Sastre survives time-trial test

Carlos Sastre of Spain acknowledges the crowd in the final meters of the 20th stage of the Tour de France. Sastre did well enough in the stage, an individual time trial between Cerilly and Saint-Amand-Montrond on Saturday, to maintain the overall lead heading into today's ceremonial final stage.

? Carlos Sastre handled his latest test and is one step from the Tour de France title.

The 33-year-old Spaniard all but locked up victory by holding off Cadel Evans of Australia and other contenders in a decisive time trial in Stage 20 on Saturday – a day before cycling’s showcase event ends in Paris.

Worn down by an onslaught from Sastre’s powerful CSC team during the three-week race, Evans couldn’t muster the leg power he needed to erase a 1 minute, 34 second deficit, and was caught off guard by the Spaniard’s skill.

Overall, after more than 84 hours of racing since the July 5 start in western Brest, Sastre leads Evans by 1 minute, 5 seconds, while Bernhard Kohl of Austria is third, 1:20 behind.

By the math of the Tour, that’s close – but just enough for the soft-spoken Spanish veteran to take home the yellow jersey today.

“This is the dream of my life that’s become a reality now,” said Sastre, who finished in the top 10 in five of his previous seven Tour appearances. “I was feeling better and better and was in top form at the end of this week.”

Today’s finale – an 88.9-mile ride from Etampes to the Champs-Elysees – is likely to be a ride of honor that won’t change the overall standings. In the Tour’s etiquette, attacks on the leader are frowned upon in the last stage and any attempts at a breakaway by a rival are easy to counter on the flat course anyway.

Expect CSC to protect Sastre hawkishly today and keep him out of trouble – like a crash, which looms as the only imaginable threat to his hold on the jersey.

In the Spanish village of El Barraco, northwest of Madrid, where Sastre lives, hundreds of fans watching the race on a giant TV cheered as he crossed the finish line – some jumping and hugging each other in joy.

Sastre made the sign of the cross, kissed his fingers and shook them skyward as he crossed the line.

Kohl’s Gerolsteiner teammate Stefan Schumacher of Germany won the time trial, a 32.9-mile race against the clock in central France from Cerilly to Saint-Amand-Montrond – for his second stage win this year.