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The Honolulu Advertiser
Updated at 6:05 a.m., Sunday, January 18, 2009

Cycling: Armstrong 64th of 133 in Tour Down Under criterium

By STEVE McMORRAN
AP Sports Writer

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Seven-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong, in front, cycles during the Tour Down Under cycling race Sunday in Adelaide, Australia.

AMAN SHARMA | Associated Press

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TOUR DOWN UNDER RESULTS

1. Robbie McEwen, Australia, Katusha, 1 hour, 4 minutes, 32 seconds.

2. Willem Stroetinga, Netherlands, Milram, same time.

3. Graeme Brown, Australia, Rabobank, same time.

4. Andre Greipel, Germany, Columbia, same time.

5. Jose Rojas, Spain, Caisse d'Espargne, same time.

6. Allan Davis, Australia, Quick Step, same time.

7. Baden Cooke, Australia, UniSA, same time.

8. Francesco Chicchi, Italy, Liquigas, same time.

Also

64. Lance Armstrong, United States, Astana, 23 seconds behind.

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ADELAIDE, Australia — Lance Armstrong made a cautious return to professional cycle racing Sunday, finishing 64th among 133 riders in a 30-mile criterium in downtown Adelaide.

More than 138,000 people watched Armstrong return from three years of retirement and begin a campaign to win his eighth Tour de France title.

The Austin cycling great stayed well back in a tight field throughout Sunday's race on a winding circuit around leafy Rymill Park, following team instructions to avoid any chance of crashing.

Armstrong will compete in the six-day Tour Down Under, which starts Tuesday. The criterium does not count toward Tour overall standings.

"That was fun," the 37-year-old Armstong said. "It felt good. I've been training a lot for this comeback and this race. It's good the first day is over and now I can get into the racing."

Australia's Robbie McEwen — a winner of 12 stages in the Tour de France — won the race for the Russian Team Katusha ahead of Willem Stroetinga of the Netherlands and fellow Australian Graeme Brown.

Armstrong was ushered to the front of the field for the start of the race with another Tour de France winner, Oscar Perero of Spain, defending Tour Down Under champion Andre Greipel of Germany and Australian Stuart O'Grady.

The seven-time Tour de France winner quickly settled in the middle of the peleton, avoiding any possibility of pileups on the tight corners of the 1-mile circuit.

"I think the last time I did that fast a race was back in probably 1990," Armstrong said. "It's fun to get back into it. I found it a bit safer and easier in the back.

"There was a lot of anxiety before today but it was good for the first day."

Johan Brunel, the head of Armstrong's Astana team, was more effusive about the significance of the legendary racer's comeback ride.

"It's a special day," he said. "There's been a lot of talk since August about his comeback and finally it's a fact, so it's a very special moment.

"The instructions were for Lance and the whole team not to concentrate too much about the race but just to get through it. For him it's an important moment to finally put that race number on his back and he's a racer again."