~ Armstrong and Contador didn't move in the standings.
ISSOUDUN, France -- The tension is clear between teammates Alberto Contador and Lance Armstrong. That's nothing, however, compared to the anger many riders feel toward Tour de France organizers.
On a day when Contador and Armstrong held their second and third spots in the overall standings and Britain's Mark Cavendish won the 10th stage, the Tour took a giant technological leap backward Tuesday.
Riders were stripped of their customary earpieces, left to fend for themselves and denied contact with their teams during the 121-mile route.
The decision to ban rider radios and TV sets in cars was made last month.
The Tour wanted to inject drama into the race by eliminating earpieces for the 10th and 13th stages. Many riders -- Armstrong, Contador and overall leader Rinaldo Nocentini of Italy among them -- were far from pleased with the experiment.
"The fact is for us it's dangerous not to have them," Nocentini said. "There are dangers on the road."
Instead of drama, the Tour got a day of agonizingly slow riding. The only excitement came with Cavendish's dash a few hundred yards from the finish for his third stage victory in this race.
"The reason to have no radios was to have more attractive racing, and that's obviously not what happened," Astana team director Johan Bruyneel said. "I think if that's what they wanted to accomplish, it's been a failure. I just think it's a bad idea to go back 20 years and do something like this, stupidly, in the biggest race of the year."
Earpieces allow riders to be linked to their directors in team cars. Riders can be informed of developments and told when they need to attack or chase rivals in a breakaway.
The radio transmissions are private and fans cannot listen to them.
The strategy was popularized by Armstrong when he won his first Tour in 1999. Some riders and former champions say the tactic makes cycling too clinical.
Today's ride covers 119 miles from Vatan to Saint-Fargeau, and again favors sprinters. The next earpiece-free stage comes Friday, a tricky course featuring one big climb and possibly many attacks. Armstrong suspects there will be an electronic change before then.
"My impression is that we'll have the radio on Friday," he said.
Armstrong is coming out of 3 1/2 years of retirement and chasing an eighth Tour title. Contador is aiming for a second title after winning in 2007. The Spanish mountain specialist was unable to defend his title last year because Astana was barred from the race because of doping scandals.
Armstrong maintains that talk of a feud between him and Contador is hyped by the media. Yet two days after telling French television there is some "tension" between him and Contador, the 37-year-old Texan spoke anew of "friction" with his Astana teammate. Only 2 seconds separate the riders.
"In the first week, the media are looking for stories to write," Armstrong said Tuesday. "They analyze every little thing. They say, 'They hate each other.' It's not the case. There's a little bit of friction, of tension. We both want to win the Tour."
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