Official games

PRO CYCLING MANAGER 2023 (PC)

2023 Edition

  • Stage winners
  • All the videos

Tour Culture

  • Commitments
  • key figures
  • Sporting Stakes
  • "Maillot Jaune" Collection
  • The jerseys

UCI Logo

TOTAL: 3492 km

This will be the first Grand Départ in Italy and the 26th that’s taken place abroad  First finale in Nice. Due to the Olympic and Paralympic Games taking place in Paris, the race will not finish in the French capital for the first time.

Two time trials. 25 + 34 = 59km in total, the second of them taking place on the final Monaco>Nice stage. This will be the first time the race has seen a finale of this type for 35 years, the last occasion being the famous Fignon - LeMond duel in 1989.

Apennines (Italy), the Italian and French Alps, Massif Central and Pyrenees will be the mountain ranges on the 2024 Tour route.

The number of countries visited in 2024: Italy, San Marino, Monaco and France. Within France, the race will pass through 7 Regions and 30 departments.

The number of bonus points 8, 5 and 2 bonus seconds go to the first three classified riders, featuring at strategic points along the route (subject to approval by the International Cycling Union)these will have no effect on the points classification. Bonuses of 10, 6 and 4 seconds will be awarded to the first three classified riders at road stage finishes.

Out of a total of 39, the locations or stage towns that are appearing on the Tour map for the first time . In order of appearance: Florence, Rimini, Cesenatico, Bologna, Piacenza, Saint-Vulbas, Gevrey-Chambertin, Colombey-les-Deux-Églises, Évaux-les-Bains, Gruissan, Superdévoluy, Col de la Couillole.

The number of sectors on white roads during stage nine, amounting to 32km in total .

The number of stages: 8 flat, 4 hilly, 7 mountain (with 4 summit finishes at Saint-Lary-Soulan Pla d’Adet, Plateau de Beille, Isola 2000, Col de la Couillole), 2 time trials and 2 rest days.

The number of riders who will line up at the start of the Tour, divided into 22 teams of 8 riders each.

The height of the summit of the Bonette pass in the Alps, the highest tarmac road in France, which will be the “roof” of the 2024 Tour.

The total vertical gain during the 2024 Tour de France.

PRIZE MONEY

A total of 2,3 million euros will be awarded to the teams and riders including € 500,000 to the final winner of the overall individual classification .

Receive exclusive news about the Tour

app uk

Accreditations

Privacy policy, your gdpr rights.

  • International edition
  • Australia edition
  • Europe edition

Tour de France: Vingegaard the champion again as Meeus sprints to stage win – as it happened

Jordi Meeus sprinted to victory on the final stage as Jonas Vingegaard was crowned champion again

  • 23 Jul 2023 Top five on stage 21
  • 23 Jul 2023 Jordi Meeus pips Jasper Philipsen on the line to win stage 21
  • 23 Jul 2023 Tadej Pogacar wins the intermediate sprint
  • 23 Jul 2023 The racing on stage 21 has begun...with a touch of fun to start
  • 23 Jul 2023 Who’s wearing what jersey?
  • 23 Jul 2023 The top five on General Classification
  • 23 Jul 2023 Jonas Vingegaard to win Tour de France again as Pogacar takes stage 20
  • 23 Jul 2023 The stage 21 roll-out is under way
  • 23 Jul 2023 Saint Quentin en Yvelines-Paris Champs Élysées, 115km

Jordi Meeus (C) sprints to the finish line to win the 21st and final stage.

It’s farewell from me… for today. I’ll be back on the Tour de France Femmes live blog tomorrow. Thank you for all your messages, questions and funny anecdotes. They really do bring a smile to my face and it’s been a pleasure covering stages of the Tour de France for you. My colleagues will update with a race report shortly…I’m off to try and recreate this Pogacar gem.

🇫🇷 Lorsque l’actuel deuxième coureur au classement général du Tour de France Tadej Pogacar se rend tranquillement chercher sa baguette en vélo dans les rues de Clermont-Ferrand ! 🥖 🎥 tadejpogacar pic.twitter.com/B1QjiFVWUY — radio sisko fm (@radiosiskofm) July 15, 2023

On the podium:

Jonas Vingegaard celebrating winning the yellow jersey at the Tour de France for the second year in a row.

Earlier I mentioned that there were a few riders saying farewell to the Tour today, having previously announced their retirement from road racing. As well as Sagan and Pinot, Tony Gallopin and Dries Devenyns have raced their final Tour stage today. Gary has tweeted to share his gratitude for Pinot:

Au revoir Thibault Pinot. You rode with your heart on your sleeve not your eye on the power meter, and carried a torch for the emotional power of panache when we thought it had gone forever, lost in a miasma of marginal gains. Chapeau! @AmySedghi — Gary Naylor (@garynaylor999) July 23, 2023

Jonas Vingegaard has won the 110th edition of the Tour de France . It’s the Dane’s second year in a row winning the yellow jersey. Here’s what he had to say after today’s stage:

What was the feeling when you crossed the line? It’s a feeling of being proud. I’m happy of course – we’re winning it for the second time and it’s amazing. Today with all the spectators, all the Danish people here, it was really amazing and I have to say thank you, not only to my team and family, but to all the of Denmark. They support me as well and I’m really grateful for this.”

Can you describe the journey from Bilbao? “It’s been a long journey but it’s also went by so fast. We race everyday…it’s been a super hard race and a super good fight between me and Tadej [Pogacar]. I really enjoyed it all the way.”

What can we expect from you? “Of course, I hope to come back next year to see if I can take the third win. At least try it. I think that would be the plan.”

What would you want your daughter to think of you when she’s older? “Just that I was a good father…that I was there for her when she needed me.”

Today’s stage winner Meeus speaks: “I knew in the previous sprints that I [had] more than the results I’ve shown so far. [Today] everything went perfect and I was super happy to finish it off.”

“I felt good all day: the beginning was easy, obviously, but from the moment we went full gas my legs felt incredibly good. Then Marco Haller did a perfect job of positioning [me]. It’s my first tour. It was a super nice experience already and to take the win today is an indescribable feeling.”

Top five on stage 21

1. Jordi Meeus (Bora Hansgrohe) 2. Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin Deceuninck) 3. Dylan Groenewegen (Team Jayco Alula) 4. Mads Pedersen (Lidl-Trek) 5. Cees Bol (Astana Qazaqstan Team)

Sagan sums up how everyone in the peloton must be feeling: “I’m tired,” he tells the Eurosport reporter. He doesn’t have much more to add.

An exciting finish… It was quite difficult to see who had taken that as there were a mix of green jerseys crossing the line together, but an overjoyed Meeus has clinched it. That was an exciting sprint to watch: Pogacar lead the group out with 1km to give a final flourish, Philipsen look well placed yet didn’t win and Meeus crossed the line to take the victory.

