uitslag tour de france 2002

Tour de France 2002 standings: results (general classification)

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The 2002 Tour de France was the 89th edition of the prestigious cycling race. It took place from July 6 to July 28, covering a total distance of approximately 3,365 kilometers (2,092 miles). The race consisted of 20 stages, including individual time trials, mountain stages, and flat stages.

American cyclist Lance Armstrong , riding for the U.S. Postal Service team, secured his fourth consecutive Tour de France victory in 2002. Armstrong’s achievements in the Tour de France were later marred by doping allegations, and he was stripped of his seven consecutive Tour de France titles from 1999 to 2005 in 2012 after the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) found evidence of systematic doping during his career. As a result, the official records of the Tour de France do not recognize any winner for the years 1999 to 2005.

The final podium in the general classification originally featured Lance Armstrong (1st), Joseba Beloki of Spain (2nd), and Raimondas Rumšas of Lithuania (3rd). The podium ceremony in Paris marked the end of the 2002 Tour de France.

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2002 Tour de France: Yellow Jersey, Green Jersey, Polka Dot Jersey and White Jersey

The 2002 Tour de France featured distinctive jerseys awarded to riders leading different classifications. Here are the jersey winners of the 2002 Tour de France:

  • Winner: Lance Armstrong (United States) – Riding for the U.S. Postal Service team, Armstrong secured the yellow jersey as the leader of the general classification. LATER NULLIFIED .
  • Winner: Robbie McEwen (Australia) – McEwen, a sprinter, topped the points classification, earning the green jersey.
  • Winner: Laurent Jalabert (France) – Jalabert excelled in the mountain stages, earning the polka dot jersey as the leader in the King of the Mountains classification.
  • Winner: Ivan Basso (Italy) – Basso, a talented young rider, secured the white jersey as the best-placed rider under the age of 25 in the general classification.

Overall Ranking – Tour de France 2002:

The overall ranking of the 2002 Tour de France, which reflects the general classification at the end of the race, was as follows:

  • Lance Armstrong (United States) – U.S. Postal Service
  • Joseba Beloki (Spain) – ONCE-Eroski
  • Raimondas Rumšas (Lithuania) – Lampre
  • Santiago Botero (Colombia) – Kelme-Costa Blanca
  • Igor González de Galdeano (Spain) – ONCE-Eroski
  • José Azevedo (Portugal) – ONCE-Eroski
  • Francisco Mancebo (Spain) – iBanesto.com
  • Levi Leipheimer (United States) – Rabobank
  • Roberto Heras (Spain) – U.S. Postal Service
  • Carlos Sastre (Spain) – CSC–Tiscali

It’s worth noting that these rankings are based on the riders’ cumulative times throughout the entire race. Lance Armstrong’s victory in the 2002 Tour de France marked his fourth consecutive win in the event. However, as mentioned earlier, Armstrong was later stripped of his titles from 1999 to 2005 due to doping allegations. Consequently, the official records do not recognize a winner for those years .

Stage Winners – Tour de France 2002:

The 2002 Tour de France featured a total of 20 stages, each offering opportunities for different riders to excel. Here is a list of the stage winners from the 2002 Tour de France:

