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SportsSeptember 17, 2007

ST. LOUIS -- The final day of the inaugural Tour of Missouri served as a victory lap for George Hincapie and the Discovery Channel team. Several of them, in fact. Hincapie took the individual title and Discovery Channel claimed the team title Sunday in its final U.S. appearance, playing it safe in the final stage of the six-day, 563-mile event, a 74-mile circuit race...

R.b. Fallstrom
Racers began Stage 6 of the Tour of Missouri on Sunday in front of Union Station in St. Louis. Ivan Dominguez won the 74-mile circuit race. George Hincapie captured the race's overall title. (KYLE ERICSON  Associated Press)
Racers began Stage 6 of the Tour of Missouri on Sunday in front of Union Station in St. Louis. Ivan Dominguez won the 74-mile circuit race. George Hincapie captured the race's overall title. (KYLE ERICSON Associated Press)

ST. LOUIS -- The final day of the inaugural Tour of Missouri served as a victory lap for George Hincapie and the Discovery Channel team. Several of them, in fact.

Hincapie took the individual title and Discovery Channel claimed the team title Sunday in its final U.S. appearance, playing it safe in the final stage of the six-day, 563-mile event, a 74-mile circuit race.

"It was very important for us to have a strong team here and try to get the win," Hincapie said. "Having basically most of the Tour de France team working for me was really special.

"I'll definitely miss those guys in the next couple of years."

Ivan Dominguez of Toyota-United took his second stage of the tour in a mass sprint, finishing in 2 hours, 37 minutes, 13 seconds. He also won the first stage, an 85-mile road race with finishing circuits in Kansas City.

Brad Huff of Springfield, the top sprinter for Team Slipstream-Chipotle, crashed within 100 yards of the finish line. Huff ended up several yards away from his bike after flipping over the handlebars, but rode across the finish line after team members rushed to his aid.

The 34-year-old Hincapie has been with Discovery since the team's inception 11 years ago and was a key member of units that won the Tour de France eight times, the first seven by Lance Armstrong and the last this year by Alberto Contador.

Contador also raced in the Tour of Missouri, this time serving as support. Hincapie, of Greenville, S.C., took the individual lead in the second stage, a 125.6-mile road race from Clinton to Springfield. He sat in the peloton throughout the final stage, which made seven laps past Union Station downtown, losing only two seconds off his cushion of 1 minute, 40 seconds entering the finale.

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The Discovery team also featured Levi Leipheimer and Yaroslav Popovych, who finished third and eighth in this year's Tour de France.

William Frischkorn of Team Slipstream-Chipotle, perhaps the successor to Discovery Channel as the dominant U.S. team, was second overall. Dominique Rollin of KodakGallery was third 2:09 back, followed by David Canada of Prodir-Saunier Duval (2:21) and Michael Friedman of Slipstream-Chipotle (2:46).

"It's been a great experience for the team," Frischkorn said. "Also, it shows we're ready."

Thousands of fans lined downtown streets for the largest major cycling event in St. Louis. It was an unprecedented third major sports contest on the same day downtown, with the St. Louis Rams and St. Louis Cardinals both playing to sellout crowds totaling about 110,000 just blocks away. The St. Louis Blues, even closer to the start and finish line, played their opening preseason game about an hour after the race ended.

"What can I say?" Dominguez said. "They're all good. There was a lot of people watching the race and I had a lot of people yelling my name."

Race organizers were impressed with the crowds in St. Louis, as well as the rest of the tour stops, in the wake of doping scandals that have scarred the sport.

"We needed a boost in a big way," said Sean Petty, chief operation officer for USA Cycling. "It exceeded any expectations we could have possibly had."

A four-man breakaway opened a gap of 2:15 after the third of seven 10-mile circuits that grew to 4 minutes before the Discovery Channel team, which sat at the front of the main peloton and controlled the tempo, started the charge.

The final member of the break, Bernard Van Ulden of Navigators Insurance, was reeled in between the third and fourth mile of the final circuit.

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