Jordi Meeus pips Jasper Philipsen on the line to win stage 21

Jordi Meeus of Bora-Hansgrohe pips Jasper Philipsen on the line. Philipsen can’t believe it and is shaking his head. That was quite unexpected…

Jordi Meeus of Team BORA-Hansgrohe wins the race.

2km to go: The sprint trains are forming. Lidl-Trek, Alpecin-Deceuninck, Uno-X and Jayco Alula are all up there. The yellow jersey have dropped back to stay out of danger and let get on with it.

5km to go: A few riders are still trying to push off the front, including Omar Fraile and Victor Campenaerts but it’s only going to end one way. I think we’re sure to see a bunch sprint and Jasper Philipsen would surely love to take this.

8km to go: Well, Sean Kelly was right. The breakaway has been caught and the riders are all back together. Magnus Cort briefly tries to get away but he’s reeled back in. We’re coming round to the final bell…

11km to go: Stefan Küng has had a mechanical. The peloton are closing in on Frison, Clarke and Oliveira but they seem to be letting them go again. Carlton Kirby on Eurosport is saying that there are some spots of localised drizzle and there is a corner that if it gets wet, has him worried.

13km to go: Hindley has managed to get back on to the peloton. The lap board is stating two laps to go! Next time round the riders will get the bell. It’s exciting.

16km to go: Seventh placed in the GC, Jai Hindley has had a bike change as his chain dropped. Frison, Clarke and Oliveira have 17sec on the group and are riding at around 55kmph.

20km to go: Sean Kelly isn’t sure that this three-man break is going to stick. While we wait to see if he’s right, I thought I’d share an email that’s landed in my inbox. Margaret asks: “Those energy bars that they all eat…are they wrapped differently to the bars we buy in the stores? Because I certainly need two hands (and occasionally a pair of scissors) to get into them. I wouldn’t ever contemplate trying to open one on a bicycle going at the speeds they reach.” I haven’t tried one of the pro-teams’ bars so can’t say but my soigneur (aka boyfriend) suspects that they might use a thinner wrapper that is easier to tear (although this has not been independently verified).

22km to go: It was looking like the trio were going to be swallowed up but the gap has gone back out to about 17 sec. The sprinters’ teams are probably happy to have a break of only three riders as they will be able to bring them back in later.

28km to go: It’s a slim lead of 8sec for the trio. Pogacar doesn’t let up and wants to join in the fun.

Pogacar really wants a piece of the action on the Champs-Élysées.

31km to go: The attackers have been reeled in, but hang on a moment, we have another attack. This time it’s Simon Clarke, followed by Frederik Frison and Nelson Oliveira.

33km to go: Michal Kwiatkowski, Alberto Bettiol, Nils Politt, Alex Edmondson, Harold Tejada, Yves Lampaert and Skjelmose have joined Pogacar and Van Hooydonck in the breakaway group. They have a very slender lead of 5sec.

Tadej Pogacar wins the intermediate sprint

Pogacar crossed the line first to take the intermediate sprint, with Van Hooydonck following. The results are:

1. Tadej Pogacar, 20 pts 2. Nathan van Hooydonck, 17 pts 3. Bryan Coquard, 15 pts 4. Alberto Bettiol, 13 pts 5. Nikias Arndt, 11 pts 6. Kevin Geniets, 10 pts 7. Michal Kwiatkowski, 9 pts 8. Axel Zingle, 8 pts 9. Rémi Cavagna, 7 pts 10. Lawson Craddock, 6 pts 11. Alex Edmondson, 5 pts 12. Nils Politt, 4 pts 13. Omar Fraile, 3 pts 14. Mattias Skjelmose, 2 pts 15. Harold Tejada, 1 pt

🏁 40KM 💚 @TamauPogi is first at the intermediate sprint @NVHooydonck behind. 💚 @TamauPogi est le premier au sprint intermédiaire, avec @NVHooydonck juste derrière. #TDF2023 @WeLoveCyclingFR pic.twitter.com/Rhz3BRxdov — Tour de France™ (@LeTour) July 23, 2023

37km to go: With the Tour de France 2023 coming to a close, many fans have been reflecting on their favourite moments. Michael has emailed in from Calgary in Canada to share his highlight: “As a Canadian, I have to be happy with the stage win this year by Michael Woods. It was a fantastic performance.” He’s also wondering about the team standings and asks “does anybody care at all about the team standings? The Tour diligently publishes them, but do they matter even slightly? (I wish they did - just like I wish there would be a team time trial every year.)"

41km to go: Six laps to go and Pogacar and Van Hooydonck are off the front with a very modest 10sec. Another group are splitting off the chasing group and another…the peloton is fracturing.

43km to go: I stand corrected. The coverage is showing that the roads have had a bit of rain on them but hopefully, not enough for it to be an issue. Van Hooydonck has decided to take turns and as a result, him and Pogacar have got the gap up to 15sec.

47km to go: Pogacar has attacked for a bit of fun. The crowd are loving it. The man certainly can entertain. Nathan Van Hooydonck of Jumbo-Visma is stuck on his wheel and refusing to do a turn.

53km to go: Earlier on the commentary, there was quite a bit of chat about whether the weather would hold or if the riders would face a wet sprint. Not a fun thought over those cobbles. So far, the weather looks to have behaved and the roads seem dry. A few riders have tried attacking already but had their efforts quickly shut down.

55km to go: The riders are on the Avenue des Champs-Élysées and have crossed the finish line for the first time. They will have eight laps before we have a final stage winner. Let the racing proper begin…

57km to go: Make sure to wave David! The riders are putting on a show with what looks like a beautifully synchronised dance through the Louvre museum.

Riders passing the Louvre museum during the final stage of the Tour de France 2023.

60km to go: The peloton are passing by the Jardin du Luxembourg currently and it’s about 5km until they hit the Champs Élysées. The pace has upped slightly towards 31kmph.

63km to go: Hello to David, who has emailed in from nearby to the Louvre. He’s asking what time the peloton will be heading past. I’m not 100% sure but would guess very soon as they’re gathering pace.

66km to go: So far, the peloton have ridden past the Palace of Versailles and crested the only categorised climb today, at the pavé des Gardes. Aptly, Ciccone is the first to get over it in all his polka-dots, after his teammates, Mads Pedersen and Mattias Skjelmose jokingly lead him out. The riders are just coming in to Paris now and the Eiffel Tower is within sight.

⛰ Côte du Pavé des Gardes (cat. 4️⃣) ⛰ 1️⃣ 🇮🇹 @giuliocicco1 , 1pt ⚪️🔴 Tout de pois vêtu, 🇮🇹 Giulio Ciccone prend symboliquement le dernier point disponible au sommet de la dernière difficulté répertoriée de ce  #TDF2023 pic.twitter.com/rSvVjhuqi0 — Maillot à Pois E.Leclerc (@maillotapois) July 23, 2023

73km to go: In answer to Justin’s question about who got closest to finishing the Tour without finishing, there have been a few emails. One mentions the German rider Tony Martin, who abandoned on the Champs Élysées during the 2016 Tour de France due to unexplained knee pain. To give some context to that, Martin told Cycling Weekly that he wanted to go home, find out what was going on with his knee and prepare for the Olympic time trial in Rio.