  • Prologue (Luxembourg City – Luxembourg City, ITT) – Lance Armstrong (United States)
  • Stage 1 (Luxembourg City – Luxembourg City) – Rubens Bertogliati (Switzerland)
  • Stage 2 (Luxembourg – Saarbrücken) – Óscar Freire (Spain)
  • Stage 3 (Metz – Reims) – Robbie McEwen (Australia)
  • Stage 4 (Épernay – Château-Thierry, TTT) – ONCE–Eroski
  • Stage 5 (Soissons – Rouen) – Jaan Kirsipuu (Estonia)
  • Stage 6 (Forges-les-Eaux – Alençon) – Erik Zabel (Germany)
  • Stage 7 (Bagnoles-de-l’Orne – Avranches) – Bradley McGee (Australia)
  • Stage 8 (Saint-Martin-de-Landelles – Plouay) – Karsten Kroon (Netherlands)
  • Stage 9 (Lanester – Lorient, ITT) – Santiago Botero (Colombia)
  • Stage 10 (Bazas – Pau) – Patrice Halgand (France)
  • Stage 11 (Pau – La Mongie) – Lance Armstrong (United States)
  • Stage 12 (Lannemezan – Plateau de Beille) – Lance Armstrong (United States)
  • Stage 13 (Lavelanet – Béziers) – David Millar (Britain)
  • Stage 14 (Lodève – Le Cap d’Agde) – Richard Virenque (France)
  • Stage 15 (Vallon-Pont d’Arc – Villard-de-Lans) – Santiago Botero (Colombia)
  • Stage 16 (Les Deux Alpes – La Plagne) – Michael Boogerd (Netherlands)
  • Stage 17 (Aime – Cluses) – Dario Frigo (Italy)
  • Stage 18 (Cluses – Bourg-en-Bresse) – Thor Hushovd (Norway)
  • Stage 19 (Régnié – Durette to Mâcon) – Lance Armstrong (United States)
  • Stage 20 (Melun – Paris Champs-Élysées) – Robbie McEwen (Australia)

These stage winners showcased a mix of sprinters, climbers, and time trial specialists, illustrating the diverse skills required in the Tour de France.

Click  here  to remember who the winners of the  Tour de France 2003  were.

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Geschiedenis tour de france vanaf 1903, uitslag tour de france 2002.

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De Tour de France van 2002 met start op 7 Juli 2002 in Luxembourg en finish op 29 Juli 2002 werd na 3282 kilometers in 20 etappes gewonnen door Lance Armstrong (DQ). Lees voor alle uitslagen van de Tour de France van 2002 hier verder. Of bekijk hier alle Tour de France etappes vanaf 1903 .

Doe mee aan het Zweeler Tourspel, met wel €31.000 aan geldprijzen !

 Deze etappe was een USA over Luxembourg kilometer. 3282 kwam uit 189 en de geletruidrager kwam uit Lance Armstrong (DQ).

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Aanvullende informatie

  • Jaartal Tour de France: 2002
  • Startplaats Tour de France: Luxembourg
  • Startdatum: start op 7 Juli 2002
  • Einddatum: finish op 29 Juli 2002
  • Lengte Tour de France in KM: 3282
  • Aantal etappes: 20
  • Gemiddelde snelheid: 39.94
  • Deelnemers: 189
  • Gefinished: 153
  • Uitvallers: 36
  • % Uitvallers: 19% uitvallers
  • Volledige naam winnaar: Lance Armstrong (DQ)
  • Achternaam winnaar: Armstrong (DQ)
  • Leeftijd winnaar: 30
  • Afkomst winnaar: USA
  • Team van de winnaar: US Postal
  • Volledige naam 2e Plaats: Joseba Beloki
  • Achternaam 2e plaats: Beloki
  • Achterstand 2e plaats: 7 min 17 sec
  • Volledige naam 3e plaats: Raimondas Rumsas
  • Achternaam 3e plaats: Rumsas
  • Achterstand 3e plaats: 8 min 17 sec
  • Volledige naam winnaar Punten: Robbie McEwen
  • Achternaam groene trui: McEwen
  • Land winnaar groene trui: Australië
  • Volledige naam winnaar Bergklassement: Laurent Jalabert
  • Achternaam bolletjestrui: Jalabert
  • Land winnaar bolletjestrui: Frankrijk
  • Ploegenklassement (of land): ONCE

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2002 Tour de France: results and classification

General classification of the 2002 tour de france.

* Disqualified

Jerseys of the 2002 Tour de France

Stages of the 2002 tour de france.

