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Tour de France 2023 stage-by-stage guide: Route maps and profiles for all 21 days
A closer look at every day of the race from bilbao to paris, article bookmarked.
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The 2023 Tour de France has all the ingredients of a classic: two leading protagonists ready to tear lumps out of each other in reigning champion Jonas Vingegaard and the deposed Tadej Pogacar; entertaining multi-talented stage hunters Wout van Aert, Mathieu van der Poel, Julian Alaphilippe and Tom Pidcock; the great Mark Cavendish chasing a historic 35th stage win; all facing a brutal route with 56,000m of climbing and four summit finish.
The Tour began in the Spanish Basque country on Saturday 1 July, where Adam Yates edged twin brother Simon to win the opening stage, and these hilly routes will throw open the yellow jersey to a wide range of contenders. The race crosses the French border for some flat stages and an early jaunt into the high Pyrenees, where the Col du Tourmalet awaits. The peloton takes on the Puy de Dome volcano on its journey across France towards the Jura Mountains and the Alps, and it is in the mountains that this Tour will ultimately be decided. It all ends on the Champs-Elysees in Paris on Sunday 23 July.
Here is a stage-by-stage guide to how the race will unfold.
Stage 1: Bilbao to Bilbao, 182km
The 2023 Tour de France starts outside Bilbao’s iconic Guggenheim Museum, and winds north to the Bay of Biscay coastline before returning to the city where the stage winner will take the yellow jersey. This 182km opening stage is a hilly route with 3,000m of climbing featuring five categorised ascents, of which the final two are sharp and testing: they are tough enough to shake off the dedicated sprinters and open up early glory for the best puncheurs – those riders with the legs to get over short climbs and the power to surge away on the other side.
The profile of this stage is a great choice by organisers as it could suit just about anyone, from the speed of Wout van Aert to the climbing strength Tom Pidcock or Simon Yates – even two-time champion Tadej Pogacar.
- Jumbo’s Death Star and Pidcock’s dog: Inside the Tour de France’s Grand Depart
Stage 2: Vitoria Gastiez to Saint Sebastian, 209km
The peloton will head east from Bilbao, touching more picturesque Basque coastline before arriving at the finish in San Sebastian. At more than 200km this is the longest stage of the 2023 Tour and, with the sizeable Jaizkibel climb (8.1km, 5.3% average gradient) shortly before the finish, this is even more tough on the legs than the first day. Another puncheur with the climbing strength to get over the steeper hills can capitalise, like two-time world champion Julian Alaphilippe.
- ‘ Coup du kilometre’: How to win a Tour de France stage hiding in plain sight
Stage 3: Amorebieta to Bayonne, 187km
Stage three starts in Spain and ends in France, and the finale in Bayonne is ripe for a bunch sprint. Mark Cavendish will get his first shot of this race at trying to win a historic 35th Tour de France stage, but he will be up against a stacked field including former QuickStep teammate Fabio Jakobsen and the awesome speed of Wout van Aert. It will be fascinating to get a first glimpse of how the power riders stack up.
- ‘Jasper the Disaster’ rebuts Netflix nickname with controversial win
Stage 4: Dax to Nogaro, 182km
Another flat day and an even faster finish in store on the Circuit Paul Armagnac, a race track in Nogaro. The 800m home straight will almost certainly tee up a showdown between the Tour’s serious fast men.
- Cavendish falls short as Philipsen wins crash-laden sprint
Stage 5: Pau to Laruns, 163km
The first major mountains of the Tour come a little earlier than usual, as the peloton heads up into the high Pyrenees on day five. The Col de Soudet (15km, 7.2%) is one of the toughest climbs of the race and rears up halfway through this 163km route from Pau to Laruns. The category one Col de Marie Blanque (7.7km, 8.6%) guards the finish 20km out, and holds bonus seconds for those first over the top to incentivise the major contenders to come to the fore and fight it out.
- Hindley grabs the yellow jersey as Vingegaard punishes Pogacar
Stage 6: Tarbes to Cauterets, 145km
This has the potential to be a thrilling day: the 145km route takes on the double trouble of the category one Col d’Aspin (12km, 6.5%) followed by the monstrous hors categorie Tourmalet (17.1km, 7.3%), before a fast ascent and a final climb to the summit finish at Cauterets (16km, 5.4%).
It is a day with several possible outcomes. The general classification contenders could fight it out in a showdown to the summit. Then again, a breakaway could be allowed to escape which would open up victory – and perhaps the yellow jersey – to an outsider. The last time the Tour finished in Cauterets in 2015, breakaway specialist Rafal Majka surged clear of his fellow escapers to win. Keep an eye on Ineos’s Tom Pidcock, who could use the long, fast descent from the Tourmalet summit to speed to the front, as he did before winning atop Alpe d’Huez last year.
- Pogacar responds to send message to Vingegaard
Stage 7: Mont de Marsan to Bordeaux, 170km
The first week of racing finishes in the Tour’s second most visited city, Bordeaux, and it’s a third flat day for the sprinters to contest. Much will depend on who has best preserved their legs through the high mountains when they come to this tight, technical finish on the banks of the Garonne river in the city centre.
- Philipsen pips Cavendish in thrilling finish to deny Brit all-time record
Stage 8: Libourne to Limoges, 201km
A long, hilly day will see the peloton head 201km east from Libourne outside Bordeaux to Limoges. The lumpy stage should suit a puncheur but it is not a particularly taxing set of climbs – only three are categorised and the toughest of those is just 2.8km at 5.2%. So could a determined team carry their sprinter to the finish and the stage win? Look out for Wout van Aert and Mathieu van der Poel, superstars with the all-round talent to conquer the climbs and still finish fast.
- Cavendish crashes out to end Tour de France record hopes
Stage 9: Saint-Leonard-de-Noblat to Puy de Dome, 184km
The final stage before the relief of the first rest day is relatively flat and gentle – until a brutal finish atop the iconic Puy de Dome volcano, a 13.3km drag at a gruelling 7.7% average gradient that last appeared in the Tour in 1988. The summit finish will require a serious climber’s legs to clinch the stage win, and the general classification contenders may well let a breakaway get ahead and fight for that prize.
- Woods takes win as Pogacar hits back at Vingegaard
Rest day: Clermont-Ferrand, Monday 10 July.
Stage 10: Parc Vulcania to Issoire, 167km
The race resumes in the centre of France from Vulcania – a volcano-themed amusement park – where riders will embark on a hilly 167km route through the Volcans d’Auvergne regional park, finishing down in the small town of Issiore. With five categorised climbs, including the sizeable Col de Guery (7.8km at 5%) and the Croix Saint-Robert (6km at 6.3%), it will be a draining ride with virtually no sustained flat sections, and a long descent to the finish town. It looks like a good day to plot something in the breakaway, as the big GC contenders save their legs for bigger challenges to come.
- Bilbao dedicates emotional stage win to late Gino Mader
Stage 11: Clermont Ferrand to Moulins, 180km
The final flat stage before the hard Alpine climbs will present an opportunity for those fast men who managed to haul themselves through the Pyrenees to get here – although there is still some climbing to be done including three category-four leg-sappers along the 180km route. The day begins in the university city of Clermont-Ferrand before the riders wind north and then east to Moulins, a small town on the Allier river. Any breakaway is likely to be reeled by those teams with dedicated sprinters eyeing their only opportunity for a stage win between the two rest days.
- Philipsen continues flat-stage dominance even without van der Poel
Stage 12: Roanne to Belleville-en-Beaujolais, 169km
The race caravan will shift east to start stage 12 in Roanne in the Loire region, before taking a 169km route to Belleville, situated on the Saone river north of Lyon. This has been categorised as a hilly or medium mountain stage, but it might feel harder than that by the time the peloton reaches the foot of the fifth categorised climb of the day, the Col de la Croix Rosier (5.3km at 7.6%). That should be enough to put off the best puncheurs like Van der Poel and Van Aert, because the stage winner will need strong climbing legs. The GC riders will want to conserve energy, so expect a breakaway to stay clear and fight amongst themselves.
- Izagirre solos to victory
Stage 13: Chatillon-Sur-Chalaronne to Grand Colombier, 138km
The first of three brutal stages that could decide the destiny of this year’s yellow jersey is only relatively short – 138km – but will provide a stern enough test to reveal any weaknesses in the major contenders. The peloton will enjoy a relatively flat and gentle first 75km from Chatillon-sur-Chalaronne before entering the Jura Mountains. A short climb and fast descent precedes the big climax: all 17.4km (7.1%) of the Grand Colombier providing an epic summit finish. This could be another day for a breakaway away to get free, but the overall contenders like Pogacar and Vingegaard will also fancy stage glory and the chance to stamp their authority on the race.
- Kwiatkowski wins as Pogacar eats into Vingegaard’s lead
Stage 14: Annemasse to Morzine, 152km
Part two of this triple header of mountain stages sees the peloton ride into the Alps with a 152km route from Annemasse to Morzine ski resort. Three tough category one climbs line the road to the hors categorie Col de Joux Plane (11.6km at 8.5%), a brutally steep grind where bonuses await the first few over the top – and stage victory is the prize at the bottom. This is another potential spot for yellow jersey fireworks.
- Rodriguez wins first Tour stage as Pogacar thwarted by motorbike
Stage 15: Les Gets to Saint Gervais, 180km
The last ride before the final rest day will take the peloton further east into the Alps, towards the French border with Italy. The 179km route is almost constantly up and down, with a fast descent before the final two climbs, and the summit finish atop Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc will require strong climbing legs once more.
- Pogacar and Vingegaard in stalemate as Poels wins stage
Rest day: Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc, Monday 17 July.