A couple of readers (hi Simon, hi David) have emailed in to mention Djamolidine Abdoujaparov. A quick search has brought up his name in this Guardian piece about the most memorable finishes on the Champs-Élysées:

“In 1991, elbows-out sprinter Djamolodine Abdoujaparov wore green into the final stage (despite controversy after he had forced Johan Musseeuw into the barriers on an earlier stage ) but crashed on the final sprint – yet clung on to the jersey when the team got him over the line. But that finish pales into insignificance next to the 1989 finish, when Greg LeMond overcame his deficit to Laurent Fignon to time trial his way to victory in 1989 .”

85km to go: There are a number of riders sealing their final Tour appearance today, including Thibaut Pinot (Groupama–FDJ) and Peter Sagan (TotalEnergies).

Peter Sagan chatting to Jordi Meeus (Bora–Hansgrohe) as they roll through the stage 21 of the Tour de France.

92km to go: An email from Justin in Spain has come in and it is asking a question that I have also pondered (but don’t know the answer to).

He asks: “Perhaps a tasteless question but yesterday I found myself wondering who has got closest to finishing Le Tour without actually getting there. Do you or any readers know who holds that unhappy distinction? (I do not include riders who have gone down in tbe (sic) final stretch but been given finishing times nonetheless.)“ If anyone knows, then please share…

93km to go: The average pace has dropped to under 26kmph. That’s the kind of pace club riders can do and I could possibly…at a push. Adam Blythe has been given a glass of Champagne by one of the team in the Jumbo-Visma car. I’m quite jealous…

96km to go: Pogacar and Vingegaard really do deliver when it comes to interesting Tour de France stats, but here is one I’ve selected from the official Tour website that might be good for a pub quiz…

“For the third consecutive year, the first two on the final podium are the same (Pogacar-Vingegaard in 2021, the other way around in 2022 and 2023): it had never happened previously.”

100km to go: As mentioned previously, I am enjoying the slower pace and light-hearted jokes from the peloton today. I’m fresh from covering the first stage of the Tour de France Femmes , so that is why.

Before anything too serious happens on this stage, I’d like to share a personal highlight from this year’s Tour: Pogacar and his pronunciation of French pastries.

🥐 Tadej Pogacar with the perfect pronunciation of "croissant" 😂 @TamauPogi | @TeamEmiratesUAE | #TDF2023 pic.twitter.com/zfplNBjPTR — Eurosport (@eurosport) July 8, 2023

103km to go: Some of the riders are casually chatting, while others are putting their arms on each others shoulders for a nice team pic. On Eurosport, Vingegaard has been speaking about his win and the news that he’ll be racing next at the La Vuelta a España:

“It’s super nice to win it for the second time…I’m more confident and more relaxed in this situation now and I think that’s the biggest difference for me. I really enjoyed the rivalry with Tadej [Pogacar]. It’s been an amazing fight from Bilbao to here today. It’s good for cycling, it’s good for us…but I’m glad I won.” Jumbo-Visma confirmed today that the Dane will be racing at La Vuelta and Vingegaard says it has been the plan all along but they were waiting to release the news.

109km to go: If ever there was any doubt that Giulio Ciccone was reveling in wearing the polka-dot jersey, then take a look at the man today. He’s even got a polka-dot bike…

Giulio Ciccone of Lidl-Trek at the Velodrome National de Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines before the start of the final stage of the Tour de France 2023.

112km to go: As is the tradition, the peloton are starting at a slow pace to soak up and enjoy atmosphere. They are celebrating their achievements over the last three weeks and having a nice time. Unfortunately, Victor Lafay (Cofidisis) not among them as he has not started today. I’m sure he’ll be happy though with that win on stage two – a big moment for Cofidisis.

The racing on stage 21 has begun...with a touch of fun to start

113km to go: Victor Campenaerts (Lotto-Dstny) had a cheeky attack off the front but he soon slows up and winks at the camera. He was just having a bit off fun as the super combative rider of the Tour. I’m looking forward to some more light-hearted fun during this stage. Bring it on.

Who’s wearing what jersey?

Yellow: Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) 79hr 16min 38sec

Green: Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck) 377pts

Polka-dot: Giulio Ciccone (Lidl-Trek) 105pts

White: Tadej Pogacar (UAE Emirates)

Left to right: Jasper Philipsen (green), Tadej Pogacar (white), Jonas Vingegaard (yellow), Thibaut Pinot (most combative rider on stage 20) and Giulio Ciccone (polka-dot).

The top five on General Classification

Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) 79hr 16min 38sec

Tadej Pogacar (UAE Emirates) +7min 29sec

Adam Yates (UAE Emirates) +10min 56sec

Simon Yates (Jayco-Ulula) +12min 23sec

Carlos Rodriguez (Ineos Grenadiers) +13min 17sec

Pello Bilbao, Jai Hindley, Felix Gall, David Gaudu and Guillaume Martin make up the top 10.

Jonas Vingegaard to win Tour de France again as Pogacar takes stage 20

In case you missed yesterday’s stage, here is the stage 20 report to get you up to speed: Jonas Vingegaard in effect sealed back-to-back wins in the Tour de France after defending his overall lead in the final mountain stage of the three-week race. With only Sunday’s processional stage to central Paris to come, the Dane will, barring accidents, wear the final yellow jersey on the Champs-Élysées.

The stage 21 roll-out is under way

Smiling faces across the front of the peloton as the riders roll out for their final stage of the 2023 Tour de France . I can imagine they are all happy to have made it to Paris after a fast, hectic and tiring three weeks.

Saint Quentin en Yvelines-Paris Champs Élysées, 115km

William Fotheringham on stage 21: A hint of the Paris 2024 Games with a start at the national velodrome before the run-in to the finish on the Champs Élysées, where the sprinters can strut their stuff. This is the last time we will see the Tour here for a couple of years, as next year’s Olympics mean the finish moves to Nice and a final time trial, the first time the Tour has finished outside the capital since 1905.

  • Tour de France 2023
  • Tour de France

Most viewed

Tour de France 2024

Latest news from the race.

'Walk first, ride indoors and then on the road' - Jonas Vingegaard's road to recovery after Itzulia crash

'Walk first, ride indoors and then on the road' - Jonas Vingegaard's road to recovery after Itzulia crash

official tour de france website

'The goal is to win the Tour de France' - Jai Hindley and new role with Primoz Roglic

'I hope and think my long term goals will not change' – Remco Evenepoel weighs crash consequences

'I hope and think my long term goals will not change' – Remco Evenepoel weighs crash consequences

2024 tour de france information.