Prologue (Luxembourg - Luxembourg, 7 km)

Stage 1 (Luxembourg - Luxembourg, 192.5 km)

Stage 2 (Luxembourg - Sarrebrück, 181 km)

Stage 3 (Metz - Reims, 174.5 km)

Stage 4 (Epernay - Chateau Thierry, 67.5 km in Team Time Trial)

Stage 5 (Soissons - Rouen, 195 km)

Stage 6 (Forges les Eaux - Alençon, 199.5 km)

Stage 7 (Bagnoles de l'Orne - Avranches, 176 km)

Stage 8 (St Martin de Landelles - Plouay, 217.5 km)

Stage 9 (Lanester - Lorient, 52 km in Individual Time Trial)

Stage 10 (Bazas - Pau, 147 km)

Stage 11 (Pau - La Mongie, 158 km)

Stage 12 (Lannemezan - Plateau de Beille, 199.5 km)

Stage 13 (Lavelanet - Béziers, 171 km)

Stage 14 (Lodève - Mont Ventoux, 221 km)

Stage 15 (Vaison la Romaine - Les Deux Alpes, 226.5 km)

Stage 16 (Les Deux Alpes - La Plagne, 179.5 km)

Stage 17 (Aime - Cluses, 142 km)

Stage 18 (Cluses - Bourg en Bresse, 176.5 km)

Stage 19 (Régnié Durette - Mâcon, 50 km in Individual Time Trial)

Stage 20 (Melun - Paris/Champs Elysées, 144 km)

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Tour de France 2002

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Millar delight

David Millar had come to this year's Tour determined to win a road-race stage, and yesterday he achieved that ambition with a performance that combined confidence and calculation. It is Britain's first stage win in the race since 2000, when the 25-year-old Scot won the prologue time trial.

Since then, Millar has been keen to prove that he is more than a specialist against the watch in the Chris Boardman mould, and that is why he was particularly keen to win one of the road-race stages, something that no Briton had achieved since Max Sciandri in 1995.

Yesterday, he rode the perfect stage. On the day's first climb, the Col du Montsegur, in the heart of the country that saw the Cathar crusades of the thirteenth century, he infiltrated the day's breakaway group, which was led by Laurent Jalabert, and would gain 13 minutes on a dormant field.

In the final 12 miles it was Millar's attack that split the group. He took four riders with him, including the double stage winner David Extebarria of Spain. Once they entered the streets of Béziers, a game of cat and mouse developed, with each rider trying to break away alone. Millar responded personally to the most threatening move - from the Spaniard David Latasa - and still had enough strength left to take a convincing win in the slightly uphill sprint.

'I saw in the last two miles that I was easily the strongest rider in the group,' he said. 'For the last 50 kilometres I said to myself that I should go for the sprint finish rather than try to escape on my own.'

Millar's hopes of winning the white jersey awarded to the best young rider evaporated when his legs gave out at the foot of the first mountain-top finish of the race on Thursday. On Friday he rode through the six-hour Pyrenean stage with the sprinters, finishing 40 minutes behind Lance Armstrong, but crucially saving his energy. He also slipped way down the overall standings, something that he had already said would have to happen if he were to be given his head in escapes like that of yesterday.

Behind the 11, Lance Armstrong's US Postal Service team merely kept a steady tempo up at the front of the field. Two mountain-top stage wins out of two in the Pyrenees have given the American a comfortable lead in the yellow jersey as he bids for his fourth Tour win in succession. With four stages in the Alps awaiting this week, yesterday was a stage when he could afford to give the lesser lights their head.

Today the Tour de France will finish for the seventh time on top of Mont Ventoux, the great, barren mountain that dominates Provence. If the heat is anything like yesterday's, when the temperature on the road reached 45 degrees centigrade, it will inevitably raise memories of the day 35 years ago when Britain's Tom Simpson died on these slopes in the Tour.

Even Armstrong fears the Ventoux. 'It's a hard, violent mountain. Probably the most difficult mountain in France.' He would like to win on the moonscape summit, and, if he does, the Tour will be as good as over. Millar's Tour, on the other hand, is already complete.

  • Tour de France 2002
  • Tour de France

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Eschborn-Frankfurt: Maxim Van Gils takes top spot in bunch sprint

Belgian beats Aranburu, Sheehan as Jan Christen's solo move nullified in final kilometre

The in-form Maxim Van Gils (Lotto-Dstny) sped to his second win of the season at Eschborn-Frankfurt, sprinting to the win at the end of the 210km race from a greatly reduced peloton.

