Tour de France 2023 route: Every stage of the 110th edition in detail

This year's race has kicked off in Bilbao, in Spain's Basque Country. It looks like it'll be a Tour for the climbers, with the Puy de Dôme returning and 56,400 metres of climbing in all

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Tour de France 2023 route on the map of France

  • Stage summary
  • The stages in-depth

Adam Becket

The 2023 men's Tour de France began in Bilbao, Spain on Saturday, July 1, with a route that looks set to be one for the climbers. It features four summit finishes, including a return for the iconic Puy de Dôme climb for the first time since 1988.

There is just one time trial across the three-week event, a short uphill race against the clock from Passy to Combloux over 22km. There are also returns for other epic climbs like the Col de la Loze and the Grand Colombier, with 56,400 metres of climbing on the Tour de France 2023 route.

The race started on foreign soil for the second year in a row, with a Grand Départ in the Spanish Basque Country , the setting for the race's 120th anniversary. There were two hilly stages in Spain, before the peloton crossed the border into France for a stage finish in Bayonne on day three. 

After visiting Pau for the 74th time on stage five, the race's first real mountain test came on stage six, leaving Tarbes and cresting the Col d’Aspin and Col du Tourmalet before a summit finish in Cauterets. 

On stage seven, the Tour’s second most visited city, Bordeaux, will welcome its first stage finish since 2010, when Mark Cavendish claimed his 14th of a record 34 stage wins. Leaving nearby Libourne the next day, stage eight will head east on a 201km slog to Limoges. 

Before the first rest day, the riders will wind up to the summit of the Puy de Dôme, a dormant lava dome which hasn’t featured in the Tour for 35 years. They’ll then enjoy a well-earned day off in Clermont-Ferrand before continuing their passage through the Massif Central. 

France’s national holiday, 14 July, will be celebrated next year with a summit finish on the Grand Colombier, the site of Tadej Pogačar ’s second stage win back in 2020. From there, the mountains keep coming. The riders will climb over the Col de Joux Plaine to Morzine on stage 14, before another mountaintop test in Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc the next day. 

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The sole individual time trial of the Tour de Franc route comes on stage 16, when a hilly 22km dash from Passy to Combloux will give the GC contenders a chance to force time gaps. The following day will bring the stage with the highest elevation gain, counting 5000m of climbing en route to the Courchevel altiport, via the Cormet de Roselend and the monstrous Col de la Loze. 

On stages 18 and 19, the sprinters are expected to come to the fore, with flat finishes in Bourg-en-Bresse and Poligny. 

The penultimate stage will play out in the country’s most easterly region, ascending the Petit Ballon, Col du Platzerwasel and finishing in Le Markstein, as the Tour de France Femmes did last year. 

The riders will then undertake a 500km transfer to the outskirts of Paris for the curtain-closing stage. The final day will start at France’s national velodrome in Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, the track cycling venue for the 2024 Olympics, and will conclude with the customary laps of the capital’s Champs-Elysées. 

The 2023 Tour de France will begin on 1 July, with the winner crowned in Paris on 23 July. 

2023 Tour de France stage table

Jonas Vingegaard climbs at Itzulia Basque Country

Jonas Vingegaard raced in the Basque Country this year

Tour de France route week summary

Tour de france week one.

The race began in Bilbao, starting in the Basque Country for the first time since 1992, when the Tour started in San Sebastian. The first two stages are packed full of climbs, with ten classified hills in over the opening couple of days, meaning there will be a fierce battle for the polka-dot jersey. Watch out for Basque fans going crazy on the roadside.

Stage three saw the race cross into France, which it will not leave for the rest of the 18 days. As expected we saw a sprint finish in Bayonne, even after four categorised climbs en-route. Nothing is easy this year.

The fourth day was another sprint, on a motor racing circuit in Nogaro, as the race moved, ominously, towards the Pyrenees. The Hors Categorie Col de Soudet on stage five was the first proper mountain of the race, and was followed by the Col de Marie Blanque, which has tough gradients. A GC day early on, although they are all GC days, really.

Stage five was a mountain top finish in Cauterets-Cambasque, but its gradients didn't catch too many out; it is the Col d'Aspin and Col du Tourmalet that will put people through it.

The seventh day of the race was a chance for the riders to relax their legs as the race headed northwest to an almost nailed-on sprint finish, before another opportunity for the the remaining fast men presented itself on stage eight - after two category four climbs towards the end, and an uphill finish.

The long first week of the race - which will have felt longer because last year had a bonus rest day - ended with the mythical Puy de Dôme.

Tour de France week two

Magnus Cort in the break at the 2022 Tour de France

Magnus Cort in the breakaway on stage 10 of the Tour de France 2022

The second week begins with a lumpy road stage around Clermont-Ferrand, starting from a volcano-themed theme park. This will surely be a day for the break. The next day could also be one if the sprint teams fail to get their act together, with two early categorised climbs potential ambush points.

Back into the medium mountains on stage 12, with a finish in the wine making heartland of the Beaujolais, Belleville. Another day for the break, probably, but none of the five categorised climbs are easy.

The following day, stage 13, is France's national holiday, 14 Juillet. The Grand Colombier at the end of the day is the big attraction, with its slopes expected to cause shifts on the GC. Stage 14 is yet another mountain stage as the Tour really gets serious, with the Col de la Ramaz followed by the Col de Joux Plane. The latter, 11.6km at 8.5%, will be a real test for a reduced peloton, before a downhill finish into Morzine.

The final day of week two, stage 15, is yet another day in the Alps before a rest day in Saint-Gervais-Mont-Blanc. There is nothing as fearsome as the previous days, but 4527m of climbing should still be feared.

Tour de France week three

Tadej Pogačar time trials at the 2022 Tour de France

Tadej Pogačar in the final time trial at the 2022 Tour de France

The third and final week begins with the race's only time trial, 22km long and with a lot of uphill. It is not a mountain event, but it is certainly not one for the pure rouleurs .