The 111th edition of the Tour de France starts in Florence, Italy, on Saturday, June 29 and ends three weeks later in Nice on Sunday, July 21. It is the first time the Tour starts in Italy and the first time it finishes in Nice to avoid the preparations for the 2024 Paris Olympics Games, which begin just a week later.

The route of the world's biggest race covers a total of 3,492km with some 52,320 metres of overall elevation, passing through four nations – Italy, San Marino, France, and Monaco. It features two individual time trials for a total of 59km, four mountain-top finishes, a series of gravel sections on stage 9, and a final hilly time trial to Nice. The official route was unveiled on October 25 in a special ceremony in Paris.

Tour de France champion  Jonas Vingegaard  (Jumbo-Visma) won his second GC title last year and will be back to defend his title against top rival Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates), who finished second overall. Vingegaard is likely to face a huge challenge from not just Pogačar, but also Remco Evenepoel (Soudal-QuickStep) and former teammate turned rival Primož Roglič (Bora-Hansgrohe).

Join Cyclingnews' coverage of the 2024 Tour de France with live coverage, race reports, results, photo galleries, news and race analysis.

  • Tour de France 2024 route

The 2024 Tour de France includes 52,230 metres of vertical gain across 3,492km of climbs, sprints and time trialling from Italy into France, with fewer high climbs than in the past and shorter stages. 

It is a balanced three weeks of racing that includes eight flat stages, four mountain-top finishes and two individual time trials, the final test against the clock is a hilly time trial to Nice that could create suspense. The race has 25km of racing above 2,000 metres and 27 mountains classified as second, first, or HC.

Florence, Italy, will host the team presentation, and stage 1 will roll out from Piazzale Michelangelo to open the Grand Tour for the first time. The first two stages are just over 200km each and include climbing, with the third day in Italy a flatter affair at 225km from Piacenza to Turin. 

Stage 4 heads into France and straight away to the Alps, with climbs across Sestriere, the Col de Montgenèvre and the Col du Galibier before a fast descent to Valloire. After two days with opportunities for breakaways and fast finishers, the first time trial comes on stage 7 at 25km. The first week ends with back-to-back stages ending in the champagne capital of Troyes to the southeast of Paris, including stage 9, which is a far tougher day due to the 14 sectors of gravel.

Week two of the 2024 Tour starts with a four-day ride south to the Pyrenees via the Massif Central and the rural France Profonde, with stages to Saint-Amand-Montrond, Le Lioran, Villeneuve-sur-Lot and then Pau. The Tour celebrates the Bastille Day holiday weekend in the Pyrenees with consecutive mountain finishes - stage 14 finishes in Pla d'Adet after climbing the Col du Tourmalet and the Hourquette d’Ancizan while stage 15 climbs the Portet d'Aspet and the Col d’Agnes for the finish up to Plateau de Beille.

Following the second rest day in Gruissan on the Mediterranean coast near the border with Spain on Monday, July 15, the final week leads into the Alps. The contenders should face a final shakeout once the race reaches stage 20, as the 2,802-metre high Cime de la Bonette and final ascent to Isola 2000 will be decisive. The final stage of the 2024 Tour is a 34km hilly time trial from Monaco to Nice.

Check out all the details of the 2024 Tour de France route .

  • There's no way to Jumbo-proof the Tour de France - 2024 route analysis
  • ‘I think it’s a good parcours for me’ - Jonas Vingegaard keen on 2024 Tour de France route
  • Mark Cavendish: 'It might be the hardest route I've ever seen at the Tour de France'
  • Jasper Philipsen sees 'a very difficult end' for sprinters in 2024 Tour de France
  • Tour de France 2024 gravel stage 'increases chance of bad luck' says Plugge
  • Remco Evenepoel tempted by 2024 Giro d'Italia-Tour de France combo
  • Regal reveals for Tour de France, Tour de France Femmes 2024 routes - Gallery
  • As it happened: All the information about the 2024 Tour de France route unveiled
  • Tour de France 2024 routes – All the rumours ahead of the official presentation

Tour de France 2024 Contenders

PARIS FRANCE JULY 23 LR Tadej Pogacar of Slovenia and UAE Team Emirates on second place race winner Jonas Vingegaard of Denmark and Team JumboVisma Yellow Leader Jersey and Adam Yates of United Kingdom and UAE Team Emirates on third place pose on the podium ceremony after the stage twentyone of the 110th Tour de France 2023 a 11 51km stage from SaintQuentinenYvelines to Paris UCIWT on July 23 2023 in Paris France Photo by Etienne Garnier PoolGetty Images

Defending Tour de France champion  Jonas Vingegaard will again have a strong Jumbo-Visma team to support his quest for a third title, but this time, former team leader Primož Roglič has turned to rival as he looks to give Bora-Hansgrohe top billing. Vingegaard will also face huge challenges from Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) and Remco Evenepoel (Soudal-QuickStep). 

In the flat stages, look for last year's green jersey victor Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck) to contest for another title against Fabio Jakobsen , now with Team dsm-firmenich, and Caleb Ewan , now with Jayco-AlUIa. And fastman Mark Cavendish (Astana Qazaqstan) is back for an 18th pro season to mix it up in the sprints, on the hunt for a record-breaking 35th Tour de France stage victory.

And there will be opportunities across the three weeks for breakaway riders to shine, including the likes of Julian Alaphilippe (Soudal-QuickStep), Wout van Aert (Jumbo-Visma) and Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Deceuninck).

Tour de France 2024 stages

  • Tour de France past winners
  • Stage 1 | Florence - Rimini 2024-06-29 205km
  • Stage 2 | Cesenatico - Bologna 2024-06-30 200km
  • Stage 3 | Piacenza - Turin 2024-07-01 225km
  • Stage 4 | Pinerolo - Valloire 2024-07-02 138km
  • Stage 5 | Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne - Saint-Vulbas Plaine de l'Ain 2024-07-03 177km
  • Stage 6 | Mâcon - Dijon 2024-07-04 163km
  • Stage 7 | Nuits-Saint-Georges - Gevrey-Chambertin (ITT) 2024-07-05 25km
  • Stage 8 | Semur-en-Auxois - Colombey-les-Deux-Églises 2024-07-06 176km
  • Stage 9 | Troyes - Troyes 2024-07-07 199km
  • Rest Day 1 | Orléans 2024-07-08
  • Stage 10 | Orléans - Saint-Amand-Montrond 2024-07-09 187km
  • Stage 11 | Évaux-les-Bains - Le Lioran 2024-07-10 211km
  • Stage 12 | Aurillac - Villeneuve-sur-Lot 2024-07-11 204km
  • Stage 13 | Agen - Pau 2024-07-12 171km
  • Stage 14 | Pau - Saint-Lary-Soulan (Pla d'Adet) 2024-07-13 152km
  • Stage 15 | Loudenvielle - Plateau de Beille 2024-07-14 198km
  • Rest Day 2 | Gruissan 2024-07-15
  • Stage 16 | Gruissan - Nîmes 2024-07-16 187km
  • Stage 17 | Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux - Superdévoluy 2024-07-17 178km
  • Stage 18 | Gap - Barcelonnette 2024-07-18 179km
  • Stage 19 | Embru - Isola 2000 2024-07-19 145km
  • Stage 20 | Nice - Col de la Couillole 2024-07-20 133km
  • Stage 21 | Monaco - Nice (ITT) 2024-07-21 34km