The Belgian popped up late in the sprint finish, hitting the wind at the last moment to edge out Alex Aranburu (Movistar) and Riley Sheehan (Israel-Premier Tech) to take the victory.

Van Gils was the only Lotto-Dstny man among the 28-man lead group which reached Frankfurt, surfing wheels in the final kilometre before working his way to the front on the closing straight in the slipstream of Kevin Vermaerke (DSM-Firmenich PostNL) and then Aranburu.

In the closing 100 metres of the race, he rounded fourth-placed neo-pro Lukas Nerurkar (EF Education-EasyPost) and another neo-pro in Sheehan before edging out Aranburu, on paper the quickest finisher among the top contenders.

The result marks Van Gils' fourth professional victory and his first at WorldTour level. He's enjoyed a very consistent spring campaign to date, finishing third at Strade Bianche and La Flèche Wallonne, plus fourth at Liège-Bastogne-Liège and seventh at Milan-San Remo.

"It's my last race of an already incredible spring. To finish with a WorldTour victory is an absolute dream," Van Gils said after the finish.

"My feeling was not super good today, but the team made the race hard to drop the sprinters. This gave me confidence and then I just had to survive the last steep climb of Mammolshain and then just stay in the wheels and try to recover and focus on my sprint. Just before the line it opened, and I finished it off.

"It's really crazy, everything went perfect this season, I'm riding on a really high level so I really enjoy it.

"Today I win a sprint and a few days back I was good in the Ardennes in climbing races and I already won a time trial this year. It's crazy."

Van Gils, who also won the reduced one-day version of the Vuelta a Andalucía in late March, concluded by saying that he'll now turn his attention to the summer and the Tour de France, which he'll prepare for with an appearance at the Tour de Suisse next month.

How it unfolded

The final sprint was set up by several teams among the select lead group which had survived after a thinning-out process over the major climbs of the day, which included two ascents of the Feldberg (11km at 5% and 8km at 6%) and three ascents of the Mammolshain (2.4km at 7.7%).

The early break of the day – consisting of Jacopo Mosca (Lidl-Trek), Warre Vangheluwe (Soudal-QuickStep), and John Degenkolb (DSM-Firmenich PostNL) – went almost from the start and hung out until the 90km to go mark up the second ascent of the Feldberg.

UAE Team Emirates and Lotto-Dstny had been busy working at the head of the peloton behind, with the two teams keen to get rid of sprinters including Caleb Ewan (Jayco-AlUla), Sam Bennett (Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale), and Alexander Kristoff (Uno-X Mobility).

They'd succeed in their goal, with large groups eventually coming to the finish five and 19 minutes down on the leaders and a few fast finishers among the front group.

Once Vangheluwe, the last man from the break, was caught, it was time for the climbers to show off, with Jan Christen (UAE Team Emirates), Ben Healy (EF Education-EasyPost), and Emanuel Buchmann (Bora-Hansgrohe) all on the move on the Feldberg.

Healy and Buchmann went clear on the other side, pushing on together on the descent and onto flatter ground. However, the pair would be caught after 13km on the move, with 55km to go.

The final flashpoint of the day came with the final ascent of the Mammolshain, 36km from the finish. There, neo-pro Christen went again, getting a gap and going solo at the head of the race.

The 19-year-old Swiss rider would carry a slim gap forward, his advantage never stretching much further beyond the 20-second mark. He hit the final 10km with a slim 16-second gap, and with several teams contributing to the chase behind, his time out front was numbered.

He held on to lead by 10 seconds at the 5km mark, but he'd be caught by the charging peloton at 2.3km to go, leaving it up to EF Education-EasyPost, Bora-Hansgrohe, and Lidl-Trek to set up the final sprint.

It was EF and DSM-Firmenich PostNL who launched the final dash to the line inside the last kilometre, but neither team would prevail at the line as Van Gils weaved his way through to hit the front at the last moment and come away with the big win.