Stage 17 looks like the race's Queen Stage, with the final climb up to the Col de la Loze looking incredibly tough on paper, and in real life. That follows the Col de Saisies, the Cormet de Roselend and the Côte de Longefoy, adding up to 5,100m of climbing. The race might be decided on this day.

After that, there is a nice day for the sprinters on stage 18, with a flat finish in Bourg-en-Bresse surely one for the fast men. The next day, stage 19 could be a breakaway day or a sprint finish, depending on how desperate teams are feeling, or how powerful the remaining leadout trains are.

The final mountainous day comes on the penultimate stage, with the men following the Femmes lead and finishing in Le Markstein. However, there's no Grand Ballon, just the Petit Ballon, and so unless something chaotic happens, there should not be great time switches on this stage.

Then, at last, there is the usual finish on the Champs-Élysées in Paris, after the race heads out of Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, which has a long-term deal to host the start of Paris-Nice too. ASO country.

Remember, this will be the last time Paris hosts the Tour de France until 2025. So, be prepared.

Tour de France 2023: The stages

Stage one: Bilbao to Bilbao (182km)

Tour de France 2023 stage 1 profile

The opening stage is very lumpy

There was no easing into the Tour de France for the peloton this year, with a tough, punchy day in the Basque Country. Adam Yates took the first yellow jersey of the 2023 Tour de France after a scintillating stage in the Basque Country that saw the overall battle for the Tour take shape at the earliest opportunity.

The Briton emerged clear over the top of the final climb of the stage, the short and steep Côte de Pike, with his twin brother Simon a few seconds behind him. The pair worked well together to stay clear of the chasing bunch of GC contenders before Adam rode his brother off his wheel inside the final few hundred metres to claim victory.

Stage two: Vitoria-Gasteiz to Saint Sebastian (208.9km)

Tour de France 2023 stage 2 profile

Still in the Basque Country, there is a Klasikoa theme to stage two

This was the longest stage of the Tour, surprisingly.  Five more categorised climbs meant  it was unlikely to be a sprint stage, including the Jaizkibel, famous from the Clasica San Sebastian, tackled on its eastern side 20km from the finish. This second stage from Vitoria Gasteiz to San Sebastian on the Basque coast followed many of the roads of the San Sebastian Classic, held here every summer.

An early break was soon established in the first 50km and established a three-minute advantage. However, the break was reeled in and a group, including the yellow jersey Adam Yates, pressed towards the finish with Wout Van Aert (Jumbo-Visma) clearly hoping it would finish in a sprint. 

Victor Lafay (Cofidis) had other ideas however, and with all and sundry already having attacked Van Aert, Lafay finally made it stick with a kilometre to go, holding off the reduced bunch all the way to the line.

Stage three: Amorebiata-Etxano to Bayonne (187.4km)

Tour de France 2023 stage 3 profile

Still some hills, but this should be a sprint stage

The third stage took the riders from Amorebieta-Etxano in the Basque Country and back into France, finishing at Bayonne in what was always tipped to be a bunch sprint.  Ultimately, despite a very strong showing in the leadout by Fabio Jakobsen's Soudal-Quick Step team, it was Jasper Philipsen who triumphed , having benefited from a deluxe leadout by team-mate Mathieu Van Der Poel.

Mark Cavendish, who is hunting for a record 35th stage win in what will be his final Tour de France, was sixth.

Stage four: Dax to Nogaro (181.8km)

Tour de France 2023 stage 4 profile

A nailed on bunch sprint, surely. Surely!

Now this one was always going to be a sprint finish, right? It finished on a motor racing circuit in Nogaro, meaning teams have a long old time to sort their leadout trains.  After a sleepy day out all hell broke lose on the finishing circuit with a series of high speed crashes. Jasper Philipsen was one of the few sprinters to still have a lead-out man at his disposal and when that lead-out man is of the quality of Mathieu van der Poel he was always going to be very difficult to beat. So it proved with Australian Caleb Ewan chasing him down hard but unable to come around him.  Philipsen's win handed him the green jersey too .

Stage five: Pau to Laruns (162.7km)

Tour de France 2023 stage 5 profile

The first proper mountain, and the first sorting out, as early as stage five

The first Hors Categorie climb of the race came on stage five, the Col de Soudet, which is 15.2km at 7.2%, before the Col de Marie-Blanque and its steep gradients. It certainly ignited the GC battle!  

A break that at one point contained 37 riders was never allowed more than a few minutes, but that proved unwise for Jonas Vingegaard and Tadej Pogačar behind. Ultimately, with the break already splintering on the final big climb – the Col de Marie-Blanque – Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe), riding his first Tour de France, attacked. 

With Hindley time trialling the largely downhill 18km to the finish, Vingegaard attempted to chase him down – and put time into Pogačar as he did so.

Picking up strays from the early break on the way, Vingegaard got to within 34 seconds of Hindley, but it wasn't enough to stop the Australian from taking the stage win, and the yellow jersey .

Stage six: Tarbes to Cauterets-Cambasque (144.9km)

Tour de France 2023 stage 6 profile

While in the Pyrenees, why not tackle a few more mountains?

A day of aggressive racing in the Pyrenees towards the first summit finish saw Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) take the yellow jersey but Tadej Pogačar (UAE Emirates) win the stage .

Having had his team set a blistering pace on the Col du Tourmalet, Vingegaard attacked with 4km until the summit. Only Pogačar could follow him as yellow jersey holder Jai Hindley dropped back to the peloton

Having joined up with super domestique Wout van Aert over the top, the group of favourites were towed up the first half of the final climb before Vingegaard attacked. Once again Pogačar followed and with two kilometers to go the Slovenian counter-attacked.

He clawed back nearly half a minute by the line, making the race for yellow a three horse race between those two and Hindley in the process. 

Stage seven: Mont-de-Marsan to Bordeaux (169.9km)

Tour de France 2023 stage 7 profile

Bordeaux is always a sprint finish

Renowned as a sprint finish town, Bordeaux didn't disappoint the hopeful fastmen –except perhaps for Mark Cavendish, who had to concede victory to hat-trick man Jasper Philipsen, despite a very strong charge for the line from the Manxman .