Latest Content on the Race

RIBADESELLA RIBESEYA SPAIN SEPTEMBER 13 Jonas Vingegaard of Denmark and Team JumboVisma meets the media press at start prior to the 78th Tour of Spain 2023 Stage 17 a 1244km stage from Ribadesella Ribeseya to Altu de LAngliru 1555m UCIWT on September 13 2023 in Ribadesella Ribeseya Spain Photo by Tim de WaeleGetty Images

By Stephen Farrand published 18 April 24

News 'In two weeks, we'll know what is possible' - Visma DS Frans Maassen on Dane's chances of riding the Tour de France

ALTSASU, SPAIN - APRIL 03: Jai Hindley of Australia and Primoz Roglic of Slovenia and Team BORA - hansgrohe - Yellow Leader Jersey compete during the 63rd Itzulia Basque Country 2024, Stage 3 a 190.9km stage from Ezpeleta to Altsasu 526m / #UCIWT / on April 03, 2024 in Altsasu, Spain. (Photo by Tim de Waele/Getty Images)

By Sophie Smith published 16 April 24

In-depth Team sports director says Hindley is 'a champion in cycling', 'sometimes too nice' and talks about a different kind of season with a different kind of leader

Remco Evenepoel (Soudal-QuickStep) on stage 3 of Itzulia Basque Country

By Simone Giuliani published 5 April 24

News After breaking collarbone, shoulder blade in Itzulia Basque Country crash Belgian indicates Ardennes out but Tour de France hopes alive

Miguel Indurain

Miguel Indurain - 'Tadej Pogačar can do the Giro d'Italia-Tour de France double'

By Alasdair Fotheringham published 29 March 24

News All-time Spanish great says Slovenian star could win both Grand Tours in 2024

Drone footage was used during the team time trial on stage 3 of Paris-Nice

Awe-inspiring TTT footage at Paris-Nice leads to possible drone footage for Tour de France

By James Moultrie published 12 March 24

News 'Nothing has been decided but we're thinking about it' says broadcast director with eyes on Troyes gravel stage

Red Bull athlete Anton Palzer of Bora-Hansgrohe

Bora-Hansgrohe to roll out Red Bull branded kits, bikes before Tour de France

By Stephen Farrand published 7 March 24

News German team working on new colours after energy drink buys 51% controlling stake

LIDO DI CAMAIORE ITALY MARCH 04 Christopher Froome of Great Britain and Team IsraelPremier Tech sprints during the 59th TirrenoAdriatico 2024 Stage 1 a 10km individual trial time from Lido di Camaiore to Lido di Camaiore UCIWT on March 04 2024 in Lido di Camaiore Italy Photo by Tim de WaeleGetty Images

‘I’d like to get back’ - Tour de France return remains the goal for Chris Froome

By James Moultrie, Stephen Farrand published 5 March 24

News Four-time winner lines out at Tirreno-Adriatico for his first WorldTour appearance since April of last year

Primož Roglič in his Bora-Hansgrohe colours

Roglic predicts 'beautiful' Tour de France matchup with Vingegaard, Pogacar and Evenepoel

By James Moultrie published 20 February 24

News 'It's the best for us to have the highest level, and the best one will win' says Slovenian ahead of season debut in Paris-Nice

Jonas Vingegaard, Sepp Kuss and Primož Roglič won the three Grand Tours in 2023

‘I’m not delusional but I’m not under-ambitious’ - Sepp Kuss clarifies his Tour de France ambitions

By Alasdair Fotheringham published 14 February 24

News American plays down idea of co-leadership with Jonas Vingegaard in 2024 Grand Boucle

The jersey winners at the 2024 Tour de France

'This is not our project' – Tour de France director claims One Cycling reforms doomed to failure

By Stephen Farrand published 13 February 24

News 'Every time cycling has tried to transform itself solely with money, it has failed' says Christian Prudhomme

Top News on the Race

Bora-Hansgrohe to roll out Red Bull branded kits, bikes before Tour de France

Remco Evenepoel: Tour de France podium would be a dream come true

'To fight for the same thing is exciting' – Geraint Thomas relishes Giro-Tour battle with Pogacar

'To fight for the same thing is exciting' – Geraint Thomas relishes Giro-Tour battle with Pogacar

Mark Cavendish lays the foundations for 2024 success at Colombian altitude camp

Mark Cavendish lays the foundations for 2024 success at Colombian altitude camp

Geraint Thomas to ride Giro d'Italia and Tour de France in 2024

Geraint Thomas to ride Giro d'Italia and Tour de France in 2024

Related features.

The event of the summer – Remco Evenepoel's Tour de France debut

The event of the summer – Remco Evenepoel's Tour de France debut

Tour de France 2024 - Four contenders, four different paths to the big showdown

Tour de France 2024 - Four contenders, four different paths to the big showdown

'If nothing goes wrong, Tadej is boss’ - Adam Yates on the Tour de France and life with Pogacar

'If nothing goes wrong, Tadej is boss’ - Adam Yates on the Tour de France and life with Pogacar

'It's a year to rebuild and find my feet again' – Caleb Ewan starts over at Jayco-AlUla

'It's a year to rebuild and find my feet again' – Caleb Ewan starts over at Jayco-AlUla

official tour de france website

  • Track Order

Best Sellers

Le Tour de France 2024 Route T-Shirt

Official Le Tour de France Store

Discover a world of cycling merchandise and gear at the official Le Tour de France Store. As the premier destination for cycling enthusiasts, we offer a wide range of products that celebrate the iconic race. From official team jerseys and accessories to exclusive Le Tour de France memorabilia, our store has everything you need to showcase your passion for this prestigious sporting event.

Explore a Diverse Selection of Le Tour de France Merchandise

At the Le Tour de France Store, we take pride in offering an extensive selection of high-quality cycling merchandise. Discover a wide range of products, including Le Tour de France shirts, jerseys, shorts, gloves, helmets, and shoes, all designed to provide comfort and performance during your rides. We also feature an exclusive collection of Le Tour de France-themed apparel and accessories, allowing you to display your support for your favorite teams and riders. Our store is a one-stop-shop for all your cycling needs, ensuring that you can find everything you need to take your cycling journey to the next level.

