BRUSSELS, Belgium | Lance Armstrong saw it coming: tight turns, narrow roads, big  crowds and nervous riders would make crashes likely in Sunday’s first  stage at the Tour de France. He sure was right. The  seven-time Tour champion emerged unscathed after at least six crashes  bedeviled the sun-baked stage through Dutch and Belgian flatlands that  was won by Alessandro Petacchi of Italy, who avoided a big pileup in the  final straightaway. Race leader Fabian Cancellara tumbled to the  asphalt and defending champion Alberto Contador scraped a leg against  another bike after he hit his brakes in the logjam that blocked the  road. Neither was seriously hurt. The 139-mile course from  Rotterdam, Netherlands, to Brussels, started out with three mid-stage  crashes, one caused by a dog that darted into the pack, and finished  with another three in the last two miles. “Total mayhem,”  Armstrong said. Even so, the overall standings didn’t change. Tony  Martin of Germany remained 10 seconds behind Cancellara, who won  Saturday’s prologue. Britain’s David Millar was third, 20 seconds off  the Swiss rider. Armstrong trailed another 2 seconds back and Contador  was sixth, 5 seconds behind his American rival. “Typical first  stage: Everybody wants to be in the front, everybody nervous for  crashes,” Armstrong said, noting that a huge fan turnout on the  roadsides was both good and bad. “Millions and millions on the  road, it’s a blessing and a curse. It’s so great to have so many  supporters,” he said. “It (also) makes the guys super nervous. “And  on these tight roads, with bad surfaces and a lot of turns, there  shouldn’t be any surprise that there are crashes there.” Two of  Armstrong’s best support riders on Team RadioShack — fellow American  Levi Leipheimer and Andreas Kloeden of Germany — were among 12 riders  who suffered cuts and bruises in the spills, according to the race  doctor. Adam Hansen of HTC-Columbia fell in an early crash. The  Australian was getting X-rays for a suspected broken collarbone, the  race doctor and his team said. Top sprinters such as Britain’s  Mark Cavendish, who won six Tour stages last year, and Oscar Freire of  Spain, crashed while negotiating a sharp turn in the last few miles.  They returned to the race but were out of contention for the stage  victory. With those big names out of the picture, it appeared  American sprinter Tyler Farrar might have an easy win. But in the last  200 yards he got bumped from behind, his bike was damaged and he had to  walk it across the finish line. “It’s a shame because everything  had gone so well and the team worked so hard for me,” Farrar said. “But,  that’s sprinting.” Millar and Giro d’Italia winner Ivan Basso  crashed after a dog darted into the pack around the 35-mile mark. Both  returned to the race after sustaining scrapes and bruises. Petacchi  clocked 5 hours, 9 minutes, 38 seconds for the victory, screaming and  thrusting his index fingers skyward as he crossed the finish. The  36-year-old Italian is riding his first Tour since 2004 — the year after  he collected four stage victories. Mark Renshaw of Australia placed  second and Norway’s Thor Hushovd was third. Armstrong crossed in  55th place, Contador was 44th and Cancellara trailed in 130th. They  received the same time as Petacchi under race rules that award riders in  the pack the same time if a crash takes place in the main group within  the last two miles. Over the years, Armstrong has made it a  priority to avoid trouble in the often-flat early Tour stages. But this  year’s a bit different partly because of a treacherous run on  cobblestones in Stage 3. Contenders will have to pedal hard — if  cautiously — to keep from losing time in the overall title hunt there. “It  just shows how crazy it’s going to be on Tuesday,” the Texan said.  “Same situation. Very small road. A lot of turns — the nerves, and the  intensity, will be high.” In the meantime, riders get another long  and flat run Monday, with a 125-mile jaunt from Brussels to Spa. Armstrong,  who is gunning for a record eighth Tour victory, said that his  razor-thin lead ahead of pre-race favorite Contador is inconsequential  at this point. “Five seconds in the scope of three weeks is  terribly nothing,” he said when asked whether his lead gives him a  psychological edge over the Spaniard. “I don’t want to instill the  rivalry any more than it already is.” ___ AP Sports Writer  Samuel Petrequin contributed to this report.
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