| Edited by Jeff Jones Gilbert wouldn't settle for second Belgians Philippe Gilbert (FDJ) and Stijn Devolder (Discovery) had the chance of their lives to win a major classic in Paris-Tours yesterday, but tactics dictated that they lost in the last 200 metres. The pair had escaped with 25 km to go, building up a one minute lead at one point that was whittled down to around 20 seconds with 2 km left. At 1 km, it was still 11 seconds, but Gilbert found himself leading Devolder all the way to the finish, and he naturally slowed down. The result: the bunch caught the duo with 200m to go and neither finished with a place. Both were frustrated with the non-result, with Gilbert showing it with an internationally known one armed gesture aimed at Devolder just before the finish, and a can of coke hurled on the ground. "What should I have done?" asked Devolder. "I gambled and lost. If I'd known that we had just 11 seconds in the final kilometre, I would have done one more turn. We didn't understand each other well." Devolder also said that he was riding under instruction from team director Dirk Demol, who told him not to take a turn in the final kilometre as Gilbert was the faster sprinter. "I'm very frustrated, even if I had theoretically less chances than Philippe to win a two man sprint." On Gilbert's part, the Wallonian rider said, "Devolder refused to take a turn and that put an end to our initiative. I have proved that I can ride a perfect race, really until 250 metres to go. If I'd ridden the last kilometre flat out, then I would have heard again that I'm a stupid rider." www.cyclingnews.com/news.php?id=news/2005/oct05/oct10news2
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