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uitslag tour de france 2002

89th Tour de France - Grand Tour

France, july 6-28, 2002.

Stage profile     Live report     Results     Next Result     Brad McGee's diary      Floyd Landis' diary

Prologue - Saturday July 6, 2002: Luxembourg ITT, 7 km

Show of force: armstrong flexes muscles on roller coaster prologue, photography.

Some more photos of the prologue by Chad Latimer , added July 15, 2002

  • Lance Armstrong (USPS) takes a test run along the prologue course
  • The boys from ONCE-Eroski warm up before the prologue
  • Pick the odd man out
  • Style-mister George Hincapie warms up with Axel Merckx and Floyd Landis
  • Christophe Mengin (FDJeux.com) looks a tad nervous as he rolls through the starting gate
  • Luxembourg is certainly a beautiful country , although Jan Svorada's not paying too much attention to the surroundings
  • Belgian hard-man Rik Verbrugghe (Lotto-Adecco) powers along
  • Dario Frigo (Tacconi Sport) flicks into an easier gear on a false flat
  • A Mapei rider crunches the 12 cog along the flatter sections of the course
  • Christophe Moreau (Credit Agricole) suffers his way to a below-par 40th place
  • David Millar (Cofidis) puts his machine into overdrive
  • Laurent Jalabert (CSC-Tiscali) borrows team-mate Tyler Hamilton's TT bike to great effect, placing second
  • Lance Armstrong (USPS) drives on for a winning time

More photos of the prologue, by Fotoreporter Sirotti , added July 10, 2002

  • Lance Armstrong - (USPS) powers into a corner
  • Lance Armstrong pulls his scariest face just after the prologue
  • Joseba Beloki - ONCE-Eroski pushes for 9th place
  • Laurent Brochard - (Fra) Jean Delatour goes for the pirate look
  • Baden Cooke - (Aus) from FDJeux.com goes for it in his first TdF prologue
  • Oscar Freire - (Spa) Mapei-Quick Step comes into a corner
  • Dario Frigo - (Ita) Tacconi Sport, knee out and concentrating
  • Serguei Gontchar - (Ukr) Fassa Bortolo
  • Ivan Gotti - (Ita) Alessio, helmetless and hammering
  • Laurent Jalabert - (Fra) CSC-Tiscali doing his best to take out the prologue
  • Jaan Kirsipuu - (Est) Ag2R Prevoyance
  • Looking ahead with Levi Leipheimer - (USA) from Rabobank
  • Denis Menchov - (Rus) iBanesto.com; sunnies and cornering
  • David Millar - (GBr) Cofidis cruising in the prologue
  • Christophe Moreau - (Fra) Credit Agricole corners hard
  • Didier Rous - not looking like he is really enjoying the prologue.
  • Raimondas Rumsas - (Ltu) Lampre Daikin doing his Darth Vader thing
  • Oscar Sevilla - (Spa) Kelme-Costa Blanca doing his bit for book-worms
  • Richard Virenque - (Fra) Domo-Farm Frites
  • Erik Zabel - decides against airflow and goes for fashion with his choice of helmet in the prologue
  • Haimar Zubeldia - (Spa) Euskaltel-Euskadi
  • Big Lance - takes the win, and the lion

Photos by AFP

  • Lance Armstrong (USPS) warms up with his son Luke in attendance, offering him a bidon.
  • Lance Armstrong leaves the starting gate
  • Lance Armstrong takes a corner during the prologue time trial in Luxembourg
  • Lance Armstrong rides during the prologue time trial in Luxembourg
  • Bradley McGee (FDJeux.com) finished in 9.21.680, which gave him 11th place.