Stage 16: Individual time trial from Passy to Combloux, 22km
This year’s home stretch begins with the only time trial of the race: a short, relatively flat 22km from Passy to Combloux in the shadow of Mont Blanc. The route includes one categorised climb, the steep but short Cote de Domancy (2.5km at 9.4%). There is an opportunity here to make up crucial seconds for those that need them.
- Vingegaard takes control of yellow jersey
Stage 17: Saint Gervais to Courchevel, 166km
Put Wednesday 19 July in the diary: this will surely be the most brutal day of the entire Tour de France and it could be decisive. The 166km route features four big climbs, the last of which offers up this year’s Souvenir Henri Desgrange for the first rider over the highest point of the race. To get there the riders must endure a 28.1km slog averaging 6% gradient to the top of the Col de la Loze, towering in the clouds 2,304m above sea level. There are bonus seconds up here too, before a short descent down to the finish at Courchevel.
A breakaway will probably form, but can they last the distance? Whatever happens up the road, the fight for the yellow jersey will be fierce – only the strongest handful of riders will be able to stand the pace and this will likely be the day that the 2023 winner is effectively crowned.
- Vingegaard dominates to put seal on Tour de France
Stage 18: Moutiers to Bourg en Bresse, 186km
After a potentially explosive stage 17, stage 18 is classified as “hilly” but is really a relatively sedate 185km which the sprinters are likely to contest if their teams can haul in the inevitable breakaway. The big question is whether there will be many sprinters left in the peloton after such a demanding set of stages in the Alps. For those fast men still in the race, the descent into Bourg-en-Bresse precedes a technical finish, with roundabouts and a sharp corner before a swinging right-hand turn on to the home straight where the stage will be won and lost.
- Breakaway stays away as Asgreen takes win
Stage 19: Moirans-en-Montagne to Poligny, 173km
Another flat day gives a further opportunity for those sprinters left in the field, as the peloton travels 173km from Moirans, near Grenoble, north to Poligny. The general classification contenders will be happy to rest their legs before one final push to Paris.
- Matej Mohoric takes photo finish to win stage 19
Stage 20: Belfort to Le Markstein, 133km
The final competitive stage of the Tour is a 133km ride from Belfort to Le Markstein ski resort in the Vosges mountains, and it offers just enough for one final attack to steal the yellow jersey, should the overall win still be on the line. The last two climbs of the day are both steep category one ascents: first the Petit Ballon (9.3km, 8.1%) followed by the Col du Platzerwasel (7.1km at 8.4%). Whoever is wearing yellow just needs to hang on to the wheel of their fiercest rival here, and that should be enough to see them home.
- Chapeau, Thibaut Pinot
Stage 21: Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines to Paris Champs-Elysees, 115km
As is tradition, the peloton will transfer to Paris and ride a truce to the Champs-Elysees. The stage will start at France’s national velodrome, home of cycling for the 2024 Paris Olympics. It will finish with one final sprint: Cavendish has won four times in Paris and it would be a fitting way to end the race that has defined his career if he were to repeat the feat one last time. And once the race is done, the winner of the 2023 Tour de France will be crowned.
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Tour de France 2023 stage-by-stage guide: Route maps and profiles for all 21 days
The 2023 Tour de France has all the ingredients of a classic: two leading protagonists ready to tear lumps out of each other in reigning champion Jonas Vingegaard and the deposed Tadej Pogacar; entertaining multi-talented stage hunters Wout van Aert, Mathieu van der Poel, Julian Alaphilippe and Tom Pidcock; the great Mark Cavendish chasing a historic 35th stage win; all facing a brutal route with 56,000m of climbing and four summit finishes.
The Tour begins in the Spanish Basque country on Saturday 1 July, and these hilly routes will throw open the yellow jersey to a wide range of contenders. The race crosses the French border for some flat stages and an early jaunt into the high Pyrenees, where the Col du Tourmalet awaits. The peloton takes on the Puy de Dome volcano on its journey across France towards the Jura Mountains and the Alps, and it is in the mountains that this Tour will ultimately be decided. It all ends on the Champs-Elysees in Paris on Sunday 23 July.
Here is a stage-by-stage guide to how the race will unfold.
Stage 1: Bilbao to Bilbao, 182km
The 2023 Tour de France starts outside Bilbao’s iconic Guggenheim Museum, and winds north to the Bay of Biscay coastline before returning to the city where the stage winner will take the yellow jersey. This 182km opening stage is a hilly route with 3,000m of climbing featuring five categorised ascents, of which the final two are sharp and testing: they are tough enough to shake off the dedicated sprinters and open up early glory for the best puncheurs – those riders with the legs to get over short climbs and the power to surge away on the other side.
The profile of this stage is a great choice by organisers as it could suit just about anyone, from the speed of Wout van Aert to the climbing strength Tom Pidcock or Simon Yates – even two-time champion Tadej Pogacar.
Stage 2: Vitoria Gastiez to Saint Sebastian, 209km
The peloton will head east from Bilbao, touching more picturesque Basque coastline before arriving at the finish in San Sebastian. At more than 200km this is the longest stage of the 2023 Tour and, with the sizeable Jaizkibel climb (8.1km, 5.3% average gradient) shortly before the finish, this is even more tough on the legs than the first day. Another puncheur with the climbing strength to get over the steeper hills can capitalise, like two-time world champion Julian Alaphilippe.
Stage 3: Amorebieta to Bayonne, 187km
Stage three starts in Spain and ends in France, and the finale in Bayonne is ripe for a bunch sprint. Mark Cavendish will get his first shot of this race at trying to win a historic 35th Tour de France stage, but he will be up against a stacked field including former QuickStep teammate Fabio Jakobsen and the awesome speed of Wout van Aert. It will be fascinating to get a first glimpse of how the power riders stack up.
Stage 4: Dax to Nogaro, 182km
Another flat day and an even faster finish in store on the Circuit Paul Armagnac, a race track in Nogaro. The 800m home straight will almost certainly tee up a showdown between the Tour’s serious fast men.
Stage 5: Pau to Laruns, 163km
The first major mountains of the Tour come a little earlier than usual, as the peloton heads up into the high Pyrenees on day five. The Col de Soudet (15km, 7.2%) is one of the toughest climbs of the race and rears up halfway through this 163km route from Pau to Laruns. The category one Col de Marie Blanque (7.7km, 8.6%) guards the finish 20km out, and holds bonus seconds for those first over the top to incentivise the major contenders to come to the fore and fight it out.
Stage 6: Tarbes to Cauterets, 145km
This has the potential to be a thrilling day: the 145km route takes on the double trouble of the category one Col d’Aspin (12km, 6.5%) followed by the monstrous hors categorie Tourmalet (17.1km, 7.3%), before a fast ascent and a final climb to the summit finish at Cauterets (16km, 5.4%).
It is a day with several possible outcomes. If the yellow jersey is on the shoulders of a fast puncheur at the start then it may well be transferred to one of the general classification contenders by the end, should they decide to fight for the stage win. Then again, a breakaway could be allowed to escape which would open up victory – and perhaps the yellow jersey – to an outsider. The last time the Tour finished in Cauterets in 2015, breakaway specialist Rafal Majka surged clear of his fellow escapers to win. Keep an eye on Ineos’s Tom Pidcock, who could use the long, fast descent from the Tourmalet summit to speed to the front, as he did before winning atop Alpe d’Huez last year.
Stage 7: Mont de Marsan to Bordeaux, 170km
The first week of racing finishes in the Tour’s second most visited city, Bordeaux, and it’s a third flat day for the sprinters to contest. Much will depend on who has best preserved their legs through the high mountains when they come to this tight, technical finish on the banks of the Garonne river in the city centre.
Stage 8: Libourne to Limoges, 201km
A long, hilly day will see the peloton head 201km east from Libourne outside Bordeaux to Limoges. The lumpy stage should suit a puncheur but it is not a particularly taxing set of climbs – only three are categorised and the toughest of those is just 2.8km at 5.2%. So could a determined team carry their sprinter to the finish and the stage win? Look out for Wout van Aert and Mathieu van der Poel, superstars with the all-round talent to conquer the climbs and still finish fast.
Stage 9: Saint-Leonard-de-Noblat to Puy de Dome, 184km
The final stage before the relief of the first rest day is relatively flat and gentle – until a brutal finish atop the iconic Puy de Dome volcano, a 13.3km drag at a gruelling 7.7% average gradient that last appeared in the Tour in 1988. The summit finish will require a serious climber’s legs to clinch the stage win, and the general classification contenders may well let a breakaway get ahead and fight for that prize.
Rest day: Clermont-Ferrand, Monday 10 July.
Stage 10: Parc Vulcania to Issoire, 167km
The race resumes in the centre of France from Vulcania – a volcano-themed amusement park – where riders will embark on a hilly 167km route through the Volcans d’Auvergne regional park, finishing down in the small town of Issiore. With five categorised climbs, including the sizeable Col de Guery (7.8km at 5%) and the Croix Saint-Robert (6km at 6.3%), it will be a draining ride with virtually no sustained flat sections, and a long descent to the finish town. It looks like a good day to plot something in the breakaway, as the big GC contenders save their legs for bigger challenges to come.
Stage 11: Clermont Ferrand to Moulins, 180km
The final flat stage before the hard Alpine climbs will present an opportunity for those fast men who managed to haul themselves through the Pyrenees to get here – although there is still some climbing to be done including three category-four leg-sappers along the 180km route. The day begins in the university city of Clermont-Ferrand before the riders wind north and then east to Moulins, a small town on the Allier river. Any breakaway is likely to be reeled by those teams with dedicated sprinters eyeing their only opportunity for a stage win between the two rest days.