With Cavendish hunting that elusive 35th record stage win, and having won here last time the Tour came visiting in 2010, many eyes were on the Astana Qazaqstan rider, with on-form Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck) who has won twice already, starting as favourite.

The day began with Arkéa-Samsic's Simon Gugliemi forging what turned out to be a solo break that lasted 130 kilometres. He was joined by Pierre Latour (TotalEnergies) and Nans Peters (Ag2r-Citroën) halfway through the stage, the trio forming a purposeful triumvirate of home riders.

However, with the sprinters and their teams on the hunt and few places to hide on what was a hot day crammed with long, straight roads, the break served only as a placeholder for the day's main action in Bordeaux.

A technical finish with roundabouts aplenty, first Jumbo-Visma (in the service of GC leader Jonas Vingegaard) and then Alpecin-Deceuninck took the race by the scruff of the neck in the final. Philipsen enjoyed a marquee leadout from team-mate Mathieu Van Der Poel, but when Cavendish turned on the afterburners at around 150m and leapt forward, the whole cycling world held its breath.

That 35th stage win had to wait for another day though, with Philipsen sweeping past in what was yet another command performance from the Belgian.

Stage eight: Libourne to Limoges (200.7km)

Tour de France 2023 stage 8 profile

Three categorised climbs in the final 70km could catch people out

Mads Pedersen powered to victory up a punchy finish on stage eight of the  Tour de France , managing to hold off green jersey  Jasper Philipsen  in the process.

Pedersen, the Lidl-Trek rider, now has two Tour stage wins to his name, in a finish which mixed pure sprinters and punchier riders. Alpecin-Deceuninck's Philipsen was third, with Wout van Aert (Jumbo-Visma) in third. To prove how mixed the top ten was, however, Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) finished behind the likes of Corbin Strong (Israel-Premier Tech) and Bryan Coquard (Cofidis).

On a day which could have been one for the breakaway, the race was controlled expertly by Jumbo, Trek and Alpecin for their options, and so the escapees were never allowed much time. Sadly, stage eight turned out to Mark Cavendish's last - the Astana-Qazaqstan rider crashed heavily and was forced to abandon .

Stage nine: Saint-Léonard-de-Noblat to Puy de Dôme (184km)

Tour de France 2023 stage 9 profile

The Puy de Dôme is back, and is vicious

In a north American showdown it was Canada that came out on top as  Michael Woods  beat American rival  Matteo Jorgenson  to the win atop the legendary Puy de Dôme.

Jorgenson had gone solo form a breakaway with 40km left to race. However, on the slopes of the Puy de Dôme where the gradient remains over 105 for more than four kilometres, Woods closed the gap and came around Jorgenson with just 600m left to go.

In the final kilometre, of what had been a blisteringly hot day with temperatures north of 30 degree Celsius, Tadej Pogačar managed to drop Jonas Vingegaard but the Jumbo-Visma captain dug deep to minimise his losses and came across the line eight seconds down.

Stage 10: Vulcania to Issoire (162.7km)

Tour de France 2023 stage 10 profile

Five categorised climbs over this Volcanic stage

The breakaway had its day in Issoire, as Pello Bilbao (Bahrain Victorious) won beneath the scorching sun in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region. 

After a frantic start, the mood finally settled and a 14-rider move went clear. Krists Neilands (Israel Premier Tech) launched a solo bid with around 30km remaining, but was caught in the closing moments by a chasing group led by Bilbao. The Spaniard then policed attacks in the finale, before sprinting to his team's first victory at this year's race. 

"For Gino," Bilbao said afterwards, dedicating his win to his late teammate, Gino Mäder .  

Stage 11: Clermont-Ferrand to Moulins (179.8km)

Tour de France 2023 stage 11 profile

The flat finalé hints at a sprint, but it could be a break day

After a difficult previous day that was hot and hilly, the bunch allowed the break to go very quickly, with Andrey Amador, Matis Louvel and Daniel Oss quickly gaining three minutes. They were kept on a tight leash though, with the sprinters' teams eyeing a bunch finish. And this they delivered, with Jasper Philipsen winning a fourth stage after a tricky finale.

Stage 12: Roanne to Belleville-en-Beaujolais (168.8km)

Tour de France 2023 stage 12 profile

Hills return, with some steep, punchy ones towards the end

Just like stage ten, Thursday's stage 12 was a fast and frenetic affair on the road to Belleville-en-Beaujolais. A strong group of puncheur type riders eventually got up the road after the breakaway took more than 80 kilometres to form. Ion Izagirre (Cofidis) came out on top at the finish, soloing to the line after a big attack on the final climb of the day. 

Stage 13: Châtillon-Sur-Chalaronne to Grand Colombier (138km)

Tour de France 2023 stage 13 profile

Welcome to the Alps, here's an hors categorie climb

Michał Kwiatkowski took an impressive solo victory on the summit finish of the Grand Colombier. The Polish rider caught and passed the remnants of the day's breakaway which included Great Britain's James Shaw to grab his second-ever Tour stage win. Behind the Ineos rider, Tadej Pogačar attacked and took eight seconds back on Jonas Vingegaard in the fight for the yellow jersey. 

Stage 14: Annemasse to Morzine Les Portes du Soleil (151.8km)

Tour de France 2023 stage 14 profile

Five categorised climbs, four of which are one and above. Ouch.

Carlos Rodríguez announced himself on his Tour de France debut on stage 14 with a career-defining victory in Morzine. While all eyes were on Jonas Vingegaard and Tadej Pogačar, the Spaniard broke free on the descent of the Col de Joux Plane and descended as if on rails to the finish. 

Stage 15: Les Gets Les Portes du Soleil to Saint-Gervais-Mont-Blanc (179km)

Tour de France 2023 stage 15 profile

Back to a summit finish, there is no escape at this Tour

The breakaway had its day at the summit of Saint-Gervais Mont Blanc. After dedicating his career to domestique duties, the victory went to Wout Poels (Bahrain Victorious), who launched a late attack on the steepest slopes and held off Wout van Aert (Jumbo-Visma) to the line.