  • Promo Terms and Exclusions
  • Safe Shopping
  • Delivery & Shipping
  • 90-Day Returns
  • Affiliate Program
  • Track My Order
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • CA Supply Chains Act/UK Modern Slavery Act
  • Cookie Policy & Management
  • Master Card

official tour de france website

TOUR DE FRANCE 2023

Ride shoulder to shoulder with the best cyclists and show your panache to triumph on the Champs-Elysées in the official video game of the Tour de France 2023! Compete in mountain or flat stages and experience all the action of the Grande Boucle.

Choose your edition

Tour De France 2023

Available now

Bundle 2023

Tour De France 2023 Base Game

Pro Cycling Manager 2023 Base Game

Tour De France 2022

Bundle 2022

Tour De France 2022 Base Game

Pro Cycling Manager 2022 Base Game

about the game

New 2023 features.

  • All 21 official stages of the Tour de France 2023
  • Updated rider and team ratings
  • New Medium Mountain and Agility rating added
  • New "grupettos" between riders added
  • New challenges added to Race of the Moment mode
  • A new mode has been introduced: Descent of the Moment
  • Distinctive bibs added for "super combative" and the best team
  • Improved rider behaviour and trajectories for more realistic races
  • Updated equipment items and official brands

Subscribe to our newsletter to get the latest news and updates

Main partners, official broadcasters, official partners, official suppliers, official supporters, technical partners, official media partners, institutional partners, system requirements.

4 GB (6 GB on Windows 10 & 11)

Intel Core i5-3470 or AMD FX-8350

Intel Core i5-7600 or AMD Ryzen 5 2600

Nvidia GeForce GTX 650, 2 GB or AMD Radeon R7 250X, 2 GB

Nvidia GeForce GTX 750 Ti, 2 GB or AMD Radeon HD 7850, 2 GB 

Problems with delivery? 

In case you have any issues with the delivery (item not received, item is damaged, etc) or any further inquiries about the delivery process, please contact [email protected]

Can the Standard Edition be shipped anywhere in the world?

For logistics reasons, we can ship the physical edition of the Standard Edition to these countries: Germany, Austria, France, Spain, Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg, United Kingdom, Poland, Switzerland, Greece, Finland, Norway, Denmark, Sweden, Czech Republic, South Africa, United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Ukraine, Saudi Arabia, Russia, Slovenia, Croatia, Turkey, Israel, Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, Iceland, Qatar, Bahrain, Lebanon, Oman, Slovakia, Malta, Cyprus.

If you have further questions, please contact our customer service at [email protected]

When will I receive my game after ordering?

You will receive your product within 5 to 10 business days from the date of your purchase.

I bought one of the PC versions directly from your platform but I didn't receive a confirmation email. What should I do?

Check your spam folder in your email client. If you still can't find the confirmation email with your game code, please contact our retailer's customer support on the following website: help.xsolla.com

BDS

What is BDS?

Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) is a Palestinian-led movement for freedom, justice and equality. BDS upholds the simple principle that Palestinians are entitled to the same rights as the rest of humanity.

  • Intro to BDS
  • Israel’s new far-right government: Analysis
  • Israeli settler colonialism and apartheid
  • About PACBI
  • Major Successes

Get Involved!

The Palestinian people’s struggle for freedom, justice and equality needs your support. It's simple to get involved with the BDS movement today.

What can I do?

  • View action alerts
  • Join a BDS Campaign
  • What to Boycott
  • Guide to strategic campaigning

BDS Guidelines

  • AFFILIATION WITH THE BDS MOVEMENT
  • Anti-Normalization Guidelines
  • GUIDELINES ON ISRAEL VISITS BY ELECTED OFFICIALS
  • REJECTING ALL FORMS OF RACISM

Strategic BDS campaigns are building mass public support and having a real impact.

Campaign Areas

  • Academic Boycott
  • Cultural Boycott
  • Economic Boycott
  • Trade Union Solidarity
  • Student Solidarity
  • Local Governments

Global Campaigns

  • Military Embargo
  • Ban Israel From Sports
  • Apartheid Free Zones
  • Israeli Apartheid Week

Stay updated!

Follow our social media accounts

Sign-up for news, campaign updates, action alerts and fundraisers from the BDS movement.

I agree to receive your newsletters and accept the data privacy statement.

* Information required

Giro d’Italia and Tour de France: Road Closed to Genocide

Palestinians call for more protests than ever against the participation of the Israeli government-sponsored team in the Giro d’Italia and the Tour de France cycling races this year. Let’s make sure the road is closed to genocide.

GDI-TDF-2024.jpg

official tour de france website

Israel is plausibly committing genocide against Palestinians in Gaza, as ruled by the International Court of Justice. International sporting bodies have a moral obligation to take all measures to prevent genocide, or risk being held criminally liable.

Yet two of the world’s top cycling races are planning to allow Team Genocide to participate, helping Israel sportswash its gravest crimes.

The Giro d’Italia (4 - 26 May) and the Tour de France (29 June - 21 July) are shamefully rewarding the Israeli government-sponsored cycling team, even as Israel murders more than 33,000 Palestinians in Gaza, even as it intentionally uses starvation as a weapon of war to engineer a famine in Gaza, even as it deliberately fires on Palestinians desperately seeking what little aid enters Gaza and the aid workers delivering it, even as it commits sporticide , killing Palestinian athletes and destroying Palestinian sports facilities.

The Israeli cycling team was created by Canadian-Israeli billionaire Sylvan Adams with the stated goal of  sportswashing Israel’s 75-year-long regime of military occupation and apartheid, and now its genocide. Adams has  described Israel’s genocide against Palestinians in Gaza in shamefully racist terms of “good vs. evil and civilization against barbarism.” He has called world leaders “useful idiots” for merely urging Israel to stop “this killing of women, of children, of babies.”

Israel is able to commit this livestreamed genocide and continue what  Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have determined to be a 75-year apartheid regime with complete impunity because of the failure of international bodies to uphold international law by sanctioning Israel.  

UCI, the international body governing cycling, claims to be a “politically neutral organization.” UCI  immediately sanctioned Russia just days into its illegal aggression against Ukraine, suspending all Russian and Belarussian teams and banning all UCI events in Russia and Belarus. Yet in a show of typical Western hypocrisy, UCI has not only closed an eye to Israel’s decades-long record of grave crimes against Palestinians, but is now helping to sportswash Israel’s Gaza genocide.

This is not the first time UCI, the Giro d’Italia, and the Tour de France have rendered themselves complicit in Israel’s sportswashing of its grave crimes against Palestinians. We salute the many groups and cycling fans in  Italy and  France that have organized protests over the participation of Team Apartheid Israel along the routes of the Giro d’Italia and the Tour de France.

Hypocritical international sporting bodies will only meet their obligation to ban genocidal Israel from sports if, as sports journalist Dave Zirin has said, we make them . Let’s do that.

We call for more protests than ever along the race routes of the Giro d’Italia and the Tour de France, which will start from Italy this year. Let’s make sure the road is closed to genocide perpetrators.