Stage 12: Roanne to Belleville-en-Beaujolais, 169km
The race caravan will shift east to start stage 12 in Roanne in the Loire region, before taking a 169km route to Belleville, situated on the Saone river north of Lyon. This has been categorised as a hilly or medium mountain stage, but it might feel harder than that by the time the peloton reaches the foot of the fifth categorised climb of the day, the Col de la Croix Rosier (5.3km at 7.6%). That should be enough to put off the best puncheurs like Van der Poel and Van Aert, because the stage winner will need strong climbing legs. The GC riders will want to conserve energy, so expect a breakaway to stay clear and fight amongst themselves.
Stage 13: Chatillon-Sur-Chalaronne to Grand Colombier, 138km
The first of three brutal stages that could decide the destiny of this year’s yellow jersey is only relatively short – 138km – but will provide a stern enough test to reveal any weaknesses in the major contenders. The peloton will enjoy a relatively flat and gentle first 75km from Chatillon-sur-Chalaronne before entering the Jura Mountains. A short climb and fast descent precedes the big climax: all 17.4km (7.1%) of the Grand Colombier providing an epic summit finish. This could be another day for a breakaway away to get free, but the overall contenders like Pogacar and Vingegaard will also fancy stage glory and the chance to stamp their authority on the race.
Stage 14: Annemasse to Morzine, 152km
Part two of this triple header of mountain stages sees the peloton ride into the Alps with a 152km route from Annemasse to Morzine ski resort. Three tough category one climbs line the road to the hors categorie Col de Joux Plane (11.6km at 8.5%), a brutally steep grind where bonus seconds await the first few over the top – and stage victory is the prize at the bottom. This is another potential spot for yellow jersey fireworks.
Stage 15: Les Gets to Saint Gervais, 180km
The last ride before the final rest day will take the peloton further east into the Alps, towards the French border with Italy . The 179km day is almost constantly up and down, with a fast descent before the final two climbs, and the summit finish atop Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc will require strong climbing legs once more.
Rest day: Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc, Monday 17 July.
Stage 16: Individual time trial from Passy to Combloux, 22km
This year’s home stretch begins with the only time trial of the race: a short, relatively flat 22km from Passy to Combloux in the shadow of Mont Blanc. The route includes one categorised climb, the steep but short Cote de Domancy (2.5km at 9.4%). This stage is unlikely to decide the yellow jersey or podium spots, but there is an opportunity here to make up crucial seconds for those that need them.
Stage 17: Saint Gervais to Courchevel, 166km
Put Wednesday 19 July in the diary: this will surely be the most brutal day of the entire Tour de France and it could be decisive. The 166km route features four big climbs, the last of which offers up this year’s Souvenir Henri Desgrange for the first rider over the highest point of the race. To get there the riders must endure a 28.1km slog averaging 6% gradient to the top of the Col de la Loze, towering in the clouds 2,304m above sea level. There are bonus points seconds up here too, before a short descent down to the finish at Courchevel.
A breakaway will probably form, but can they last the distance? Whatever happens up the road, the fight for the yellow jersey will be fierce – only the strongest handful of riders will be able to stand the pace and this will likely be the day that the 2023 winner is effectively crowned.
Stage 18: Moutiers to Bourg en Bresse, 186km
After a potentially explosive stage 17, stage 18 is classified as “hilly” but is really a relatively sedate 185km which the sprinters are likely to contest if their teams can haul in the inevitable breakaway. The big question is whether there will be many sprinters left in the peloton after such a demanding set of stages in the Alps. For those fast men still in the race, the descent into Bourg-en-Bresse precedes a technical finish, with roundabouts and a sharp corner before a swinging right-hand turn on to the home straight where the stage will be won and lost.
Stage 19: Moirans-en-Montagne to Poligny, 173km
Another flat day gives a further opportunity for those sprinters left in the field, as the peloton travels 173km from Moirans, near Grenoble, north to Poligny. The general classification contenders will be happy to rest their legs before one final push to Paris.
Stage 20: Belfort to Le Markstein, 133km
The final competitive stage of the Tour is a 133km ride from Belfort to Le Markstein ski resort in the Vosges mountains, and it offers just enough for one final attack to steal the yellow jersey, should the overall win still be on the line. The last two climbs of the day are both steep category one ascents: first the Petit Ballon (9.3km, 8.1%) followed by the Col du Platzerwasel (7.1km at 8.4%). Whoever is wearing yellow just needs to hang on to the wheel of their fiercest rival here, and that should be enough to see them home.
Stage 21: Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines to Paris Champs-Elysees, 115km
As is tradition, the peloton will transfer to Paris and ride a truce to the Champs-Elysees. The stage will start at France’s national velodrome, home of cycling for the 2024 Paris Olympics. It will finish with one final sprint: Cavendish has won four times in Paris and it would be a fitting way to end the race that has defined his career if he were to repeat the feat one last time. And once the race is done, the winner of the 2023 Tour de France will be crowned.
Everything you need to know about the 2023 Tour de France
The 110th edition of the Tour de France begins Saturday in Bilbao, Spain, and one of the sport’s budding rivalries will be on display in cycling’s biggest race.
Among the 176 cyclists competing on 22 teams are defending champion Jonas Vingegaard and two-time winner Tadej Pogacar , who rank among the favorites to win.
Here’s what you need to know before one cyclist rides victoriously into the streets of Paris on July 23.
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2022 tour de france route: stage profiles, previews, start, finish times.
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A stage-by-stage look at the 2022 Tour de France route with profiles, previews and estimated start and finish times (all times Eastern) ...
Stage 1/July 1: Copenhagen-Copenhagen (8.2 miles) Individual Time Trial Start: 10 a.m. Estimated Finish: 1:10 p.m. Quick Preview: The Grant Départ is held in Denmark for the first time with the first three stages being held there. Watch out for Italian Filippo Ganna , who won the last two world titles in the time trial.
Stage 2/July 2: Roskilde-Nyborg (125 miles) Flat Start: 6:15 a.m. Estimated Finish: 10:59 a.m. Quick Preview: The first sprinters’ stage. With Mark Cavendish not selected for the Tour, look for Peter Sagan to began his bid for a record-extending eighth green jersey title.
Stage 3/July 3: Vejle-Sonderborg (113 miles) Flat Start: 7:05 a.m. Estimated Finish: 11:12 a.m. Quick Preview: The last “flat” category stage until stage 13 and the last stage in Denmark before the rest day and a move to France.
TOUR DE FRANCE: TV Schedule
Stage 4/July 5: Dunkirk-Calais (106 miles) Hilly Start: 7:15 a.m. Estimated Finish: 11:14 a.m. Quick Preview: The Tour visits Dunkirk, site of the largest evacuation in military history during World War II, for the first time in 15 years.
Stage 5/July 6: Lille Metropole-Arenberg Porte Du Hainaut (95 miles) Hilly Start: 7:35 a.m. Estimated Finish: 11:20 a.m. Quick Preview: The Tour returns to the famed cobblestones of Paris-Roubaix for the first time in four years. There are 11 sections totaling about 12 miles. As the saying goes, you can’t win the Tour on the cobblestones, but you can lose it.
Stage 6/July 7: Binche-Longwy (136 miles) Hilly Start: 6:05 a.m. Estimated Finish: 11:15 a.m. Quick Preview: The first uphill finish of the Tour on a stage that includes Belgium and France.
Stage 7/July 8: Tomblaine-La Super Planche des Belles Filles (109 miles) Mountain Start: 7:05 a.m. Estimated Finish: 11:17 a.m. Quick Preview: A day for the general classification contenders, including Tadej Pogacar . The finishing climb, which translates to “The Plank of Beautiful Girls,” has become a Tour staple.
Stage 8/July 9: Dole-Lausanne (115 miles) Hilly Start: 7:05 a.m. Estimated Finish: 11:28 a.m. Quick Preview: The peloton crosses into a fourth country, Switzerland, finishing at the home city of the International Olympic Committee.
Stage 9/July 10: Aigle-Chatel Les Portes Du Soleil (119 miles) Mountain Start: 6:30 a.m. Estimated Finish: 11:28 a.m. Quick Preview: The lone mountain stage of the six total at this year’s Tour without a summit finish.
Stage 10/July 12: Morzine Les Portes Du Soleil-Megeve (92 miles) Hilly Start: 7:30 a.m. Estimated Finish: 10:57 a.m. Quick Preview: After a rest day, this Tour’s first taste of the Alps. At the 2020 Criterium du Dauphine, American Sepp Kuss won the last stage that started and finished in Megeve.
Stage 11/July 13: Albertville-Col Du Granon Serre Chevalier (94 miles) Mountain Start: 6:15 a.m. Estimated Finish: 10:40 a.m. Quick Preview: Starts in the 1992 Winter Olympic host village and finishes with the first two beyond category climbs of this Tour.
Stage 12/July 14: Briancon-Alpe d’Huez (102 miles) Mountain Start: 7:05 a.m. Estimated Finish: 11:55 a.m. Quick Preview: On Bastille Day, the stage finishes with arguably the Tour’s most famous climb -- the 21 switchbacks of Alpe d’Huez.
Stage 13/July 15: Le Bourg D’Oisans-Saint-Etienne Flat Start: 7:05 a.m. Estimated Finish: 11:26 a.m. Quick Preview: After nine hilly or mountain stages, the sprinters get a flat stage for the first time in 12 days.
Stage 14/July 16: Saint-Etienne-Mende (119 miles) Hilly Start: 6:15 a.m. Estimated Finish: 11:05 a.m. Quick Preview: Five categorized climbs, but none of the highest varieties. Could be a day for a breakaway.