Stage 16: Passy to Combloux ITT (22.4km)

Tour de France 2023 stage 16 profile

A time trial! But not a flat one

Stage 16 brought the fewest time trial kilometres at the Tour de France in 90 years. On the uphill test to Combloux, Jonas Vingegaard proved the strongest , and by quite a way, too. The Dane's winning margin of 1-38 over Tadej Pogačar left him in the driving seat to taking his second Tour title.

Stage 17: Saint-Gervais-Mont-Blanc to Courchevel (165.7km)

Tour de France 2023 stage 17 profile

Back to  the proper mountains, and there will be no let up on the final Wednesday

The Queen stage brought a career-defining victory for Austrian Felix Gall (AG2R Citroën), but all eyes were on the GC battle, and the demise of Tadej Pogačar. The UAE Team Emirates rider cracked on the slopes of the Col de la Loze, losing almost six minutes to Jonas Vingegaard, and slipping to 7-35 in the overall standings.

Stage 18: Moûtiers to Bourg-en-Bresse (184.9km)

Tour de France 2023 stage 18 profile

Two category four climbs on the road to a chicken-themed sprint

Denmark's Kasper Asgreen put in one of the best performances of the race to grab his first-ever Tour victory . The Soudal Quick-Step rider was part of a four man breakaway that managed to hold on all the way to the line by just a handful of seconds ahead of the peloton.

Stage 19: Moirans-en-Montagne to Poligny (172.8km)

Tour de France 2023 stage 19 profile

Another sprint, maybe, or a heartbreaking chase which fails to bring the breakaway back

Matej Mohorič of Bahrain Victorious took an emotional victory in Poligny after a chaotic day of racing. The Slovenian rider launched an attack with Kasper Asgreen and Ben O'Connor on the final climb of the hilly stage before beating his breakaway compatriots in a three-up sprint for the line. It was Mohorič's third-ever Tour victory.

Stage 20: Belfort to Le Markstein Fellering (133.5km)

Tour de France 2023 stage 20 profile

One last chance. Six categorised climbs, will it shake up the GC?

The race might be very near Germany at this point, but Belfort remained French after the Franco-Prussian War, unlike the territory the penultimate stage travels into. 

This is the last chance saloon for all teams and riders who aren’t sprinters, especially those with GC ambitions. However, it is not quite the task of the previous Alpine days, with the six categorised climbs not the most testing. Still, there will be a lot of people trying to make things happen.

Stage 21: Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines to Paris (115.1km)

Tour de France 2023 stage 21 profile

The classic Parisian sprint. Lovely.

This will be the last time the Tour heads to Paris until at least 2025, so make the most of those shots of the Arc de Triomphe and the Champs-Élysées. The classic procession will happen for the first 55km until the race hits the Champs for the first time 60km in. From that point on, anything goes, although that anything will probably be a bunch sprint.

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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, speaking to people as varied as Demi Vollering to Philippe Gilbert. 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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cyclingfever tour de france 2023

Tour de France 2023: Route and stages

Tour de France 2023

Read about the entire route of the 2023 Tour de France.

Please click on the links in underneath scheme for in-depth information on the individual stages.

Tour de France 2023 stages

Tour de france 2023: route, profiles, more.

Click on the images to zoom

Tour de France 2023: entire route - source:letour.fr

More about the Tour de France

Tour de france 2023: the route, tour de france 2023 route stage 1: bilbao - bilbao.

Tour de France 2023

Tour de France 2023 Route stage 2: Vitoria-Gasteiz - San Sebastián

Tour de France 2023

Tour de France 2023 Route stage 3: Amorebieta-Etxano - Bayonne

Tour de France 2023

Tour de France 2023 Route stage 4: Dax - Nogaro

Tour de France 2023

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cyclingfever tour de france 2023

  • 1 EVENEPOEL Remco * (DNS #10)
  • 2 BALLERINI Davide (DNS #16)
  • 3 CATTANEO Mattia (DNS #11)
  • 4 ČERNÝ Josef (DNS #11)
  • 5 HIRT Jan (DNS #11)
  • 6 SERRY Pieter
  • 7 VAN WILDER Ilan *
  • 8 VERVAEKE Louis (DNS #11)

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

  • 11 PARET-PEINTRE Aurélien
  • 12 BAUDIN Alex *
  • 13 CHEREL Mikaël (DNF #12)
  • 14 LAPEIRA Paul * (DNF #4)
  • 15 PARET-PEINTRE Valentin *
  • 16 PRODHOMME Nicolas
  • 17 VENDRAME Andrea (DNS #11)
  • 18 WARBASSE Larry

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

  • 21 OLDANI Stefano *
  • 22 CONCI Nicola (DNS #7)
  • 23 GROVES Kaden * (DNF #12)
  • 24 KRIEGER Alexander
  • 25 LEYSEN Senne
  • 26 RIESEBEEK Oscar (DNS #10)
  • 27 SBARAGLI Kristian
  • 28 SINKELDAM Ramon (DNS #5)

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

  • 31 CAVENDISH Mark
  • 32 BATTISTELLA Samuele * (DNS #14)
  • 33 DOMBROWSKI Joe
  • 34 MOSCON Gianni
  • 35 PRONSKIY Vadim *
  • 36 SÁNCHEZ Luis León
  • 37 SCARONI Christian
  • 38 VELASCO Simone

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

  • 41 HAIG Jack
  • 42 ARASHIRO Yukiya
  • 43 BUITRAGO Santiago *
  • 44 CARUSO Damiano
  • 45 MILAN Jonathan *
  • 46 PASQUALON Andrea
  • 47 SÜTTERLIN Jasha
  • 48 ZAMBANINI Edoardo *

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

  • 51 VLASOV Aleksandr (DNF #10)
  • 52 ALEOTTI Giovanni * (DNS #7)
  • 53 BENEDETTI Cesare
  • 54 DENZ Nico
  • 55 JUNGELS Bob
  • 56 KÄMNA Lennard
  • 57 KONRAD Patrick
  • 58 PALZER Anton