Join us and help ensure that UCI, the Giro d’Italia and the Tour de France get the message: there is no place in cycling for genocide .

For more information on Giro d’Italia and Tour de France mobilizations, contact us at: [email protected]    

Related Campaigns

Ban Apartheid Israel from Sports

Palestinian boys playing footballl in al-Amari refugee camp

Related News

official tour de france website

Giro d’Italia and Tour de France, Don’t Pedal for Israeli Apartheid

official tour de france website

Love Football. Hate Apartheid. Score a Goal for Palestinian Rights.

official tour de france website

Webinar - Camouflaging Injustice: Using Sport to Hide Oppression

Subscribe Now

Now you can see non-English news...

official tour de france website

[HIGHLIGHTS] Tour de France women 2024: Rotterdam and the Netherlands, “cycling countries”, ready for the Grande Boucle

2024-04-18T22:55:03.687Z

official tour de france website

The third edition of the Women's Tour of France starts in Rotterdam on August 12. Two Dutch women have won the first two editions.

Lorena Wiebes is the first in history to wear the yellow jersey for the event. Demi Vollering has confirmed that she will aim for a second success in a row at the Grand Départ. Click here for more from the Women's Tour of France. and to follow all the latest news from this year's event on CNN.com and Twitter @CNNTourdeFrance and @LaTourdeFrance. For the latest from the Tour, visit the Tour's official website. and click here for the latest. and from CNN iReport. and on Twitter at www.TheTourDeFrance and @CNNOlympics. For more from The Tour, click here. for the news from the 2014 Tour de France. for more. and visit The Tour's official website at: http://www.tourdefrance.com/.

Read the full translated version in English Read the full version from leparis

May on the same topic in other locals

Cycling: can drones replace helicopters to film the race? . ...

“It is important to act”: the boss of INEOS calls for concrete actions for the safety of runners Jim Ratcliffe asks the UCI to accelerate its safety measures. The English billionaire is the CEO of the Ineos Grenadier team...

Cycling: on the road to the Giro, Tadej Pogacar will start his season at the Strade Bianche . ...

Cycling: Pogacar goes faster than motorcycles… Tadej Pogacar won four stages of the Tour of Catalonia. The 25-year-old is the current leader of the UAE Team Emirates...

Cycling: Vingegaard's medical assessment more serious than expected with affected lungs Danish cyclist Jonas Vingegaard suffers from a pneumothorax and a pulmonary contusion. The 27-year-old double winner of the Tour de France already had fractures to the clavicle and ribs already diagnosed...

Cycling: Evenepoel superstar, ambitious French people, an exciting journey… Everything you need to know about Paris-Nice . ...

Broken collarbone, pneumothorax, fear of cycling… Can Vingegaard prepare for the Tour calmly after his fall? Jonas Vingegaard has less than three months to be back on the roads. The double defending champion of the Grande Boucle will have to observe more than one day of rest and training...

All sports articles on 2024-04-18

Conversations with Nagelsmann? Dreesen and Eberl take a deep look

Conversations with Nagelsmann? Dreesen and Eberl take a deep look

Death of Alexis Vastine: 9 years after the drama of “Dropped”, a documentary on her father broadcast this Thursday

Death of Alexis Vastine: 9 years after the drama of “Dropped”, a documentary on her father broadcast this Thursday

What was that? It was Madrid

What was that? It was Madrid

School for beginning owners: What caused the disintegration of Hapoel Tel Aviv?

School for beginning owners: What caused the disintegration of Hapoel Tel Aviv?

Lille-Aston Villa: a brawl between supporters before the quarter-final second leg of the Europa Conference League

Lille-Aston Villa: a brawl between supporters before the quarter-final second leg of the Europa Conference League

In Germany, they are fantasizing about the reconstruction of 2013, Arteta: "There are no words to console"

In Germany, they are fantasizing about the reconstruction of 2013, Arteta: "There are no words to console"

Barça-PSG: Araujo annoyed by the criticism of his teammate Gündogan after his expulsion and elimination

Barça-PSG: Araujo annoyed by the criticism of his teammate Gündogan after his expulsion and elimination

Kimmich makes the Allianz Arena shake: FC Bayern moves into the CL semi-finals

Kimmich makes the Allianz Arena shake: FC Bayern moves into the CL semi-finals

FC Bayern announces Gnabry diagnosis: Arsenal decision made

FC Bayern announces Gnabry diagnosis: Arsenal decision made

Getting ready for the international game

Getting ready for the international game

Bayern's biggest weakness may become its biggest trump card ahead of Arsenal's second leg 2024-04-18T23:19:02.338Z

Top 14: Stade Rochelais, a stable project to continue reaching the summits 2024-04-18T23:11:05.645Z

“It only happened once”: Tuchel names Bayern’s problem during his time in office 2024-04-18T23:09:52.430Z

Benjamin Sarfati, boss of the Ares league: “The quality of what we offer today is really superior to what is done in France” 2024-04-18T23:03:00.583Z

Tour de France women 2024: Rotterdam and the Netherlands, “cycling countries”, ready for the Grande Boucle 2024-04-18T22:55:03.687Z

Thanks to header monster Kimmich: FC Bayern follows BVB into the Champions League semi-finals 2024-04-18T22:41:58.572Z

PSG Féminin: Élisa de Almeida and Lieke Martens back against Lyon? 2024-04-18T22:27:20.138Z

West Ham against Leverkusen in the live ticker today: Will the Werkself's treble dream remain alive? 2024-04-18T22:08:25.499Z

Consultant reveals: This is how Bayern is working on Nagelsmann's comeback 2024-04-18T22:00:11.707Z

That's why Leroy Sané wasn't in the dressing room at half-time against Arsenal 2024-04-18T21:41:17.597Z

Barça-PSG: Araujo annoyed by the criticism of his teammate Gündogan after his expulsion and elimination 2024-04-18T20:41:22.186Z

Without a single story, Barça disagrees in the defeat against PSG 2024-04-18T20:30:07.475Z

Franco-German cross-country skier Sara Benfares suspended for 5 years for doping 2024-04-18T20:12:38.307Z

PSG: in Doha at the moment, Gabriel Moscardo has the green light to resume training with Corinthians 2024-04-18T20:12:10.165Z

The next coach, the mistakes and the Jordan Paul question: Washington looks ahead 2024-04-18T20:04:38.814Z

School for beginning owners: What caused the disintegration of Hapoel Tel Aviv? 2024-04-18T20:01:58.481Z

While waiting for F1, and after Super Formula, Théo Pourchaire will discover Indycar 2024-04-18T19:38:54.274Z

FC Bayern is happy about millions in rain in the Champions League 2024-04-18T19:14:00.503Z

Football: Palestine will request sanctions against Israel at the FIFA Congress 2024-04-18T19:05:29.850Z

Bavaria's dream becomes REAL! 2024-04-18T18:46:40.154Z

Manchester City-Real Madrid: two players asked not to take penalties 2024-04-18T18:39:37.645Z

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

IMAGES

  1. Tour De France 2024 Official Site Sponsors

    official tour de france website

  2. Tour de France women 2024: Rotterdam and the Netherlands, “cycling

    official tour de france website

  3. Pre-order the Official Tour de France Guide (Australian edition)

    official tour de france website

  4. Le Tour De France 2024 Route

    official tour de france website

  5. Tour De France World Feed Commentators 2024

    official tour de france website

  6. Tour De France Unchained 2024

    official tour de france website

COMMENTS

  1. Official website of Tour de France 2024

    Tour de France 2024 - Official site of the famed race from the Tour de France. Includes route, riders, teams, and coverage of past Tours. Club 2024 route 2024 Teams 2023 Edition Rankings Stage winners All the videos. Grands départs Tour Culture news ...