Stage 15/July 17: Rodez-Carcassonne (125 miles) Flat Start: 7:05 a.m. Estimated Finish: 11:39 a.m. Quick Preview: Last year, Cavendish tied Eddy Merckx ‘s record 34 Tour stage wins in Carcassone.
Stage 16/July 19: Carcassonne-Foix (110 miles) Hilly Start: 6:30 a.m. Estimated Finish: 10:58 a.m. Quick Preview: A transition stage after the last rest day takes the peloton to the foot of the Pyrenees.
Stage 17/July 20: Saint Gaudens-Peyragudes (80 miles) Mountain Start: 7:15 a.m. Estimated Finish: 10:50 a.m. Quick Preview: The first of last two mountain stages (back-to-back summit finishes) that could decide the Tour. Finishes at an airport featured in the James Bond movie, “Tomorrow Never Dies.”
Stage 18/July 21: Lourdes-Hautacam (89 miles) Mountain Start: 7:30 a.m. Estimated Finish: 11:25 a.m. Quick Preview: Finishes with a one-way climb to a ski resort with a mountain luge that was included in the race route in 2014.
Stage 19/July 22: Castelnau-Magnoac-Cahors (117 miles) Flat Start: 7:05 a.m. Estimated Finish: 11:16 a.m. Quick Preview: A day for the sprinters who made it through the Alps and Pyrenees.
Stage 20/July 23: La Capelle-Marival-Rocamadour (25 miles) Individual Time Trial Start: 7:05 a.m. Estimated Finish: 11:49 a.m. Quick Preview: The last competitive day of the Tour. The “Race of Truth” will determine the final podium positions with two short climbs near the end potentially being decisive.
Stage 21/Sept. 20: Paris La Defense Arena-Paris Champs-Elysees (71 miles) Flat Start: 10:30 a.m. Estimated Finish: 1:26 p.m. Quick Preview: The ceremonial ride into Paris, almost always a day for the sprinters.
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All the Stages of the 2021 Tour de France
A map of every stage from this year’s race, which takes place from June 26-July 18.
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STAGE 1 BREST - LANDERNEAU (197.8km)
STAGE 2 PERROS GUIREC - MÛR-DE-BRETAGNE GUERLÉDAN (183.5km)
STAGE 3 LORIENT - PONTIVY (182.9km)
STAGE 4 REDON - FOUGÈRES (150.4km)
STAGE 5 CHANGÉ - LAVAL ESPACE MAYENNE (27.2km)
STAGE 6 TOURS - CHÂEAUROUX (160.6km)
STAGE 7 VIERZON - LE CREUSOT (249.1km)
STAGE 8 OYONNAX - LE GRAND-BORNAND (150.8km)
STAGE 9 CLUSES - TIGNES (144.9km)
STAGE 10 ALBERTVILLE - VALENCE (190.7km)
STAGE 11 SORGUES - MALAUCÈNE (198.9km)
STAGE 12 SAINT-PAUL-TROIS-CHÂTEAUX - NÎMES (159.4km)
STAGE 13 NÎMES CARASSONNE (219.9km)
STAGE 14 CARCASSONNE - QUILLAN (183.7km)
STAGE 15 CÉRET - ANDORRE-LA-VIEILLE (191.3km)
STAGE 16 PAS DE LA CASE - SAINT-GAUDENS (169km)
STAGE 17 MAURET - SAINT-LARY-SOULAN COL DU PORTET (178.4km)
STAGE 18 PAU - LUZ ARDIDAN (129.7km)
STAGE 19 MOURENX - LIBOURNE (207km)
STAGE 20 LIBOURNE - SAINT ÉMILION (30.8km)
Laura is the summer 2021 editorial intern for Popular Mechanics, Runner's World, and Bicycling. Her work can also be found at Oprah Daily. She is a student at Howard University in Washington, D.C. where she studies English and Art History. When she isn't fighting the temptation to use passive voice, you can typically find her hunched over her Strat or working on her zine.
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A little bit of information ...
The program for the grand départ of the tour de france 2023.
- Wednesday June 28, 2023 - 9:00 am : opening of the welcome desk and press center at the Bilbao Exhibition Centre in Barakaldo
- Friday, June 30, 2023 - 10:00 am to 8:00 pm: opening of the Fan Park at the Parque del Arenal in Bilbao - free entry
- Saturday, July 1, 2023 : Stage 1 - Bilbao > Bilbao
- Sunday, July 2, 2023 : Stage 2 - Vitoria-Gasteiz > Donostia San Sebastian
- Monday, July 3, 2023 : Stage 3 - Amorebieta-Extano > Bayonne
The Tour de France 2023 route on Open Street Maps
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1/ Saturday July 1 - Bilbao 🇪🇸 > Bilbao 🇪🇸 - 182 km
- start : - the start will take place on the Felipe Serrate Kalea in Bilbao (12:30 p.m.) - the actual start is scheduled on the BI-704 , after 11.3 km of the parade route (12:55 p.m.)
- passes and climbs : - Côte de Laukiz (3rd category) at km 13.8 - ^ 211 m / 2.2 km at 6.9% - Côte de San Juan de Gaztelugatxe (3rd category) at km 67.8 - ^ 286 m / 3.5 km at 7.6% - Col de Morga (4th category) at km 140,9 - ^ 307 m / 3.9 km at 4.1% - Côte de Vivero (2nd category) at km 154.9 - ^ 361 m / 4.2 km at 7.3% - Côte de Pike (3rd category) at km 140.9 - ^ 212 m / 2 km at 10%.
- intermediate sprint : Carlos Gangoiti Kalea in Gernika-Lumo at km 88.2
- bonus sprint : Côte de Pike
- finish : Zumalacárregui Etorbidea / BI-625 in Bilbao at the end of a 150 m straight line at sight / width 6.5 m
- departments crossed : Vizcaya (Spain) from km 0 to km 182
- main towns : Bilbao, Getxo, Bermeo and Gernika-Lumo
2/ Sunday, July 2, 2023 - Vitoria-Gasteiz 🇪🇸 > San Sebastian 🇪🇸 - 208.9 km
- start : - the start will take place on the Mendizabala Area in Vitoria-Gasteiz (12:15pm) - the actual start is scheduled on the N-104 , after 6.7km of the parade route (12:25pm)
- passes and climbs : - Col d'Udana (3rd category) at km 81.3 - ^ 515 m / 4.5 km at 5.1% - Côte d'Aztiria (4th category) at km 87.6 - ^ 572 m / 2.7 km at 5.3% - Côte d'Alkiza (3rd category) at km 140,9 - ^ 324 m / 4.2 km at 5.7% - Gurutze hill (4th category) at km 174.2 - ^ 150 m / 2.6 km at 4.7% - Jaizkibel (2nd category) at km 192.4 - ^ 455 m / 8.1 km at 5.3
- intermediate sprint : N-240 in Legutio at km 40.6
- bonus sprint : Jaizkibel
- finish : Zurriola Hiribidea in San Sebastian at the end of a final straight 550 m at sight / 6 m wide
- Departments crossed : Alava from km 0 to km 53.9, Gipuzcoa from km 58 to km 208.9
- main towns : Vitoria-Gasteiz, Irun, Hondarribia and San Sebastian
3/ Monday, July 3, 2023 - Amorebieta-Extano 🇪🇸 > Bayonne - 187.4 km
- start : - the start will take place on Nafarroa Kalea in Amorebieta-Extano (1:00 p.m.) - the actual start is scheduled on the N-634 , after 6.8 km of the parade route (1:15 p.m.)
- passes and climbs : - Côte de Trabukua (3rd category) at km 13.8 - ^ 369 m / 4.1 km at 5.4% - Côte de Milloi (4th category) at km 32.8 - ^ 162 m / 2.3 km at 4.5% - Col d'Itziar (3rd category) at km 70.9 - ^ 212 m / 5.1 km at 4.6% - Côte d'Orioko Benta (3rd category) at km 102 - ^ 316 m / 4.6 km at 6.3
- intermediate sprint : Hondartza Kalea in Deba at km 65.8
- sprint bonus : XXXX à XXXX
- finish : Avenue de l'Aquitaine in Bayonne at the end of a 200 m straight line at sight / width 6.5 m
- Departments crossed : Biscaye from km 0 to km 53.8, Gipuzcoa from km 59 to km 128.8, Pyrénées-Atlantiques (64) from km 134.1 to km 187.4
- main towns : Amorebieta-Extano, Durango, Zarautz, San Sebastian, Errenteria, Irun, Hendaye, Saint-Jean-de-Luz and Bayonne
4/ Tuesday, July 4, 2023 - Dax > Nogarro - 181.8 km
- start - the start will take place on the Place de la Fontaine Chaude in Dax (1:10pm) - the actual start is scheduled on the D32 / Route de Candresse , after 4.8 km of the parade route (1:20pm)
- passes and climbs : - Côte de Dému (4th category) at km 154.4 - ^ 218 m / 2 km at 3.5
- intermediate sprint : in front of Notre-Dame des Cyclistes at km 93.6
- finish : on the Circuit Paul Armagnac in Nogaro at the end of a 750 m / 9 m wide final straight
- departments crossed : Landes (40) from km 0 to km 93.6 and from km 98.9 to km 181.8, Gers (32) at km 98
- main towns : Dax, Eauze and Nogaro
5/ Wednesday, July 5, 2023 - Pau > Laruns - 162.7 km
- start : - the start will take place in Rue Pierre Bordelongue in Pau (1:05pm) - the actual start is scheduled on the D802 , after 9.1 km of the parade route (1:25pm)
- passes and climbs : - Col de Soudet (hors catégorie) at km 87.5 - 15.2 km at 7.2% - Col d'Ichère (3e catégorie) at km 124.8 - 4.2 km at 7% - Col de Marie Blanque (1ère catégorie) at km 144.2 - 1.3 km at 5.8%.