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

  • 61 CONSONNI Simone
  • 62 BIDARD François
  • 63 CHAMPION Thomas *
  • 64 CIMOLAI Davide (DNS #9)
  • 65 DELETTRE Alexandre
  • 66 LASTRA Jonathan
  • 67 ROCHAS Rémy (DNS #5)
  • 68 TOUMIRE Hugo *

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

  • 71 URÁN Rigoberto (DNS #10)
  • 72 CAICEDO Jonathan Klever (DNS #11)
  • 73 CARTHY Hugh (DNS #19)
  • 74 CEPEDA Jefferson Alexander *
  • 75 DE BOD Stefan (DNS #14)
  • 76 HEALY Ben *
  • 77 BETTIOL Alberto
  • 78 CORT Magnus

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

  • 81 ALBANESE Vincenzo
  • 82 BAIS Davide *
  • 83 BAIS Mattia
  • 84 FETTER Erik * (DNF #10)
  • 85 FORTUNATO Lorenzo
  • 86 GAVAZZI Francesco
  • 87 MAESTRI Mirco
  • 88 SEVILLA Diego Pablo

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

  • 91 FIORELLI Filippo
  • 92 COVILI Luca (DNS #18)
  • 93 GABBURO Davide
  • 94 MAGLI Filippo *
  • 95 MARCELLUSI Martin *
  • 96 MULUBRHAN Henok *
  • 97 TONELLI Alessandro
  • 98 ZOCCARATO Samuele * (DNF #8)

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

  • 101 PINOT Thibaut
  • 102 ARMIRAIL Bruno
  • 103 KONOVALOVAS Ignatas
  • 104 KÜNG Stefan (DNS #10)
  • 105 LIENHARD Fabian
  • 106 MOLARD Rudy
  • 107 STEWART Jake *
  • 109 VAN DEN BERG Lars * (DNS #8)

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

  • 111 GEOGHEGAN HART Tao (DNF #11)
  • 112 ARENSMAN Thymen *
  • 113 DE PLUS Laurens
  • 114 GANNA Filippo (DNS #8)
  • 115 PUCCIO Salvatore
  • 116 SIVAKOV Pavel (DNF #16)
  • 117 SWIFT Ben
  • 118 THOMAS Geraint

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

  • 121 ROTA Lorenzo
  • 122 BONIFAZIO Niccolò (DNS #18)
  • 123 BYSTRØM Sven Erik (DNS #10)
  • 124 HUYS Laurens *
  • 125 MARIT Arne *
  • 126 PETILLI Simone (DNF #10)
  • 127 REX Laurenz *
  • 128 TAARAMÄE Rein (DNS #10)

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

  • 131 POZZOVIVO Domenico (DNS #10)
  • 132 BERWICK Sebastian *
  • 133 CLARKE Simon (DNS #16)
  • 134 FRIGO Marco *
  • 135 GEE Derek
  • 136 RICCITELLO Matthew *
  • 137 WÜRTZ SCHMIDT Mads (DNS #10)
  • 138 WILLIAMS Stephen

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

  • 141 ROGLIČ Primož
  • 142 AFFINI Edoardo
  • 143 BOUWMAN Koen
  • 144 DENNIS Rohan
  • 145 HESSMANN Michel *
  • 146 KUSS Sepp
  • 147 GLOAG Thomas *
  • 148 OOMEN Sam

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

  • 151 GAVIRIA Fernando
  • 152 BARTA Will
  • 153 KANTER Max
  • 154 RODRÍGUEZ Óscar (DNF #11)
  • 155 ROJAS José Joaquín
  • 156 RUBIO Einer *
  • 157 TORRES Albert
  • 158 VERONA Carlos

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

  • 161 BARGUIL Warren
  • 162 BOUET Maxime
  • 163 DEKKER David * (DNF #8)
  • 164 GUERNALEC Thibault
  • 165 RIES Michel *
  • 166 RIOU Alan
  • 167 RUSSO Clément (DNS #6)
  • 168 VERRE Alessandro * (DNF #14)

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

  • 171 CONTI Valerio (DNS #5)
  • 172 DALLA VALLE Nicolas
  • 173 GANDIN Stefano (DNS #11)
  • 174 IACCHI Alessandro *
  • 175 KONYCHEV Alexander *
  • 176 QUARTERMAN Charlie *
  • 177 STOJNIĆ Veljko *
  • 178 VACEK Karel *

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

  • 181 LEKNESSUND Andreas *
  • 182 DAINESE Alberto *
  • 183 HVIDEBERG Jonas Iversby *
  • 184 MÄRKL Niklas *
  • 185 MAYRHOFER Marius *
  • 186 STORK Florian (DNF #8)
  • 187 TUSVELD Martijn (DNF #10)
  • 188 VANHOUCKE Harm (DNF #12)

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

  • 191 MATTHEWS Michael
  • 192 DE MARCHI Alessandro
  • 193 DUNBAR Eddie
  • 194 HEPBURN Michael
  • 195 PÖSTLBERGER Lukas
  • 196 SCOTSON Callum (DNS #10)
  • 197 STEWART Campbell *
  • 198 ZANA Filippo *

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

  • 201 PEDERSEN Mads (DNS #13)
  • 202 GHEBREIGZABHIER Amanuel (DNS #16)
  • 203 HOOLE Daan *
  • 204 KIRSCH Alex
  • 205 MOLLEMA Bauke
  • 206 SKUJIŅŠ Toms
  • 207 TESFATSION Natnael * (DNS #11)
  • 208 VERGAERDE Otto

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

  • 211 ALMEIDA João *
  • 212 ACKERMANN Pascal
  • 213 COVI Alessandro * (DNS #12)
  • 214 FORMOLO Davide
  • 215 GIBBONS Ryan
  • 216 MCNULTY Brandon *
  • 217 ULISSI Diego
  • 218 VINE Jay
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Tour de France 2023 - Startlist

Tuesday 20 June 2023 • Blog

The startlist of the 2023 Tour de France consists of 22 teams and 176 riders in total. In this blog we will keep track of the all confirmed teams, including BIBs. You can also find the rider-cards by clicking at the rider's name. At this page you can find the startlist of the Tour de France  at which you can sort riders by their qualities and compare their skills.