Photos by Fotoreporter Sirotti

  • Lance Armstrong (USPS) gets ready to roll
  • Lance Armstrong (USPS) in the start house
  • Ivan Basso (Fassa Bortolo) in the starting house
  • Joseba Beloki (ONCE) in the starting house
  • Laszlo Bodrogi (Mapei) in the starting house
  • Michael Boogerd (Rabobank) in the starting house
  • Santiago Botero (Kelme) in the starting house
  • Laurent Brochard (Jean Delatour) in the starting house
  • Baden Cooke (FDJeux.com) in the starting house
  • Erik Dekker (Rabobank) in the starting house
  • Ludo Dierckxsens (Lampre) in the starting house
  • Laurent Dufaux (Alessio) in the starting house
  • Dario Frigo (Tacconi) in the starting house
  • Igor Gonzalez de Galdeano (ONCE) in the starting house
  • Serguei Gontchar (Fassa Bortolo) in the starting house
  • Ivan Gotti (Alessio) in the starting house
  • Tyler Hamilton (CSC) in the starting house
  • Roberto Heras (USPS) in the starting house
  • George Hincapie (USPS) requires a third hand
  • Laurent Jalabert (CSC) in the start house
  • Jaan Kirsipuu (Ag2r) in the start house
  • Andrei Kivilev (Cofidis) in the start house
  • Floyd Landis (USPS) looking pensive before the start
  • Floyd Landis (USPS) in the starting house
  • Levi Leipheimer (Rabobank) in the starting house
  • Kevin Livingston (Telekom) gets ready to start
  • Kevin Livingston (Telekom) in the starting house
  • Robbie McEwen (Lotto-Adecco) in the starting house
  • Brad McGee (FDJeux.com) in the starting house
  • Denis Menchov (iBanesto.com) in the starting house
  • Axel Merckx (Domo) in the starting house
  • David Millar (Cofidis) in the starting house
  • Christophe Moreau (Credit Agricole) in the starting house
  • Stuart O'Grady (Credit Agricole) in the starting house
  • Didier Rous (Bonjour) in the starting house
  • Jose Luis Rubiera (USPS) in the starting house
  • Raimondas Rumsas (Lampre-Daikin) in the starting house
  • Oscar Sevilla (Kelme) in the starting house
  • Tom Steels (Mapei) in the starting house
  • Andrea Tafi (Mapei) in the starting house
  • Rik Verbrugghe (Lotto-Adecco) in the starting house
  • Richard Virenque (Domo) in the starting house
  • Nicolas Vogondy (FDJeux.com) in the starting house
  • Haimar Zubeldia (Euskaltel-Euskadi) in the starting house
  • Lance Armstrong on the podium, arms raised
  • Lance Armstrong (USPS) puts on his first Maillot Jaune
  • Lance Armstrong (USPS) raises his arms as the first wearer of the Maillot Jaune

© Cyclingnews.com 2002

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Points at finish

Youth day classification, team day classification, race information.

uitslag tour de france 2002

  • Date: 23 April 2024
  • Start time: 14:50
  • Avg. speed winner: 46.903 km/h
  • Race category: ME - Men Elite
  • Distance: 2.28 km
  • Points scale: 2.WT.Stage
  • UCI scale: UCI.WR.C1.Stage
  • Parcours type:
  • ProfileScore: 0
  • Vert. meters: 3
  • Departure: Payerne
  • Arrival: Payerne
  • Race ranking: 27
  • Startlist quality score: 688
  • Avg. temperature: 6 °C

Race profile

uitslag tour de france 2002

Grand Tours

  • Vuelta a España

Major Tours

  • Volta a Catalunya
  • Tour de Suisse
  • Itzulia Basque Country
  • Milano-SanRemo
  • Ronde van Vlaanderen

Championships

  • European championships

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  • GP Montréal

Popular riders

  • Tadej Pogačar
  • Wout van Aert
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IMAGES

