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Etappe 1 | 29/06 florence > rimini, etappe 2 | 30/06 cesenatico > bologne, etappe 3 | 01/07 plaisance > turin, etappe 4 | 02/07 pinerolo > valloire, etappe 5 | 03/07 saint-jean-de-maurienne > saint-vulbas, etappe 6 | 04/07 mâcon > dijon, etappe 7 | 05/07 nuits-saint-georges > gevrey-chambertin, etappe 8 | 06/07 semur-en-auxois > colombey-les-deux-églises, etappe 9 | 07/07 troyes > troyes, ruhe | 08/07 orléans, etappe 10 | 09/07 orléans > saint-amand-montrond, etappe 11 | 10/07 évaux-les-bains > le lioran, etappe 12 | 11/07 aurillac > villeneuve-sur-lot, etappe 13 | 12/07 agen > pau, etappe 14 | 13/07 pau > saint-lary-soulan pla d'adet, etappe 15 | 14/07 loudenvielle > plateau de beille, ruhe | 15/07 gruissan, etappe 16 | 16/07 gruissan > nimes, etappe 17 | 17/07 saint-paul-trois-châteaux > superdévoluy, etappe 18 | 18/07 gap > barcelonnette, etappe 19 | 19/07 embrun > isola 2000, etappe 20 | 20/07 nice > col de la couillole, etappe 21 | 21/07 monaco > nice, grand départ florence émilie-romagne 2024, grand départ lille-nord de france 2025, finale in nizza bei der tour de france 2024, riding into the future, "maillot jaune" kollektion, tour operators.

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Tour de france 2022 schedule: start time, stages, length, dates, how to watch live stream, route, tv coverage, highlights.

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The 2022 Tour de France begins on Friday, July 1 through Sunday, July 24 across the networks of NBC, USA Network, and Peacock. This year’s cycling event features nine new sites and stages indicated with an asterisk in the schedule below.

RELATED: 2022 Tour de France TV, live stream schedule

Additionally, there will be two individual time trials in this year’s Tour marking the first time since 2017 that the event begins with an individual time trial and the third straight year with one on the penultimate Tour stage. See below to find out more information including how to watch, stages, the complete schedule, and more.

RELATED: 2022 Tour de France standings

2022 Tour de France Key Information

When is the 2022 tour de france what time does coverage start.

The 2022 Tour de France will take place from July 1-July 24. Coverage of stage 1 begins at 9:30 a.m. ET on Peacock and USA Network.

How can I watch the 2022 Tour de France?

Stream all 21 stages of the 2022 Tour de France from start to finish, or watch on-demand on NBC, USA, and Peacock . All NBC and USA coverage also streams on NBCSports.com/live and the NBC Sports app. Click here for the full broadcast schedule .

RELATED: Tour de France Stage 12 yellow jersey ceremony

How long is the Tour de France 2022?

The 2022 Tour de France is 24 days long. There will be one stage contested per day and three rest days. The first rest day is on July 4 (between stages 3 & 4), the second will be on July 11 (between stages 9 & 10), and the final rest day will be on July 18 (between stages 15 & 16).

How many riders are in the Tour?

There will be a total of 176 riders. There will be 22 teams with 8 riders per team.

RELATED: 2022 Tour de France: Cyclists to watch

How many stages is the Tour de France?

There are 21 stages: 6 flat, 7 hilly, 6 mountain stages, and 2 individual time trials.

What is the 2022 Tour de France schedule and route?

Click here to see the full map.

RELATED: 2022 Tour de France route - stage profiles, previews, start, finish times

How many miles is the 2022 Tour de France?

A total of 3,346.5 km (approximately 2,079.4 miles) is the distance expected to be covered in this year’s Tour.

Previous Tour de France Winners

2021 - Tadej Pogacar

2020 - Tadej Pogacar

2019 - Egan Bernal

2018 - Geraint Thomas

2017 - Chris Froome

2016 - Chris Froome

2015 - Chris Froome

2014 - Vincenzo Nibali

2013 - Chris Froome

2012 - Bradley Wiggins

2011 - Cadel Evans

2010 - Andy Schleck

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Tour de France 2023: When does race start and end? Dates, times and full schedule

Everything you need to know ahead of the start of the world’s most famous cycling race, article bookmarked.