Jumbo-Visma

Wilco Kelderman

Christophe Laporte

Tiesj Benoot

Wout van Aert

Dylan van Baarle

Nathan Van Hooydonck

Jonas Vingegaard

Tour de France 2023 - Jumbo-Visma

UAE Team Emirates

Felix Großschartner

Vegard Stake Laengen

Mikkel Bjerg

Matteo Trentin

Tadej Pogacar

Rafal Majka

Tour de France 2023 - UAE Team Emirates

Bahrain Victorious

Phil Bauhaus

Nikias Arndt

Pello Bilbao

Matej Mohoric

Mikel Landa

Fred Wright

Tour de France 2023 - Bahrain - Victorious

BORA-hansgrohe

Marco Haller

Patrick Konrad

Bob Jungels

Jordi Meeus

Danny van Poppel

Emanuel Buchmann

Jai Hindley

Nils Politt

Tour de France 2023 - BORA - hansgrohe

Groupama-FDJ

Quentin Pacher

Olivier Le Gac

Lars Van Den Berg

Stefan Küng

Kevin Geniets

Thibaut Pinot

David Gaudu

Valentin Madouas

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

INEOS Grenadiers

Omar Fraile

Daniel Martinez

Tom Pidcock

Michal Kwiatkowski

Carlos Rodriguez

Jonathan Castroviejo

Tour de France 2023 - INEOS Grenadiers

Uno-X Pro Cycling Team

Jonas Abrahamsen

Jonas Gregaard

Anthon Charmig

Søren Wærenskjold

Torstein Træen

Alexander Kristoff

Rasmus Tiller

Tobias Halland Johannessen

Tour de France 2023 - Uno-X Pro Cycling Team

Israel-Premier Tech

Michael Woods

Nick Schultz

Corbin Strong

Krists Neilands

Guillaume Boivin

Simon Clarke

Dylan Teuns

Tour de France 2023 - Israel - Premier Tech

Lotto Dstny

Jacopo Guarnieri

Frederik Frison

Pascal Eenkhoorn

Jasper De Buyst

Victor Campenaerts

Florian Vermeersch

Maxim Van Gils

Tour de France 2023 - Lotto Dstny

Tony Gallopin

Giulio Ciccone

Quinn Simmons

Mattias Skjelmose Jensen

Juan Pedro Lopez

Alex Kirsch

Jasper Stuyven

Mads Pederse n

Tour de France 2023 - Lidl - Trek

Intermarché-Circus-Wanty

Biniam Girmay

Louis Meintjes

Mike Teunissen

Adrien Petit

Georg Zimmermann

Lilian Calmejane

Tour de France 2023 - Intermarché - Circus - Wanty

Team DSM Firmenich

Chris Hamilton

Alex Edmondson

Kevin Vermaerke

John Degenkolb

Sam Welsford

Matthew Dinham

Romain Bardet

Nils Eekhoff

Tour de France 2023 - Team DSM - Firmenich

Movistar Team

Antonio Pedrero

Gregor Muhlberger

Alex Aranburu

Gorka Izagirre

Matteo Jorgenson

Nelson Oliveira

Ruben Guerreiro

Tour de France 2023 - Movistar

Team Jayco-AlUla

Christopher Juul-Jensen

Elmar Reinders

Chris Harper

Luke Durbridge

Lawson Craddock

Dylan Groenewegen

Simon Yates

Luka Mezgec

Tour de France 2023 - Team Jayco - AlUla

AG2R Citroën Team

Nans Peters

Oliver Naesen

Benoît Cosnefroy

Ben O'Connor

Aurélien Paret-Peintre

Clement Berthet

Stan Dewulf

Tour de France 2023 - AG2R Citroën Team

Alpecin-Deceuninck

Mathieu van der Poel

Jasper Philipsen

Jonas Rickaert

Silvan Dillier

Ramon Sinkeldam

Quinten Hermans

Søren Kragh Andersen

Astana Qazaqstan Team

Tour de France 2023 - Alpecin Deceuninck

Harold Tejada

Gianni Moscon

Alexey Lutsenko

Yevgeniy Fedorov

Mark Cavendish

David De La Cruz

Luis León Sánchez

Tour de France 2023 - Astana Qazaqstan Team

Alexis Renard

Simon Geschke

Axel Zingle

Anthony Perez

Victor Lafay

Bryan Coquard

Ion Izagirre

Guillaume Martin

Tour de France 2023 - Cofidis

EF Education-EasyPost

Alberto Bettiol

Andrey Amador

Esteban Chaves

Richard Carapaz

Magnus Cort

Rigoberto Uran

Neilson Powless

Tour de France 2023 - EF Education - EasyPost

Soudal Quick-Step

Andrea Bagioli

Fabio Jakobsen

Julian Alaphilippe

Remi Cavagna

Yves Lampaert

Mauri Vansevenant

Florian Sénéchal

Michael Mørkøv

Tour de France 2023 - Soudal -Quick Step

Team Arkéa-Samsic

Laurent Pichon

Simon Guglielmi

Jenthe Biermans

Warren Barguil

Luca Mozzato

Clément Champoussin

Anthony Delaplace

Matis Louvel

Tour de France 2023 - Team Arkéa Samsic

TotalEnergies

Mathieu Burgaudeau

Edvald Boasson-Hagen

Valentin Ferron

Pierre Latour

Peter Sagan

Anthony Turgis

Tour de France 2023 - TotalEnergies

2023 Tour de France expected to include early TTT and Alpine TT

Further details emerge before the official presentation in Paris on Thursday

Jonas Vingegaard during the 2022 Tour de France time trial

The 2023 Tour de France is expected to include a team time trial in the first week, a hilly individual time trial in the Alps and lots of mountain stages but no final time trial before the ride into Paris.

