadel Evans (BMC Racing) by 1min 53secs entering today’s rest day.

Ireland’s Nicolas Roche was 23rd on the time trial, the AG2R La Mondiale rider finishing 3:08 behind Wiggins. It sees him retain his 10th place overall, 5:29 behind the Sky rider.

Ireland’s other participant, Dan Martin, finished 51st on yesterday’s stage, 4:46 behind Wiggins. Martin — a cousin of Roche — now stands 67th on general classification, 32:03 off the yellow jersey.

Evans entered the day 10 seconds behind Wiggins, but finished sixth on the stage to lose 1:43 as the Briton took pole position in the race to Paris on July 22.

Wiggins’ team-mate Chris Froome placed second in 51:59 to move up to third overall, 2:07 behind.

Despite his comfortable lead ahead of tomorrow’s resumption, the 194.5km 10th stage from Macon to Bellegarde-sur-Valserine, Wiggins is taking nothing for granted.

“It’s never over until the fat lady sings and she hasn’t entered the room yet,” Wiggins said. “This is just another day at the Tour.”

* Lance Armstrong has launched a legal action against the US Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) and claimed it offered “corrupt inducements” to other cyclists to testify against him.

The seven-times Tour de France winner, charged last month with using performance-enhancing drugs, filed a lawsuit yesterday asking for a temporary restraining order against the agency. The 40-year-old denies USADA’s charges and likened its processes to “a kangaroo court”, claiming they violated athletes’ constitutional rights. USADA has said more than 10 former team-mates and officials will testify against Armstrong, who has been given a deadline of Saturday to accept the charges and sanctions or agree for the case to go to arbitration. He could face being stripped of all his Tour de France titles if found guilty.

Armstrong, however, is taking on USADA and the body’s chief executive, Travis Tygart, in the courts.

On its part, the USADA claimed Armstrong’s lawsuit was “without merit”.

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