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The Tour de France , cycling’s premier race, is fast approaching with action set to get underway in a few weeks.

The multi-stage race will see the best cyclists in the world race across different terrains and locations throughout France and the Basque country.

Defending champion, Denmark’s Jonas Vingegaard will be looking to retain his yellow jersey with his main threat likely to be two-time Tour de France winner Tadej Pogacar , despite the 24-year-old seeing his early year form and tour preparations hampered by a fractured wrist.

Here is everything you need to know about the Tour de France.

When is the Tour de France?

The 2023 Tour de France will take place between July 1-23 with the riders completing a series of different stages across varying terrain.

Where does the Tour de France start?

The first stage of the Tour de France, known as the Grand Départ, will take place in Bilbao which is located in the Basque Country in northern Spain. The first three stages will all start in Spain before the riders cross over into France for the conclusion of stage three in Bayonne.

How many stages are there in the Tour de France?

There are 21 stages in the Tour de France, with two rest days sandwiched in between. Across the three weeks of racing, the riders will have 6 flat stages, 6 hilly stages, 8 mountain stages and one individual time trial.

  • When cycling meets ‘war games’ – Tour de France: Unchained revitalises Netflix’s well-worn format
  • Tom Pidcock plays down yellow jersey ambitions at Tour de France

How long is the Tour de France?

This year’s Tour de France will be raced over 3,404 kilometres (2,115 miles). The longest day will be stage two from Vitoria-Gasteiz to San Sebastian, which is 209km while the shortest - besides the time trial - at just 115km is the final stage from Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines to Paris Champs-Elysees

How many teams and riders are in the Tour de France?

There are 22 teams that make up the Tour de France. Each team is made up of eight riders meaning 176 cyclists will compete in this year’s race.

How to watch the Tour de France?

For UK viewers, the Tour de France will be available to watch on Eurosport with a valid subscription as well as ITV4.

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2023 Tour de France watch guide: Everything to know to get ready for the 110th edition

tour de france morgen start

The Super Bowl of cycling is back.

Jonas Vingegaard will attempt to defend his title in the 110th Tour de France, which starts July 1. Last year's win was the Danish rider's first victory as he beat the favored Tadej Pogacar with impressive performances in the mountains.

The yellow jersey is up for grabs again as Pogacar will be racing after suffering a broken wrist in April. Other notable participants include Spain's Mikel Landa and Enric Mas, France's David Gaudu and Australia's Jai Hindley and Ben O'Connor.

American team Trek-Segafredo will rebrand at the end of this month and race as Lidl-Trek for the Tour de France. Mattias Skjelmose, 22, won the Tour de Suisse on Sunday and the Dane will be seeking to carry that momentum into the Tour de France.

This year's route starts in Bilbao, Spain before its celebratory conclusion in Paris, France.

Here's everything you need to know for the 2023 Tour de France:

When is the 2023 Tour de France

The 2023 Tour de France starts on July 1 and races through July 23.

How to watch the 2023 Tour de France

The Tour de France will be televised on NBC, NBC Sports and USA Network.

How to live stream the 2023 Tour de France

The Tour de France will be live streamed on Peacock.

Who are the analysts for the 2023 Tour de France

Phil Liggett returns as play-by-play for his 51st Tour de France. He will work alongside veteran analyst and former Tour de France participant Bob Roll. Steve Porino and Christian Vande Velde will report from the scene.