Full details of the route will be unveiled in Paris on Thursday but the VeloWire website and a detailed report by French news network France Bleu have lifted the lid on the likely route, revealing some details of the time trials.    

The French Grand Tour is also expected to include lots of mountains, with a brief but intense visit to the Pyrenees, a finish atop the Puy de Dôme dormant volcano in the Massif Central and eight days in the Alps, with a finish on the Grand Colombier on Bastille Day and a stage to Morzine via the Col de Joux Plane and its testing descent. 

The Alpine time trial comes after the second rest day followed by stage 17 to the Courchevel altiport after climbing the mighty Col de la Loze, where Primož Roglič distanced Tadej Pogačar in 2020 when stage 17 finished at the 2,304 metre-high summit. 

Tour de France 2023 routes – All the rumours ahead of the official presentation 2023 Tour de France set to return to Puy de Dome mountain finish Jonas Vingegaard: Defending the Tour de France is hard but I’m up for the challenge Evenepoel says decision on 2023 Giro d’Italia or Tour de France ‘already taken’

The final week of the Tour heads north into the Vosges mountains to climb the Grand Ballon and finish at the Le Markstein ski resort on the final Saturday, with a transfer to Paris apparently leaving no space for a traditional stage 20 time trial. 

The 2023 Tour de France will start in Bilbao in the Basque Country on Saturday July 1 and end in Paris on Sunday July 23. 

The Tour hasn't included a team time trial since 2019, when Jumbo-Visma won the 27.6km stage around Brussels. Race organisers ASO had become frustrated with how a few teams dominated team time trials and gained significant time on their weaker rivals, especially the French teams. 

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The team time trial is expected to be on stage 6 and around the town of Tarbes at the foot of the Pyrenees. The distance is unknown but is likely to be less than 30km. It could help convince Remco Evenepoel to ride the Tour de France and also set up a huge battle for every second between Jumbo-Visma, UAE Team Emirates and Ineos Grenadiers.

The team time trial is expected to be preceded by a first mountain stage to Cauterets via the Pont d'Espagne, before heading to Bordeaux from Mont-de-Marsan – the adopted hometown of 1973 Tour winner Luis Ocaña, and then on to the Massif Central. 

Reports of a return to the Puy de Dôme have been circulating for a while and the mountain will dominate the second weekend.  

The climb up the dormant volcano hasn't been used since 1988 but has a storied history, including the Poulidor-Anquetil duel in 1964 and the time a spectator punched Eddy Merckx in 1975. Although not overly long, the main 5.8-kilometre ascent of the climb, which spirals around the central cone of the volcano, is unremittingly steep and spectacular, with gradients averaging around 12%. 

The only individual time trial is set for stage 16 in the valley south of Sallanches after the second rest day on Monday July 17. 

The route is expected to start in Passy on the north side of the Arve valley and then climb the Côte de Domancy and finish in the village of Combloux on the southside. The Côte de Domancy has been named the Montée Bernard Hinault after the French rider attacked alone to set up his historic victory at the 1980 World Championships in Sallanches.  The côte de Domancy is only three kilometres long but has an average gradient of 8.5% and a section at 16%.

After climbing the Col de la Loze and the finish at the Courchevel altiport, the Tour route is expected to head north to the Jura and the Vosges via Bourg-en-Bresse and Poligny. 

The Vosges has seen several visits to La Planche des Belles Filles in recent years. The 2023 Tour seems centred around the Grand Ballon, last used in 2019 but never as a summit finish. 

France Bleu notes that local officials are planning to build a 5km path from Geishouse up the Col du Haag to create a 13km climb with nearly a kilometre of vertical altitude gain, making it the only hors-catégorie climb in the Vosges mountains.

With no closing time trial, the Tour de France peloton will transfer to Paris on Sunday morning. The final parade stage is set to start inside the national velodrome of Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, which will host the track racing at the 2024 Paris Olympics. 

The final winner of the stage will again be crowned on the Champs-Elysées after the sprinters fight for one last victory. 

cyclingfever tour de france 2023

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Stephen Farrand

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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IMAGES

  1. 2023 TOUR DE FRANCE ROUTE REVEALED

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  2. Tour de France Femmes 2023 route revealed

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  3. Tour de France 2023: Strecke & Etappen der 110. Frankreich-Rundfahrt #

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  4. Parcours du Tour de France 2023 : toutes les étapes en détail

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  5. Tour De France 2023 Femmes Teams

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  6. CYCLING: Tour de France 2023 route (1) infographic

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COMMENTS

  1. Tour de France 2022

    Tour de France 2022 Racespecial by CyclingFever - The International Cycling Social Network- Just to get even more fever from cycling. Language: English ... Support CyclingFever >> Stage 21 > PARIS LA DÉFENSE ARENA - PARIS CHAMPS-ÉLYSÉES. 24 July / 115.60 kilometer. Start time: 16:30h: Stagewinner: PHILIPSEN Jasper: Winning time:

  2. - CyclingFever

    Racespecial by CyclingFever - The International Cycling Social Network- Just to get even more fever from cycling : Login / Subscribe Language: ... 2023 Tour de France LIVE STREAM Tour de France 2023 - stage 21 (Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines - Paris 115.1km) LIVE STREAM: Sunday, 23 July, starts at 16:00pm Central Europe, 10:00am U.S. Eastern ...

  3. - CyclingFever

    ouest france, 4 July 2022. Le Britannique Chris Froome (Israël-Premier Tech), quadruple vainqueur du Tour de France, est devenu un coureur de bas de classement, depuis sa lourde chute en 2019. Pourtant, il est persuadé de pouvoir encore retrouver un bon niveau. 2.

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    Racespecial by CyclingFever - The International Cycling Social Network- Just to get even more fever from cycling : Login / Subscribe Language: ... Tour de France; Vuelta a España; WorldTour competition Spring competition Autumn competition About CyclingFever; History; Frequently asked questions;

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  6. Tour de France 2023: Results & News

    The full 2023 Tour de France route was revealed at the official Tour de France presentation on 27th October. The race starts across the border in the Basque Country, the first time the race has ...