- intermediate sprint : D918 at Lanne-en-Barétous at km 48.8
- bonus sprint : Col de Marie Blanque
- finish : D934 at Laruns at the end of a 3.4 km final straight (including 800 m at sight) / width 5.5 m
- departments crossed : Pyrénées-Atlantiques (64) from km 0 to km 162.7
- main towns : Pau, Oloron-Sainte-Marie, Arette and Laruns
6/ Thursday, July 6, 2023 - Tarbes > Cauterets-Cambasque - 144.9 km
- start : - the start will take place on Place Marcadieu in Tarbes (1:10pm) - the actual start is scheduled on the D21 , after 7.6km of the parade route (1:25pm)
- passes and climbs : - Côte de Capvern-les-Bains (3rd category) at km 29.9 - ^ 602 m / 5.6 km at 4.8% - Col d'Aspin (1st category) at km 68.1 - ^ 1490 m / 12 km at 6.5% - Col du Tourmalet (hors catégorie) at km 97.9 - ^ 2115 m / 17.1 km at 7.3% - Cauterets-Cambasque (1st category) at km 144.9 - ^ 1355 m / 16 km at 5.4%.
- intermediate sprint : D929 / Route d'Espagne in Sarrancolin at km 49.2
- finish : Route de Cambasque in Cauterets-Cambasque at the end of a final straight 50 m at sight / width 5 m
- departments crossed : Hautes-Pyrénées (65) from km 0 to km 144.9
- main towns : Tarbes, Arreau, Luz-Saint-Sauveur, Pierrefitte-Nestalas and Cauterets
7/ Friday, July 7, 2023 - Mont-de-Marsan > Bordeaux - 169.9 km
- start : - the start will take place on Place Joseph Pancaut in Mont-de-Marsan (1:15pm) - the actual start is scheduled on the D53 , after 5.4 km of the parade route (1:30pm)
- passes and climbs : - Côte de Béguey (4th category) at km 131 - ^ 84 m / 1.2 km at 4.4
- intermediate sprint : Route des Landes in Grignols at km 88
- finish : Quai Louis XVIII in Bordeaux at the end of a 2 km final straight (including 400 m at sight) / width 6 m
- departments crossed : Landes (40) from km 0 to km 67.3, Gironde (33) from km 70.3 to km 169.9
- main towns : Mont-de-Marsan, Roquefort, Langon and Bordeaux
8/ Saturday, July 8, 2023 - Libourne > Limoges - 200.7 km
- start : - the start will take place in Rue Roudier in Libourne (12:30 p.m.) - the actual start is scheduled on the D1089 , after 4.8 km of the parade route (12:45 p.m.)
- passes and climbs : - Côte de Champs-Romain (3rd category) at km 130.4 - ^ 303 m / 2.8 km at 5.2% - Côte de Masmont (4th category) at km 184.7 - ^ 353 m / 1.3 km at 5.5% - Côte de Condat-sur-Vienne (4th category) at km 191.4 - ^ 289 m / 1.2 km at 5.4%.
- intermediate sprint : Route de Royan in Tocane-Saint-Apre at km 79
- finish : Place Jourdan in Limoges at the end of an 800 m final straight (of which 200 m on sight) / width 6.5 m
- departments crossed : Gironde (33) from km 0 to km 30.4, Dordogne (24) from km 30.8 to km 137.2 and to km 145.4 and Haute-Vienne (87) from km 140.8 to km 145.3 and from km 147.4 to km 200.7
- main towns : Libourne, Ribérac and Limoges
9/ Sunday, July 9, 2023 - Saint-Leonard-de-Noblat > Puy de Dôme - 182.4 km
- start : - the start will take place on the Avenue du Champ de Mars in Saint-Leonard-de-Noblat (1:30 pm) - the actual start is scheduled on the D13 , after 4.3 km of the parade route (1:45 pm)
- passes and climbs : - Côte de Felletin (4th category) at km 74.8 - ^ 660 m / 2.1 km at 5.2% - Côte de Pontcharraud (4th category) at km 85.7 - ^ 692 m / 1.8 km at 4.6% - Côte de Pontaumur (3rd category) at km 126.2 - ^ 734 m / 3.3 km at 5.3% - Puy de Dôme (outside category) at km 182.4 - ^ 1415 m / 13.3 km at 7.7%.
- intermediate sprint : D222 at Lac de Vassivière at km 30.4
- finish : at the summit of the Puy de Dôme at the end of a 10 m / 4 m wide final straight.
- departments crossed : Haute-Vienne (87) from km 0 to km 37, Creuse (23) from km 38.6 to km 105.1, Puy de Dôme (63) from km 107.9 to km 182.4
- main towns : Saint-Léonard-de-Noblat, Felletin and Clermont-Ferrand
R1/ Monday, July 10, 2023 - rest in Clermont-Ferrand
10/ tuesday, july 11, 2023 - vulcania > issoire - 167.2 km.
- start : - the start will take place on the Vulcania parking lot (1:05pm) - the actual start is scheduled on the D942 , after 7.8 km of the parade route (1:20pm)
- passes and climbs : - Col de la Moréno (3rd category) at km 7 - ^ 1065 m / 4.8 km at 4.7% - Col de Guéry (3rd category) at km 27.3 - ^ 1277 m / 7.8 km at 5% - Col de la Croix Saint-Robert (2nd category) at km 66,6 - ^ 1451 m / 6 km at 6.3% - Côte de Saint-Victor-la-Rivière (3rd category) at km 84.3 - ^ 1041 m / 3 km at 5.9% - Côte de la Chapelle-Marcousse (3rd category) at km 138.6 - ^ 980 m / 6.5 km at 5.6
- intermediate sprint : Place Charles de Gaulle, Le Mont-Dore at km 59.9
- finish : Route de Saint-Germain / D716 in Issoire at the end of a 700 m / 6 m wide final straight.
- departments crossed : Puy-de-Dôme (63) from km 0 to km 167.2
- main towns : Murat-le-Quaire, Le Mont-Dore, Chambon-sur-Lac, Murol, Besse and Issoire
11/ Wednesday, July 12, 2023 - Clermont-Ferrand > Moulins - 179.8 km
- start : - the start will take place on Boulevard Desaix in Clermont-Ferrand (1:05pm) - the actual start is scheduled on the D210 , after 10.3 km of the parade route (1:25pm)
- passes and climbs : - Côte de Chaptuzat-Haut (4th category) at km 31.8 - ^ 490 m / 1.9 km at 5% - Côte du Mercurol (4th category) at km 49.5 - ^ 457 m / 2.9 km at 4.6% - Côte de la Croix Blanche (4th category) at km 118.5 - ^ 292 m / 1.6 km at 5.4
- intermediate sprint : D998 at Lapeyrouse at km 70.5
- finish : Boulevard de Nomazy in Moulins at the end of a 1,300 m final straight (including 300 m at sight) / width 7 m
- departments crossed : Puy-de-Dôme (63) from km 0 to km 44.7 and from km 66.5 to km 74.3, Allier (03) from km 45.4 to km 64.5 and from km 76.5 to km 179.8
- main towns : Clermont-Ferrand, Aigueperse, Ébreuil, Commentry, Néris-les-Bains, Montluçon, Cosne-d'Alier and Moulins
12/ Thursday, July 13, 2023 - Roanne > Belleville-en-Beaujolais - 168.8 km
- start : - the start will take place at the Parking du Scarabée in Roanne (1:05 pm) - the actual start is scheduled on the Roanne , after 10.4 km of the parade route (1:20 pm)
- passes and climbs : - Côte de Thizy-les-Bourgs (3rd category) at km 20.5 - ^ 633 m / 4.3 km at 5.6% - Col des Écorbans (3rd category) at km 37.9 - ^ 853 m / 2.1 km at 6.9% - Col de la Casse Froide (3rd category) at km 109,9 - ^ 740 m / 5.2 km at 6.1% - Col de la Croix Montmain (2nd category) at km 125 - ^ 737 m / 5.5 km at 6.1% - Col de la Croix Rosier (2nd category) at km 140.4 - ^ 717 m / 5.3 km at 7.6
- intermediate sprint : Rue Chaussée d'Erpent in Régnié-Durette at km 93.3
- bonus sprint : Col de la Croix Rosier
- finish : Avenue de l'Europe / D306 à v at the end of a 400 m / 6 m wide final straight line
- departments crossed : Loire (42) from km 0 to km 13.2 and to km 38, Rhône (69) from km 15.1 to km 37.9 and from km 40.2 to km 76.9 and from km 78.7 to km 168.8, Saône-et-Loire (71) from km 77.8 to km 78.2
- main towns : Roanne, Bourg-de-Thizy, Régnié-Durette and Belleville-en-Beaujolais
13/ Friday, July 14, 2023 - Châtillon-sur-Chalaronne > Grand Colombier - 137.8 km
- start : - the start will take place on Place de la République in Châtillon-sur-Chalaronne (1.45pm) - the actual start is scheduled on the D2 , after 4.3km of the parade route (1.55pm)
- passes and climbs : - Grand Colombier (out of category) at km 137.8 - ^ 1501 m / 17.4 km at 7.1
- intermediate sprint : Avenue de la Liberté in Hauteville-Lompnes at km 87.3
- finish : D120 at Grand Colombier at the end of a final straight 1400 m (including 400 m at sight) / width 5 m
- departments crossed : Ain (01) from km 0 to km 137.8
- main towns : Châtillon-sur-Chalaronne, Villars-les-Dombes, Ambérieu-en-Bugey, Hauteville-Lompnes and Culoz
14/ Saturday, July 15, 2023 - Annemasse > Morzine - 151.8 km
- start : - the start will take place in the Rue des Amoureux in Annemasse (1:05pm) - the actual start is scheduled on the D1205 , after 8.3 km of the parade route (1:20pm)
- passes and climbs : - Col de Saxel (3rd category) at km 18.7 - ^ 944 m / 4.2 km at 4.6% - Col de Cou (1st category) at km 35.3 - ^ 1116 m / 7 km at 7.4% - Col du Feu (1st category) at km 52,7 - ^ 1117 m / 5.8 km at 7.8% - Col de la Ramaz (1st category) at km 101.6 - ^ 1619 m / 13.9 km at 7.1% - Col de Joux Plane (non-category) at km 139.8 - ^ 1691 m / 11.6 km at 8.5%.