  • Liège-Bastogne-Liège Live - Pogacar attacks solo on Côte de la Redoute
  • Liège-Bastogne-Liège Femmes Live - Chabbey, Brown feature in a dangerous breakaway heading into finale

How to watch stage 21 of the Tour de France

Mad dash in Paris remains of the exciting 2023 race

Tour de France: Jonas Vingegaard before stage 18

  • How to watch

Tour de France stage 20 and 21 dates: July 22, 23

Live streams: ITVX / S4C (UK)|  GCN+ (UK) | SBS On Demand (AUS) | Peacock / USA Networks ($ USA) | FloBikes (CAN $) | Sky Sport (NZ $) 

Use ExpressVPN to watch any stream

Race preview

The herculean GC battle Tour de France between leader Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) and second-placed Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) ended on stage 16 and 17 with the Dane first delivering a stunning blow in the time trial before a knockout punch on the Col de la Loze.

Vingegaard has a comfortable lead in the Tour de France GC standings of 7:29 on Pogačar, winner of stage 20 , and 10:56 on the Slovenian's teammate Adam Yates.

The penultimate stage delivered the final skirmish for riders fighting to move up in the top 10 of the general classification. Simon Yates  (Jayco-AlUla) moved up to fourth overall while Carlos Rodríguez (Ineos Grenadiers) lost one spot and is now in fifth place.  Meanwhile, Giulio Ciccone (Lidl-Trek) sealed the KOM classification.

All eyes now turn to the sprinters whose biggest day of the year is the finish on the Champs Elysées in Paris.

Tour de France – news and information Tour de France route Netflix's 'Tour de France: Unchained' documentary out on June 8 Tour de France – Analysing the contenders

The largely-ceremonial final stage will explode into life in the circuits as the sun sets over Paris.  

Can anyone beat Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck) who has already won four stages, and claimed the points jersey? 

Sprinters such Dylan Groenewegen (Jayco-AlUla), Biniam Girmay (Intermarché-Circus-Wanty), Bryan Coquard (Cofidis) and Sam Welsford (dsm-firmenich) will try to take advantage of tired legs to claim their first stage win of this year's Tour. 

See the entire 2023 Tour de France route for what's coming next.

Cyclingnews will be bringing you full reports, results, news, interviews, and analysis throughout the race. 

Read on to find out how to watch the 2023 Tour de France via free live streams, no matter your location. Use ExpressVPN to watch your usual stream from anywhere in the world, or one of the other highly-recommended VPN services below. 

Check out our full live streaming guide, check out our  comprehensive Tour de France guide , the  Tour de France route , plus the Tour de France start list information powered by  FirstCycling .

How to watch the Tour de France

Follow Cyclingnews on Twitter , Facebook and Instagram for alerts on important stories and action during the race.

NBC hold the broadcasting rights for the Tour de France in the USA. The race will be broadcast live on NBC, as well as the network's streaming service, Peacock TV .

FloBikes will air the Tour de France in Canada. An annual subscription will set you back $12.99/month.

Viewers in the USA can watch the Tour live via the network, while highlights and on-demand streams will also be available.

In the UK, the Tour de France will be aired free to air on TV via Eurosport, ITV4 , and Welsh-language channel S4C . Live coverage and highlights are all available.

The Tour will also be aired live and in full by  GCN+  in the UK, with the same coverage also available via streaming on Discovery+ and on Eurosport's TV channel. Discovery+ is available for Sky Glass, Sky Q, and Sky Stream customers for no extra cost.

In Australia, national broadcaster SBS will carry live Tour de France coverage.

For a local feel and full French-language coverage of the race, head to France TV Around Europe, broadcasters include ARD in Germany, Sporza and RTBF in Belgium, Rai in Italy, and RTVE in Spain.

Best VPN for streaming the Tour de France

Geo-restrictions are the bane of cycling fans because they can prevent you from watching the Tour de France using your live streaming accounts if you are outside of your home country.

While you can always follow Cyclingnews for all the live coverage you can access your geo-blocked live streaming services by simulating being in your home country with a VPN - a 'virtual private network'.

Our experts have thoroughly tested VPNs for live streaming sports and recommend ExpressVPN . The service lets you to watch the race live on various devices – Smart TVs, Fire TV Stick, PC, Mac, iPhone, Android phone, iPads, tablets, etc.

Try ExpressVPN risk-free for 30 days

Try ExpressVPN risk-free for 30 days ExpressVPN offers a 30-day money back guarantee with its VPN service. You can use it to watch on your mobile, tablet, laptop, TV, games console and more. There's 24/7 customer support and three months free when you sign-up.