  7. 2023 Tour de France route

    2023 Tour de France stage summary; Stage preview Date Start Finish Distance Type; Stage 1: Jul 1, 2023: Bilbao: Bilbao: 182 km: Hilly: Stage 2: Jul 2, 2023: Vitoria-Gasteiz

  8. Complete guide to the Tour de France 2023 route

    It looks like it'll be a Tour for the climbers, with the Puy de Dôme returning and 56,400 metres of climbing in all. The map of France - and the Basque Country - with the route on. Not very ...

  9. Tour de France 2023 routes

    The 2023 Tour de France begins in Bilbao on July 1, with a 185km route that heads out to the hilly coastline of the Bay of Biscay before returning to Bilbao for a late, steep climb of the Pike ...

  10. - CyclingFever

    Racespecial by CyclingFever - The International Cycling Social Network- Just to get even more fever from cycling. Language: English | Nederlands ... > Tour de France 2021 > Giro d'Italia 2021 > WorldTourcompetitie 2021 > Vuelta a España 2020 > Giro d'Italia 2020 > Tour de France 2020 > Tour Down Under 2020

  11. Tour de France 2022

    Tour de France 2022 Racespecial by CyclingFever - The International Cycling Social Network- Just to get even more fever from cycling ... Italiano | Español Tour de Suisse Tour de Pologne : Server time: 30 May 2023 00:03:26 CET. Homepage | Games | Calendar | Teams | Login / Subscribe Tour de France 2022. France / 1 July - 24 July Edition: 109 ...

  12. Tour de France 2023: Route and stages

    Tour de France 2023: Route and stages. Jonas Vingegaard won the 110th Tour de France ahead of Tadej Pogacar and Adam Yates. The first blow was struck by the Dane as early as the fifth day, but Pogacar bounced back before he was forced against the ropes in the final week. The 2023 Tour de France set off on Saturday 1 July in Bilbao, Spain, and ...

  13. Tour de France 2023

    Tour de France 2023 profile stage 6 Cauterets (Image credit: ASO). When the Grand Départ last took place in the Basque Country in 1992, the Tour paid only a most perfunctory visit to the Pyrenees ...

  14. 2023 Tour de France

    The 2023 Tour de France was the 110th edition of the Tour de France.It started in Bilbao, Spain, on 1 July and ended with the final stage at Champs-Élysées, Paris, on 23 July.. Defending champion Jonas Vingegaard (Team Jumbo-Visma) won the general classification for the second year in a row. Two-time champion Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) finished in second place, with Adam Yates (UAE ...

  15. Tour de France 2022

    Tour de France 2022 Racespecial by CyclingFever - The International Cycling Social Network- Just to get even more fever from cycling. ... Italiano | Español | Login / Subscribe: Tour de France 2022 | Server time: 13 Oct 2023 20:26:01 CET. Games | Race info | Forum | Chat: Homepage | My Profile

  16. - CyclingFever

    Here you find a collection of interviews on the internet in various languages. Bitossi (Thanks, Arturo!) is searching the Internet on a daily basis looking for fresh interviews. You can find them all in our Interview database containing thousands of riders interviews to be read, while having your cup of coffee. Our eternal thanks go out to Lucybears, we miss him.

  17. Startlist for Giro d'Italia 2023

    22 CONCI Nicola (DNS #7) 23 GROVES Kaden * (DNF #12) 24 KRIEGER Alexander. 25 LEYSEN Senne. 26 RIESEBEEK Oscar (DNS #10) 27 SBARAGLI Kristian. 28 SINKELDAM Ramon (DNS #5) DS LEYSEN Bart, MEERSMAN Gianni. team statistics in race.

  18. Tour de France 2023

    Tour de France 2023 - UAE Team Emirates Bahrain Victorious. Jack Haig. Phil Bauhaus. Nikias Arndt. Wout Poels. Pello Bilbao. Matej Mohoric. Mikel Landa. Fred Wright. Tour de France 2023 - Bahrain - Victorious BORA-hansgrohe. Marco Haller. Patrick Konrad. Bob Jungels. Jordi Meeus. Danny van Poppel. Emanuel Buchmann. Jai Hindley. Nils Politt ...

  19. Tour de France 2023 route presentation

    The 2023 Tour de France Femmes will also feature seven-rider teams, up from the six-rider teams that competed at the inaugural edition this summer. 2022-10-27T10:20:45.759Z This is a long video ...

  20. - CyclingFever

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  21. 2023

    Racespecial by CyclingFever - The International Cycling Social Network- Just to get even more fever from cycling ... UCI Europe Tour . UCI Africa Tour . UCI America Tour . UCI Oceania Tour . UCI Asia Tour . Women . Championships . Criteriums . Races. Calendar. Results. Startlists. Championships 2022: 2023: 2024 >>--- advertisement ---Pro ...

  22. Cyclisme. Le Tour du Pays de Lesneven

    Quatrième et meilleur espoir en 2023, Robin Lesné (Cre'Actuel-Marie Morin-U 22) ne cache pas son ambition sur ce Tour du Pays de Lesneven Côte des Légendes qui se courra sur deux étapes ...

  23. Five moments that defined the 2023 Tour de France

    Features. Road. Five moments that defined the 2023 Tour de France. By Alasdair Fotheringham, Barry Ryan. published 24 July 2023. Through the phases of the Vingegaard-Pogačar duel. (Image credit ...

  24. Earlier today at Stade de France in Paris, France

    3,637 likes, 25 comments - bestofhetfield on May 17, 2023: "Earlier today at Stade de France in Paris, France | May 17th, 2023 during M72 World Tour © Ross Halfin ...

  25. 2023 Tour de France expected to include early TTT and Alpine TT

    The 2023 Tour de France will start in Bilbao in the Basque Country on Saturday July 1 and end in Paris on Sunday July 23. The Tour hasn't included a team time trial since 2019, when Jumbo-Visma ...