- intermediate sprint : Col de Jambaz (^ 1029 m) at km 65.5
- bonus sprint : Col de Joux Plane
- finish : Place de l'Office de Tourisme in Morzine at the end of a 50 m straight line at sight / width 5.50 m
- departments crossed : Haute-Savoie (74) from km 0 to km 151.8
- main towns : Annemasse, Saint-Jeoire, Taninges, Samoëns and Morzine
15/ Sunday, July 16, 2023 - Les Gets > Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc - 179 km
- start : - the start will take place in Rue du Centre in Les Gets (1:05pm) - the actual start is scheduled on the D902 , after 11.6km of the parade route (1:20pm)
- passes and climbs : - Col de la Forclaz de Montmin (1st category) at km 82.8 - ^ 1157 m / 7.2 km at 7.3% - Col de la Croix Fry (1st category) at km 124.5 - ^ 1477 m / 11.3 km at 7% - Col des Aravis (3rd category) at km 133,3- ^ 1487 m / 4.4 km at 5.8% - Côte des Amerands (2nd category) at km 170.6 - ^ 888 m / 2.7 km at 10.9% - Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc (1st category) at km 179 - ^ 1372 m / 7 km at 7.7%.
- intermediate sprint : Route de Thônes à Bluffy at km 72
- finish : Route du Bettex in Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc at the end of a final straight 50 m at sight / width 5 m
- departments crossed : Haute-Savoie (74) from km 0 to km 133.3 and from km 148.5 to km 179, Savoie (73) from km 137.7 to km 147.4
- main towns : Les Gets, Cluses, Bonneville, La Roche-sur-Foron, Faverges, Praz-sur-Arly, Megève, Combloux and Saint-Gervais-les-Bains
R2/ Monday July 17, 2023 - rest in Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc
16/ tuesday, july 18, 2023 - passy > combloux - individual time trial - 22.4 km.
- start : - the launch ramp will be in l 'Avenue Joseph Thoret in Passy (the first rider will start at 1:05 p.m.; first minute by minute, then every 1'30" and finally 2 minutes by 2 minutes; the last start is scheduled for 5:00 p.m.)
- timing points : - Passy Chef-Lieu at km 7.1 - Domancy at km 16.1 - Côte de Domancy at km 18.9
- passes and climbs : - Côte de Domancy (2nd category) at km 18.9 - Passy
- finish : Route de Megève / D1212 in Combloux at the end of a 120 m straight final stretch on sight / width 5 m
- departments crossed : Haute-Savoie (74) from km 0 to km 22.4
- main towns : Passy, Sallanches and Combloux
17/ Wednesday, July 19, 2023 - Saint-Gervais > Courchevel - 165.7 km
- start : - the start will take place at the Viaduc de Saint-Gervais in Saint-Gervais-les-Bains (12:20 p.m.) - the actual start is scheduled on the D909 , after 3.5 km of the parade route (12:30 p.m.)
- passes and climbs : - Col des Saisies (1st category) at km 28.4 - ^ 1650 m / 13.4 km at 5.1% - Cormet de Roselend (1st category) at km 66.7 - ^ 1968 m / 19.9 km at 6% - Côte de Longefoy (2nd category) at km 105.7 - ^ 1174 m / 6.6 km at 7.5% - Col de la Loze (non-category) at km 159.1 - ^ 2304 m / 28.1 km at 6%.
- intermediate sprint : Avenue des Sports in Beaufort at km 46
- bonus sprint : Col de la Loze
- finish : Altiport in Courchevel at the end of a 370 m final straight, 30 m of which on sight / width 7 m
- departments crossed : Haute-Savoie (74) from km 0 to km 9.9, Savoie (73) from km 13.4 to km 165.7
- main towns : Saint-Gervais-les-Bains, Megève, Bourg-Saint-Maurice, Moûtiers, Salins-les-Thermes, Bride-les-Bains, Méribel-les-Allues and Courchevel
18/ Thursday, July 20, 2023 - Moûtiers > Bourg-en-Bresse - 184.9 km
- start : - the start will take place on the Square de la Liberté in Moûtiers (1:05pm) - the actual start is scheduled on the D990 , after 16.2 km of the parade route (1:35pm)
- passes and climbs : - Côte de Chambéry-le-Haut (4th category) at km 62.1 - ^ 349 m / 1.6 km at 4.1% - Côte de Boissieu (4th category) at km 105.2 - ^ 362 m / 2.4 km at 4.7%.
- intermediate sprint : Avenue de l'Europe in Saint-Rambert-en-Bugey at km 132.9
- finish : Boulevard Charles de Gaulle / D1075 in Bourg-en-Bresse at the end of a final 750 m straight at sight / width 6.5 m
- departments crossed : Savoie (73) from km 0 to km 89.2, Ain (01) from km 91.6 to km 184.9
- main towns : Moûtiers, Albertville, Chambéry, Belley, Ambérieu-en-Bugey and Bourg-en-Bresse
19/ Friday, July 21, 2023 - Moirans-en-Montagne > Poligny - 172.8 km
- start : - the start will take place in Rue du Collège in Moirans-en-Montagne (1:15pm) - the actual start is scheduled on the D470 , after 7.7km of the parade route (1:30pm)
- passes and climbs : - Côte du Bois de Lionge (4th category) at km 23.7 - ^ 686 m / 1.9 km at 5.7% - Côte d'Ivory (3rd category) at km 144.7 - ^ 602 m / 2.3 km at 5.9%.
- intermediate sprint : Route de Champagnole in Ney at km 97.7
- finish : Route de Dole / D905 in Poligny at the end of a 7 km / 6.5 m wide final straight.
- departments crossed : Jura (39) from km 0 to km 172.8
- main towns : Moirans-en-Montagne, Arinthod, Orgelet, Pont-de-Poitte, Champagnole, Salins-les-Bains, Mesnay, Arbois and Poligny
20/ Saturday, July 22, 2023 - Belfort > Le Markstein - 135.5 km
- start : - the start will take place in Rue de l'Ancien Théatre in Belfort (1:30 pm) - the actual start is scheduled on the D5 , after 6.6 km of the parade route (1:45 pm)
- passes and climbs : - Ballon d'Alsace (2nd category) at km 24 - ^ 1173 m / 11.5 km at 5.2% - Col de la Croix des Moinats (2nd category) at km 56.5 - ^ 891 m / 5.2 km at 7% - Col de Grosse Pierre (2nd category) at km 64.9 - ^ 944 m / 3,2 km at 8% - Col de la Schlucht (3rd category) at km 79.4 - ^ 1139 m / 4.3 km at 5.4% - Petit Ballon (1st category) at km 108.2 - ^ 1163 m / 9.3 km at 8.1% - Col du Platzerwasel (1st category) at km 125.3 - ^ 1193 m / 7.1 km at 8.4
- intermediate sprint : Rue d'Alsace in Fresse-sur-Moselle at km 37.2
- finish : D27 at Le Markstein at the end of a 170 m straight finish at sight / width 6 m
- departments crossed : Territoire de Belfort (90) from km 0 to km 24, Vosges (88) from km 33.1 to km 79.4, Haut-Rhin (68) from km 92.5 to km 133.5
- main towns : Belfort, Saint-Maurice-sur-Moselle, Fresse-sur-Moselle, Le Thillot, Cornimont, La Bresse, Munster and Sondernach
21/ Sunday, July 23, 2023 - Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines > Paris Champs-Elysées - 133.5 km
- start : - the start will take place on the Place de la Paix Céleste , in front of the Vélodrome National de Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, in Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (in the commune of Montigny-le-Bretonneux) (4:30 p.m.) - the actual start is scheduled on the D11 , after 3 km of the parade route (4:40 p.m.)
- passes and climbs : - Côte du Pavé des Gardes (4th category) at km 42.8 - ^ 180 m / 1.3 km at 6.5
- intermediate sprint : top of the Champs-Elysées in Paris (3rd passage) at km 75.1
- finish : Champs-Elysées in Paris at the end of a 700 m / 8 m wide final straight line
- departments crossed : Yvelines (78) from km 0 to km 39.2, Hauts-de-Seine (92) from km 41.1 to km 43.6, Paris (75) from km 48.8 to km 115.1
- main towns : Montigny-le-Bretonneux (Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines), Fontenay-le-Fleury, Les Clayes-sous-Bois, Plaisir, Élancourt, Montigny-le-Bretonneux, Voisins-le-Bretonneux, Guyancourt, Versailles, Viroflay, Chaville, Meudon, Issy-les-Moulineaux and Paris.
The Tour de France 2023 route in Google Earth
Thanks for all your work over the years! Really enjoy it to have all the race routes available in Google Earth.
Thank you very much for this. I am looking forward to it every year.