  1. Tour de France 2002 Official Map Poster

    uitslag tour de france 2002

  2. No One Gets The Tour De France Titles Lance Armstrong Lost : The Two

    uitslag tour de france 2002

  3. Tour de France rit 18: uitslag en standen

    uitslag tour de france 2002

  4. Tour de France 2002

    uitslag tour de france 2002

  5. Tour de France 2002

    uitslag tour de france 2002

  6. Tour de France Photo

    uitslag tour de france 2002

VIDEO

  1. TOUR DE FRANCE 2002 PLATEAU DE BEILLE parte 1

  2. Tour de France 2002 Etappe 14 Lodève

  3. 8e étape du Tour de France 2002

  4. 6e étape du Tour de France 2002

  5. Analyse de l'étape 2

  6. 14e étape du Tour de France 2002

COMMENTS

  1. 2002 Tour de France

    The 2002 Tour de France was a multiple-stage bicycle race held from 6 to 28 July, and the 89th edition of the Tour de France.The event started in Luxembourg and ended in Paris. The Tour circled France counter-clockwise, visiting the Pyrenees before the Alps.It has no overall winner—although American cyclist Lance Armstrong originally won the event, the United States Anti-Doping Agency ...

  2. Tour de France 2002 standings: results (general classification)

    The 2002 Tour de France was the 89th edition of the prestigious cycling race. It took place from July 6 to July 28, covering a total distance of approximately 3,365 kilometers (2,092 miles). The race consisted of 20 stages, including individual time . The latest cycling news. Scores, standings, states, rumors and competitions.

  3. Uitslag Tour de France 2002

    Uitslag Tour de France 2002. De Tour de France van 2002 met start op 7 Juli 2002 in Luxembourg en finish op 29 Juli 2002 werd na 3282 kilometers in 20 etappes gewonnen door Lance Armstrong (DQ). Lees voor alle uitslagen van de Tour de France van 2002 hier verder. Of bekijk hier alle Tour de France etappes vanaf 1903.

  4. Results of the 2002 Tour de France

    2002 Tour de France: results and classification Start: July 6th 2002 End: July 28th 2002 Number of stages : 20 Number of participants : 189 Number of finishers : 153 Distance : 3277.5 km Average speed : 39.88 km/h General classification of the 2002 Tour de France. Rider Time; 1: Lance Armstrong* (Usa)

  5. Tour de France 2002 Stage 20 results

    Stage 20 (Final) » Melun › Paris (140km) Lance Armstrong is the winner of Tour de France 2002, before Joseba Beloki and Raimondas Rumšas. Robbie McEwen is the winner of the final stage.

  6. Tour de France 2002 Stage 1 results

    Stage 1 » Luxembourg › Luxembourg (192.5km) Rubens Bertogliati is the winner of Tour de France 2002 Stage 1, before Erik Zabel and Robbie McEwen. Rubens Bertogliati was leader in GC.

  7. Tour de France 2002 Stage 3 results

    Robbie McEwen is the winner of Tour de France 2002 Stage 3, before Erik Zabel and Baden Cooke. Erik Zabel was leader in GC.

  8. 2002 Tour de France

    The 2002 Tour de France was a multiple-stage bicycle race held from 6 to 28 July, and the 89th edition of the Tour de France. The event started in Luxembourg and ended in Paris. The Tour circled France counter-clockwise, visiting the Pyrenees before the Alps. It has no overall winner—although American cyclist Lance Armstrong originally won the event, the United States Anti-Doping Agency ...

  9. www.cyclingnews.com presents the 89th Tour de France, 2002

    89th Tour de France - Grand Tour France, July 6-28, 2002 . Stage profile Live report Results Previous Result. Stage 20 - Sunday July 28: Melun -Paris-Champs-Elysées, 140 km McEwen ends in green with Champs Elysées win

  10. www.cyclingnews.com presents the 89th Tour de France, 2002

    The final Alpine climb of the 2002 Tour De France is the Cat. 1 Col de la Colombière (11.8 km/5.6%), which climbs the magnificent Massif des Aravis via the shorter south side of the col, but with the last 3 km at 8%, the narrow Colombière is no pique-nique. After the final summit, Stage 17 descends 21 km to finish in Cluses, the main town in ...

  11. Ronde van Frankrijk 2002

    Zie de categorie Tour de France 2002 van Wikimedia Commons voor mediabestanden over dit onderwerp. Bronnen Deze pagina is voor het laatst bewerkt op 6 jan 2024 om 22:58. De tekst is beschikbaar onder de licentie Creative Commons Naamsvermelding/Gelijk delen, er kunnen aanvullende voorwaarden van toepassing zijn. Zie de ...

