Briton Wiggins wins extends Tour lead

By JAMEY KEATEN, Associated Press

BESANCON, France (AP) -- Bradley Wiggins showed he's the man to beat at the Tour de France, winning the first big time trial and cementing his hold on the yellow jersey he wants to take home in two weeks.

The three-time Olympic track champion is trying to become the first British champion of cycling's premier event. He dominated Monday's race against the clock -- a discipline he loves -- in the 25.8-mile ninth stage between Arc-et-Senans and Besancon.

"That was my physical best out there," Wiggins told French TV after his first stage victory in the Tour. "It's probably my best time trial ever."

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Christopher Froome, his Sky teammate and countryman who won Saturday's seventh stage, was second -- 35 seconds behind. Their 1-2 punch was especially hard on Australian Cadel Evans, the defending champion, who finished 1:43 behind Wiggins in sixth.

Evans remains second overall, trailing Wiggins by 1:53. Froome jumped to third, from sixth, and is 2:07 behind his teammate.

"I was really motivated -- the time trial is my thing," Wiggins said, adding he had worked hard on his riding position, breathing and study of the course. "I am very happy now."

Wiggins insisted the three-week race is far from over, saying a crash or illness could douse his victory hopes. He also noted that Evans has vowed to fight to the finish.

"It's never over until the fat lady sings, and she hasn't entered the building yet," he said.

But the stage raises questions about whether Evans _ or anyone else _ can challenge Wiggins and his team, which has shown strength in both the climbs and time trials that often determine the Tour winner.

Wiggins entered the stage looking to move up in the overall standings, a stage victory not his top priority.

"My goal was to get a minute on Cadel. ... I've come away with a bit more than that, it's a bonus," Wiggins said. "Winning the stage is like Christmas -- it's brilliant."

Riders set off one by one down the starter's ramp for the time trial. By the first time check, at just more than 10 miles, Evans was more than a minute slower than Wiggins, but he was able to limit the damage.

Evans was "a little bit disappointed" but insisted the Tour wasn't over.

"I rode not my best time trial, but certainly not a bad one," he said, adding Sky had "two very, very, very strong riders today."

On one of the warmest days so far in this Tour, many riders crossed the finish with white spittle ringing their lips, a sign of dehydration. Unlike usual road stages, time trials require solo efforts, placing additional importance on form, concentration and rhythm.

After 10 straight days of racing, the 178-rider pack gets its first rest day Tuesday. The field then faces two hard days in the Alps, including a summit finish Thursday that is likely to shake up the standings.

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Associated Press writers Greg Keller and Samuel Petrequin in Besancon contributed to this report.