  2. Official website of Tour de France 2024

    Tour de France 2024 - Official site of the famed race from the Tour de France. Includes route, riders, teams, and coverage of past Tours. Stay on Tour de France website. We use cookies to enhance your experience, improve site performance, analyze its traffic, to allow you to purchase anything related to sporting events you are interested to, to ...

  3. Come to the Tour

    Tour de France - Official website. Club 2024 route 2024 Teams 2023 Edition Rankings Stage winners All the videos. Grands départs Tour Culture news ... TOUR DE FRANCE 2023 - VIDEO GAMES (PC, XBOX ONE, PS4 & PS5) Fantasy by Tissot Tour de France Cycling Legends (iOS, Android) ...

  4. Tour de France

    The Tour de France (French pronunciation: [tuʁ də fʁɑ̃s]; English: Tour of France) is an annual men's multiple-stage bicycle race held primarily in France. It is the oldest of the three Grand Tours (the Tour, the Giro d'Italia, and the Vuelta a España) and is generally considered the most prestigious.. The race was first organized in 1903 to increase sales for the newspaper L'Auto and ...

  5. Broadcasters

    Tour de France - Official website. Club 2024 route 2024 Teams 2023 Edition Rankings Stage winners All the videos. Grands départs Tour Culture news ... TOUR DE FRANCE 2023 - VIDEO GAMES (PC, XBOX ONE, PS4 & PS5) Fantasy by Tissot Cycling Legends (iOS, Android) - Official Mobile Game ...

  6. All News of Tour de France 2024

    Biogents becomes "official protector" of the Tour de France. The Tour de France, a fixture on the calendar in July, also takes place at the heart of the... 12/02 - 14:02 Read more. News La Vache qui rit® returns as official supplier of the Tour de France. The Tour de France and La Vache qui rit® share timeless fundamental values such as a ...

  7. Tour de France

    Welcome to the Tour de France's official YouTube page! Enjoy here all the videos of the world's most famous cycling race: daily summaries, best moments, backstage... The Tour de France 2023 will ...

  8. Find out all the info with the official mobile app!

    Immerse yourself in the heart of the Tour de France with the official Tour de France application presented by ŠKODA! In 2023, the Tour de France offers you even more content and invites you to be part of the race with the Tour de France Club! Download the free application so that you don't miss anything about the race. With the app, you can ...

  9. Tour de France 2021: The Essential Race Guide

    The 2021 Tour de France will be broadcast around Europe and Eurosport. A subscription to Eurosport Player costs £6.99 for a single month, £4.99 for a year-long monthly pass, or £39.99 for a 12 ...

  10. Tour de France 2021: Results & News

    Tadej Pogacar loses 26 seconds in Tour de France crash but keeps GC ambitions alive. Which GC riders lost time on stage 3 of the 2021 Tour de France. Riders criticise crash-marred stage 3 final at ...

  11. Official route of Tour de France 2024

    The number of riders who will line up at the start of the Tour, divided into 22 teams of 8 riders each. 2802 m. The height of the summit of the Bonette pass in the Alps, the highest tarmac road in France, which will be the "roof" of the 2024 Tour. 52 230 m. The total vertical gain during the 2024 Tour de France. PRIZE MONEY

  12. Tour de France: Vingegaard the champion again as Meeus sprints to stage

    Giulio Ciccone of Lidl-Trek at the Velodrome National de Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines before the start of the final stage of the Tour de France 2023. Photograph: Christophe Petit-Tesson/EPA 23 Jul ...

  13. Tour de France LIVE: Stage 21 result & updates

    Cavendish misses out on new stage win record, Van Aert wins. Cavenish & Belgian legend Eddy Merckx both have 34 stage wins. Slovenia's Tadej Pogacar wins second consecutive Tour de France. The ...

  14. Tour de France 2022: Results & News

    Stage 2 - Tour de France: Fabio Jakobsen wins crash-marred sprint stage 2 in Nyborg | Roskilde - Nyborg. 2022-07-02199km. Results|Live report|Contenders. Stage 3 - Tour de France: Groenewegen wins ...

  15. Tour de France 2022: The stage-by-stage story of the race

    Jonas Vingegaard (middle) won the 2022 Tour de France from Tadej Pogacar (left) and Geraint Thomas. Denmark's Jonas Vingegaard was crowned Tour de France champion for the first time after the ...

  16. Tour de France 2024: Results & News

    The 2024 Tour de France includes 52,230 metres of vertical gain across 3,492km of climbs, sprints and time trialling from Italy into France, with fewer high climbs than in the past and shorter ...

  17. Le Tour de France Gear, Le Tour Merchandise, Apparel

    At the Le Tour de France Store, we take pride in offering an extensive selection of high-quality cycling merchandise. Discover a wide range of products, including Le Tour de France shirts, jerseys, shorts, gloves, helmets, and shoes, all designed to provide comfort and performance during your rides. We also feature an exclusive collection of Le ...

  18. Tour De France 2023

    New 2023 features. All 21 official stages of the Tour de France 2023. Updated rider and team ratings. New Medium Mountain and Agility rating added. New "grupettos" between riders added. New challenges added to Race of the Moment mode. A new mode has been introduced: Descent of the Moment. Distinctive bibs added for "super combative" and the ...

  19. Giro d'Italia and Tour de France: Road Closed to Genocide

    The Giro d'Italia (4 - 26 May) and the Tour de France (29 June - 21 July) are shamefully rewarding the Israeli government-sponsored cycling team, even as Israel murders more than 33,000 Palestinians in Gaza, even as it intentionally uses starvation as a weapon of war to engineer a famine in Gaza, even as it deliberately fires on Palestinians ...

  20. Tour de France women 2024: Rotterdam and the Netherlands, "cycling

    The third edition of the Women's Tour of France starts in Rotterdam on August 12. Two Dutch women have won the first two editions. Lorena Wiebes is the first in history to wear the yellow jersey for the event. Demi Vollering has confirmed that she will aim for a second success in a row at the Grand Départ. Click here for more from the Women's Tour of France. and to follow all the latest news ...