I was looking forward to open the kmz-file in Google Earth, but in a full hour of trying to download it, I din't succeed, nor by clicking the link nor by copy-pasting the url in a new window. I'll try again later.
I created a public iCal calendar based on this website and links to all stages. https://short.thover.com/?ID=863
Thanks again, Thomas! Like the others, each year I look forward to downloading the KMZ file.
Downloading the kmz file doesn't work, neither does the alternative link
Leave a comment
Tour de France 2024 route: Two individual time trials, five summit finishes and gravel sectors
Tour de France 2024 route totals 3,492km of racing with 52,320 metres of overall elevation across 21 stages
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- Stage summary
The Tour de France 2024 route will include five summit finishes, 59km of individual time trialling, and gravel sectors on stage nine, it has been announced by its organiser ASO.
The route for the 111th edition of the race was unveiled in a presentation inside Paris's Palais des Congrès on Wednesday.
It begins on the 29 June, and finishes on the 21 July, three weeks later.
As was confirmed last year, the race will begin in Italy for the first time , with stages from Florence to Rimini, Cesenatico to Bologna and Piacenza to Turin. It will mark 100 years since the first Italian winner of the Tour, Ottavio Bottecchia.
Another first is that the Tour will not conclude in Paris for the first time ever, due to the 2024 Paris Olympics, with the final stage coming in Nice. It also means that for the first time since 1989, the final stage will be contested, in a time trial.
On the way, the race tackles the Alps, the Massif Central and the Pyrenees, including four summit finishes at Pla d'Adet, the Plateau de Beille, Superdévoluy, Isola 2000 and the Col de la Couillole, and 59 kilometres of time trialling across stages seven and 21.
There are 14 gravel sectors on stage nine from Troyes to Troyes, totalling 32km, with six packed into the final 35km in what could be a decisive point of the race. The longest is 4km.
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With the final day a hilly time trial in Nice and not the usual procession in to Paris, it is hoped that the race will be alive right to the end of the race. The whole final week, in fact, will be crucial for general classification, with four of the six days potentially decisive.
According to the race organisers, there are eight sprint opportunities along the way, although some are not as straightforward as others, with a breakaway sure to contest some of them. Mark Cavendish will be looking forward to Saint-Amand-Montrond on stage 13, where he won in 2013, and Nîmes on stage 16 especially, where he won in 2008.
Last year, the race was dominated by Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma), who crushed all of his competition, including Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates), on the stage 16 time trial to Combloux and stage 17's summit finish in Courchevel .
Tour de France 2024 route: stage by stage
Full tour de france 2024 route map.
Tour de France 2024 route week one
The 2024 Tour de France begins how it means to go on, with a lot of climbing. Stage one begins in Florence, and includes 3,800km over 205km, the most ever in an opening stage, according to race director Christian Prudhomme.
The second stage is also hilly, starting from Marco Pantani's hometown of Cesenatico, finishing in Bologna through Emilia-Romagna. It copies the route of the Giro dell'Emilia, including the final climb of San Luca - 1.9km at 10.6 per cent - which is tackled twice.
There is a chance for the fast men on stage three, which covers 225km from Piacenza to Turin.
Stage four sees the race finally reach France, via the Alps. The Sestriere, the Col de Montgenèvre and the Col du Galiber are all tackled before a descent to Valloire.
Stages five and six, to Saint-Vulbas and Dijon, should be sprint opportunities, but the fast men could be ambushed.
The race's first individual time trial comes on stage seven, but it will be a technical affair as opposed to a pure rouleur 's course, before stage eight should be another chance for the sprinters.
Stage nine could be the highlight of the opening week, and is certainly something new, using the gravel roads of the Champagne region to mix things up. The 32km of gravel across 14 sectors is inspired from the Tour de France Femmes 2022, which used two of the same tracks; it is the biggest use of gravel at the Tour to date.
Tour de France 2024 route week two
After a rest day in Orléans, the closest to Paris the race gets in 2024, there are four stages which head south towards the Pyrenees.
Stage ten will surely be a sprint stage, but the winds could blow, as they did in 2013, when Cavendish won, while stage 11 is a return to medium mountains. The stage to Le Lioran is similar to the one which Greg Van Avermaet triumphed on in 2016, taking the yellow jersey in the process. 4,500m of climbing will make this a tough test for everyone.
It's back to sprinting or breakaways on stages 12 and 13 to Villeneuve-sur-Lot and Pau, respectively, with the latter looking more nailed on for a bunch finish.
Stage 14 is the first Pyrenean test, finishing atop the Pla d'Adet, which marks Raymond Poulidor's victory up there 50 years ago; it follows the Col du Tourmalet and the Hourquette d’Ancizan in just 152 km.
After that, the climbing does not stop. On Bastille Day, Catorze Juillet , the race heads from Loudenvielle to Plateau de Beille, in a stage that covers 198 km, with 4,850 metres of climbing. The Peyresourde is tackled first, followed by the Col de Menté, the Col de Portet d’Aspet, the Col de la Core, and Col d’Agnès, before the final test to Plateau de Beille. It will surely help decide the direction of the race.
Tour de France 2024 route week three
A classic transition stage follows the second rest day from Gruissan to Nîmes, which is planned as a sprint stage, but if the winds blow, mayhem could ensue.
Stage 17 is a return to the mountains with a finish in the ski resort of Superdévoluy on the fringes of the Alps, before stage 18 looks set to be a breakaway day as the race travels from Gap to Barcelonnette.
It is the final three days where the 2024 champion will be crowned, however, with two back-to-back summit finishes in southeast France. Stage 19 finishes atop Isola 2000, with the Col de Vars, at 2,120m, before the Col de la Bonnette, at 2,802m, marks the high point of the race, and then there's Isola 2000.
Stage 20 feels like a Paris-Nice penultimate stage, and kind of is, with some of the favourite climbs from the race tackled consecutively. The Col de Braus is first, 10.2km at 6.3 per cent, before the Col de Turini, 20.6km at 5.6 per cent, and then the Col de La Colimiane, 7.6km at 6.8 per cent, and then, finally the Col de la Couillole, 15.7km at 7.1 per cent. That's 4,500m of elevation in just 132km.
However, that is not the end of the race. This year, there is a final day time trial around Nice, not a procession in Paris. The 35km course includes La Turbie, 8.1km at 5.6 per cent, and the Col d’Eze, 1.6km at 8.1%, before concluding on the Promenade des Anglais.
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Adam is Cycling Weekly ’s news editor – his greatest love is road racing but as long as he is cycling on tarmac, he's happy. Before joining Cycling Weekly he spent two years writing for Procycling, where he interviewed riders and wrote about racing. He's usually out and about on the roads of Bristol and its surrounds. Before cycling took over his professional life, he covered ecclesiastical matters at the world’s largest Anglican newspaper and politics at Business Insider. Don't ask how that is related to cycling.
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Tour Du Finistère 11 mai 2024 les engagés
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CLASSEMENT DE LA COUPE DE FRANCE CYCLISTE PRO 2024
LES ENGAGES AU 5 MAI 2024
GROUPAMA-FDJ
1 LE HUITOUZE EDDY
2 BARTHE CYRIL
3 GRUEL THIBAUD
4 MOLARD RUDY
5 PACHER QUENTIN
6 THOMPSON REUBEN
7 WATSON SAM
TOTALENERGIES
11 DUJARDIN SANDY
12 FERRON VALENTIN
13 JOUSSEAUME ALAN
14 OURSELIN PAUL
15 SIMON JULIEN
16 VERCHER MATTEO
17 VUILLERMOZ ALEXIS
21 ZINGLE AXEL
22 COQUARD BRYAN
23 HERRADA JESUS
24 HERMANS BEN
25 IZAGIRRE GORKA
26 MAHOUDO NOLANN
27 MARIAULT AXEL
DECATHLON AG2R LA MONDIALE
31 LAPEIRA PAUL
32 COSNEFROY BENOIT
33 LABROSSE JORDAN
34 RETAILLEAU VALENTIN
35 BOASSON-HAGEN EDVALD
36 VEISTROFFER BAPTISTE
ARKEA-B&B HOTELS
41 ALBANESE VINCENZO
42 GUERNALEC THIBAULT
43 GUGLIELMI SIMON
44 HUYS LAURENS
45 TJØTTA MARTIN
46 MILESI NICOLAS
47 VENTURINI CLEMENT
51 DE TIER FLORIS
52 MEENS JOHAN
53 PEYSKENS DIMITRI
54 VAN BOVEN LUCA
55 VILLA GIACOMO
56 VLIEGEN LOIC
57 TIZZA MARCO
CAJA RURAL-SEGUROS RGA
61 AULAR ORLUIS
62 BARCELO FERNANDO
63 CEPEDA JEFFERSON
64 LOPEZ JOSEBA
65 NICOLAU JOEL
66 PRADES EDUARD
67 SORARRAIN GORKA
EQUIPO KERN PHARMA
71 SOTO ANTONIO
72 MIQUEL DELGADO PAU
73 GALVAN FRANCISCO
74 JAIME ALEX
75 BRUSTENGA MARC
76 ELOSEGUI IÑIGO
77 VAN DER TUUK DANNY
EUSKALTEL-EUSKADI
81 CAÑELLAS XAVIER
82 BERASATEGI XABIER
83 ISASA XABIER
84 ETXEBERRIA ASIER
85 JUARISTI TXOMIN
86 FOUCHE JAMES
87 ALUSTIZA NICOLAS
ISRAEL-PREMIER TECH
91 EINHORN ITAMAR
92 HOLLYMAN MASON
93 KOGUT ODED
94 ZABEL RICK
95 COTE PIER-ANDRE
96 VAN TRICHT FLORIS
97 WATTS KIAAN
LOTTO DSTNY
101 ADAMIETZ JOHANNES
102 BEULLENS CEDRIC
103 EENKHOORN PASCAL
104 GRIGNARD SEBASTIEN
105 MENTEN MILAN
106 VAN MOER BRENT
107 VAN DE WYNKELE LORENZ
UNO-X MOBILITY
111 CORT MAGNUS
112 SKAARSETH ANDERS
113 DVERSNES FREDRIK
114 HOELGAARD MARKUS
115 HOLTER ÅDNE
116 BUGGE MARTIN URIANSTAD
117 ANDERSEN IDAR
CIC U NANTES ATLANTIQUE
121 BASSET PIERRE-HENRY
122 BRAZ AFONSO CLEMENT
123 BRIAND ENZO
124 DANES LEO
125 GUEGAN MAËL
126 JALADEAU ARTUS
127 PLAMONDON ROBIN
NICE METROPOLE COTE D'AZUR
131 COUANON JONATHAN
132 CROMMELINCK MELVIN
133 GIRARD DAMIEN
134 LE NY JEAN-LOUIS
135 KNECHT NOAH
136 MIFSUD ANDREA
137 NARBONNE-ZUCCARELLI AXEL
ST MICHEL-MAVIC-AUBER 93
141 DELETTRE ALEXANDRE
142 CABOT JEREMY
143 CARDIS ROMAIN
144 CORKERY DILLON
145 DELBOVE JORIS
146 LECROQ JEREMY
147 VAN NIEKERK MORNE
VAN RYSEL-ROUBAIX
151 BOUDAT THOMAS
152 CAPRON REMI
153 GUILLON CELESTIN
154 JUILLARD MAXIMILIEN
155 LEVEAU JEREMY
156 MORIN EMMANUEL
157 MOLLY KENNY
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Romillé 9 mai 2024 les engagés
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Tour de France 2022 route revealed
All the details of the 109th Grande Boucle from the big unveiling in Paris
The 2022 Tour de France route was unveiled in Paris on Thursday morning, with the 109th edition of the Grand Boucle including an opening 13km time trial in Copenhagen, a stage across the cobbles of Paris-Roubaix, a first mountain finish at La Planche des Belles Filles, a return to the legendary hairpins of L'Alpe d'Huez, more summit finishes in the Pyrenees, and a final 40km time trial.
