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I'm no Armstrong, says new Tour de France 'boss' Nibali

Italian does not want to be compared with biggest drugs cheat of all as he dictates race

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Vincenzo Nibali of Italy has combined racing smarts, skill at bike-handling and powerful climbing legs to put together a lead of more than seven minutes in this year’s Tour de France. Photo: Reuters

As his team hoped, Vincenzo Nibali has demonstrated he's the "boss" of the Tour de France. Just don't compare him to the last rider to regularly bear that sobriquet at cycling's greatest race, Lance Armstrong.

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In a tour de force, Nibali blew away the peloton on a Pyrenees ascent too tough to be rated in stage 18, all but locking up victory when the race ends in Paris tomorrow.

Yesterday, Lithuania's Ramunas Navardauskas won the 208.5-km 19th stage from Maubourguet to Bergerac in a breakaway in a downpour at the end, but the top standings did not change.

Let's leave the past behind us. I'm very clear about myself
Vincenzo Nibali

Nibali has combined racing smarts, skill at bike-handling, and powerful climbing legs to methodically piece together a lead of more than seven minutes, gaining seconds "here and there", as he put it after his fourth stage win.

That margin, if it holds, would be the second largest in 25 years: Jan Ullrich won by more than nine minutes in 1997. Armstrong won five of his seven titles from 1999 to 2005 by more than six minutes, but those victories were stripped after he was exposed as a doping cheat.

The last Italian to win the Tour was "The Pirate", Marco Pantani, in 1998. Nibali too knows about nicknames.

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His family calls him Enzino. An attacking rider, he's been known as the "Shark of the Straits" in reference to the Strait of Messina off Sicily. One from his boyhood re-emerged on Thursday after the win at Hautacam resort: "Flea of the Pyrenees" - a nod to its first bearer, Vincent Treuba of Spain, decades ago.

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