  12. Tour de France 2002 2002

    Get updates on the latest Tour de France 2002 2002 action and find articles, videos, commentary and analysis in one place. Eurosport is your go-to source for Cycling news.

  13. www.cyclingnews.com presents the 89th Tour de France, 2002

    89th Tour de France - Grand Tour France, July 6-28, 2002 . Main page Stage profile Start List Results. Stage 1 - Sunday July 7: Luxembourg - Luxembourg, 192.5 km Complete Live Report. Start time: 12:45 CEST Estimated finish time: 17:30 CEST. 11:40 CEST Welcome to Cyclingnews' coverage of the first open road stage of the Tour de France.

  14. Startlist for Tour de France 2002

    51 JALABERT Laurent. 52 HAMILTON Tyler. 53 PERON Andrea. 54 PIIL Jakob Storm. 55 PIZIKS Arvis. 56 SANDSTØD Michael (DNF #11) 57 SASTRE Carlos. 58 SØRENSEN Nicki. 59 VAN HYFTE Paul.

  15. McEwen sprints in to dethrone Zabel and grab the green

    July 29: Easy for Armstrong and Jalabert but points prize goes to Australian after duel all the way to the Champs Elysees.

  16. Cycling Tour de France 2002 Part 2

    The 2002 Tour de France was a multiple stage bicycle race held from 6 July to 28 July 2002, and the 89th edition of the Tour de France. It has no overall win...

  17. Millar delight

    Sat 20 Jul 2002 20.12 EDT. David Millar had come to this year's Tour determined to win a road-race stage, and yesterday he achieved that ambition with a performance that combined confidence and ...

  18. www.cyclingnews.com presents the 89th Tour de France, 2002

    Le Tour De France 2002 has announced the official route and it appears to be a classic tour template, with three distinct phases: a first week of flat, fast stages across Northern France; then two weeks of tough mountain stages in the Pyrenees and Alpes before the final dash to Paris. Le Tour '02 opens in the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, which ...

  19. Eschborn-Frankfurt: Maxim Van Gils takes top spot in bunch sprint

    Dani has reported from the world's top races, including the Tour de France, World Championships, and the spring Classics. They have interviewed many of the sport's biggest stars, including Mathieu ...

  20. Tour de France 2002 Stage 6 results

    Stage 6 » Forges-les-Eaux › Alencon (199.5km) Erik Zabel is the winner of Tour de France 2002 Stage 6, before Óscar Freire and Robbie McEwen. Igor González de Galdeano was leader in GC.

  21. www.cyclingnews.com presents the 89th Tour de France, 2002

    "I always have a special motivation at the Tour de France; I always go 'au bloc' (all-out), declared a delighted Lance Armstrong to the TV cameras in almost fluent French after winning the Prologue Time Trial of the 2002 Tour de France, with a smooth segue from last July 29th, when the Texan won his 3rd consecutive Tour de France.

  22. Tour de France 2002 Stage 2 results

    Stage 2 » Luxembourg › Saarbrücken (181km) Óscar Freire is the winner of Tour de France 2002 Stage 2, before Robbie McEwen and Erik Zabel. Rubens Bertogliati was leader in GC.

  23. 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 ...

  24. Ronde van Vlaanderen / Tour des Flandres 2002 One day race results

    185. Sprint. RUŠKYS Saulius. Gerolsteiner. 27. Gerolsteiner. -. DNF=Did not finish / DNS=Did not start / OTL = Outside time limit / DF=Did finish, no result / NR=No result Rider wearing the jersey >50% of race distance in group before peloton. Andrea Tafi is the winner of Ronde van Vlaanderen / Tour des Flandres 2002, before Johan Museeuw and ...

  25. Tour de Romandie 2024 Prologue results

    Maikel Zijlaard is the winner of Tour de Romandie 2024 Prologue, before Cameron Scott and Julian Alaphilippe. Maikel Zijlaard was leader in GC.