The route appears to be finely balanced, with 53km of time trials bookending the race route, while visits to the Vosges, the Alps and the Pyrenees offer the climbers some chances to attack and gain time.
The exposed roads of Denmark and northern France and the cobbled stage to Wallers-Arenberg will mean the overall contenders will have to be complete riders, able to fight in echelons and race on the pavé.
2021 Tour de France winner Tadej Pogačar was at the Palais des Congrès in Paris to see the route revealed alongside new world champion Julian Alaphilippe and 2021 green jersey winner Mark Cavendish .
The Manxman and his rivals could have several sprint opportunities in the first week but then will have to suffer through the Alps and Pyrenees to make it to Paris on July 24.
As per tradition, race organisers ASO ensured the race route took centre stage rather than the riders, with an entertaining recap of this year’s race followed by Christian Prudhomme revealing the details of each stage of the 2022 race.
The Grand Départ in Copenhagen
The 2022 Tour de France will start in Copenhagen after a one-year delay caused by a clash with the European Football Championships in the Danish capital.
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The opening stages had already been revealed, and Prudhomme confirmed the Tour de France will begin with a 13km city-centre time trial on Friday, July 1. It seems perfect for the likes of Filippo Ganna, Stefan Küng, Primož Roglič and Wout van Aert to fight for the first yellow jersey of the race, while the overall contenders will be trying to gain a psychologically important few seconds on their rivals.
Stage 2 heads west to Nyborg and then stage 3 goes south to Sønderborg, both on exposed roads and often skirting the coastline. The 199km stage 2 ends after the 18km Great Belt Bridge to Nyborg, with the risk of crosswinds sure to make for a nervous finale.
Stage 3 is more suited to the sprint teams with a loop around the city adding an extra twist in the final kilometres. Mads Pedersen won here at this year’s Tour of Denmark.
A nerve-racking first week and a first mountain finish at La Planche des Belles Filles
The riders enjoy a rare first rest day on Monday after the three days in Denmark but will be up early for a flight to Lille in northern France.
The racing returns on Tuesday with a stage from Dunkirk to Calais on the northern French coast. It's a day for the sprinters but they will have to fight for it in the wind and on the small hills.
Stage 5 finishes in Wallers-Arenberg and will again cause panic in the peloton and fuel debate about the place of the Paris-Roubaix cobblestone sectors in a Grand Tour. The Tour last raced on the pavé in 2018, when John Degenkolb won the stage, while previous visits took place in 2015 and in 2014, when Chris Froome quit the race early, rain made the pavé treacherous, and Vincenzo Nibali set up his overall victory.
The 2022 stage will cover 19.4km of cobblestones, across 11 sectors, five of which have never been used in either Paris-Roubaix or the Tour de France.
The route then heads into Belgium for a start in Binche on stage 6 and heads south via Luxembourg to a punchy finish in Longwy, where Peter Sagan got the better of Michael Matthews in 2017.
The Tour then heads into the Vosges for Friday’s stage 7 summit finish at the Super Planche des Belles Filles. The stage will climb beyond the standard summit, used heavily since its debut in 2010, to reach the steep gravel tracks at the top that were first introduced in 2019. Pogačar will no doubt be happy to return to the place where he snatched victory from Roglič in 2020.
The weekend sees the Tour head further south on hilly terrain into Switzerland for a flatter finish in Lausanne on stage 8. The following stage starts at the UCI headquarters in nearby Aigle before climbing back into France for a finish in the ski resort of Châtel, after a steady climb, a dip down, then a final kick up to the line.
The riders will enjoy the second resort day in Morzine on Monday, July 11 before facing three days in the high Alps.
A return to L’Alpe d’Huez a visit to Switzerland and lots of climbing in week two
The second week will begin with three Alpine mountain stages. Stage 10, from Morzine to Megève, links two big ski resorts but pales in comparison to what's in store on the following two days.
Stage 11 starts in Albertville and ends at high-altitude on the Col du Granon above the Serre Chevalier ski resort near Briançon. The Col du Granon climb measures 11.3km and averages more than nine per cent. Remarkably, it has only been used once before, back in 1986, when Greg Lemond was in the leader’s yellow jersey.
It ends at a breathless altitude of 2400m, making it a day for the pure climbers and anyone fighting for overall victory. Only the nearby Col du Galibier has hosted a finish at a higher altitude, in 2011, and that monster is scaled here as an appetiser.
The celebration of the pure climbers continues on July 14 – Bastille Day in France – with a return to the 21 hairpins of L’Alpe d’Huez after a four-year absence. It was last visited in 2018 when Geraint Thomas won with an angry final surge to indicate he was on track to win the Tour.
Stage 12 will be an exact replica of the famous 1986 stage that saw Greg LeMond and Bernard Hinault go shoulder-to-shoulder, going over the easier side of the Galibier and then the Col de la Croix de Fer before the final climb up L'Alpe D'Huez, which measures 13.8km at 8.1 per cent.
After the mountains, stage 13 heads west to Saint-Etienne for a transition stage, which could see a bunch sprint or offer a rare chance for the breakaway and baroudeurs . If the wind is up, there could be a threat of echelons
The third weekend is surprisingly a transfer across the south of France, with a small hilltop finish on the Mende airstrip, when Steve Cummings won in 2015, followed by a long and flat ride through the sunflower fields from Rodez to Carcassonne on Sunday, July 17.
The third rest day will be in that area before the final week starts in the Pyrenees.
The Pyrenees and a final time trial in week three
The final week begins with a ride to Foix but without climbing to the Plateau de Beille. The route tackles two late climbs, cresting the Port de Lers and the Mur de Peguère before descending into Foix.
The high mountains come on stages 17 and 18, with back-to-back summit finishes at Peyragudes and then Hautacam.
Stage 17 starts in Comminges and ends on the steep Peyragudes altiport runway made famous by the James Bond movie Tomorrow Never Dies. The climb and final ramp to the finish line were used in 2017, when Romain Bardet won and Fabio Aru took the yellow jersey from Chris Froome.
The stage goes over the Col d'Aspin, Hourquette d'Ancizan and Col de Val Louron-Azet before the final climb (8km at 7.8 per cent) and the super-steep final runway ramp.
Hautacam will host a second consecutive mountain-top finish on Thursday, July 21, measuring 13.6km at 7.8 per cent. There is no Col du Tourmalet en route this time but the stage will climb the Col d'Aubisque and the Col des Spandelles on the way from Lourdes.
Stage 18 marks the end of the mountains but it will be difficult to see Paris from Hautacam. The riders face a long ride out of the Pyrenees to Cahors in the north of the Occitanie region on the Lot river. It will be the usual battle of the breakaway versus the sprinters.
The nearby villages of Lacapelle-Marival and Rocamadour will host the final 40km individual time trial on the final Saturday, the stage route passing through the spectacular rolling countryside near the Padirac caves.
The riders will transfer to Paris on Sunday morning for the final traditional stage around the French capital. The stage will start in the Thoiry Zoo Safari to the west of the city and end with the traditional laps of the Champs-Elysées and the crowning of the 2022 winner at sunset.
Tour de France 2022 stages
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Stephen is the most experienced member of the Cyclingnews team, having reported on professional cycling since 1994. He has been Head of News at Cyclingnews since 2022, before which he held the position of European editor since 2012 and previously worked for Reuters , Shift Active Media , and CyclingWeekly , among other publications.
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