Try the 12-month plan for the best value price.

There are a couple other very good options that are safe, reliable and offer good bandwidth for streaming sports. Check out the best two options below - NordVPN and the best budget option, Surfshark .

NordVPN - get the world's favorite VPN

NordVPN - get the world's favorite VPN We've put all the major VPNs through their paces and we rate NordVPN as the best for streaming Netflix as our top pick, thanks to its speed, ease of use and strong security features. It's also compatible with just about any streaming device out there, including Amazon Fire TV Stick, Apple TV, Xbox and PlayStation, as well as Android and Apple mobiles.

3. Surfshark: the best cheap VPN

3. Surfshark: the best cheap VPN Currently topping our charts as the fastest VPN around, Surfshark keeps giving us reasons to recommend it. It's a high-value, low-cost option that's easy to use, full of features, and excellent at unblocking restricted content. 

With servers in over 100 countries, you can stream your favorite shows from almost anywhere. Best of all, Surfshark costs as little as $2.30 per month , and it comes with a 30-day money-back guarantee to try it out.

*Live television and streaming, as well as Cyclingnews ' live coverage, always covers start to finish.

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Laura Weislo

Laura Weislo has been with Cyclingnews since 2006 after making a switch from a career in science. As Managing Editor, she coordinates coverage for North American events and global news. As former elite-level road racer who dabbled in cyclo-cross and track, Laura has a passion for all three disciplines. When not working she likes to go camping and explore lesser traveled roads, paths and gravel tracks. Laura specialises in covering doping, anti-doping, UCI governance and performing data analysis.

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Tour de France stage 6 as it happened: Jonas Vingegaard yellow jersey as Tadej Pogačar wins

The second mountain stage of the Tour de France is a chance to challenge Jonas Vingegaard and yellow jersey Jai Hindley

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After the fireworks of yesterday the race looks very different from the day before.

Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe) is now in the yellow jersey and has a quite commanding lead, while Tadej Pogačar (UAE Emirates) lost a minute to his presumed big rival Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma).

It's anyone's guess what will happen on today's stage which features three mountains including the fearsome Col du Tourmalet .

I, Vern Pitt , will bring you all the action as it happens today. Send me any comments on Twitter , or email [email protected]

Stage start: 12:10 BST

Estimated finish: 16:20 BST

Today's parcours

It's another mountain test for the GC men today with Col du Tourmalet tackled from the harder side plus a cat one mountain top finish at Cauterets-Cambasque.

Tour de France 2023 route profiles

Today's timings

Start: 12:10

Summit of the Col d'Aspin: 14:15

Summit Col du Tourmalet: 15:04

Finish: 16:20

All times are British Summer Time and, obviously, estimates.

Recapping a classic mountain raid

Yesterday's stage was truly one for the ages with Jai Hindley soaring into yellow thanks to a good old mountain raid whereby he got in the break and kicked on from there on the final climb to put himself 47 seconds to the good.

At the finish he said "it was an accident" . However, its noteworthy that he recced these stages months ago. It was no accident that he knew what he was doing, made the right moves at the right times and maximised what he could get from the day.

The other winner was J onas Vingegaard, who put Tadej Pogačar to the test and found him wanting to the tune of 1-04 in fact.

Can the Slovenian hit back today? Can Bora-Hansgrohe do an effective job of defending the jersey? Will Vingegaard show them all who's boss? 

Welcome to the second day in the Pyrenees.

Who is Jonas Vingegaard?

Jonas Vingegaard

Several months ago my colleague Tom Thewlis embarked on a mission to profile the reigning Tour de France champ.

The result is a highly insightful feature with sotires you won't have read anywhere else . It ran in our Tour de France preview magazine but we've put it online this monring.

I encourage you all to go and read it .

How tough is the Col du Tourmalet?

Pretty tough with the steepest ramps towards the top.

This is its 85th appearance in the Tour. 

The first over the summit will be given the  Souvenir Jacques Goddet, a cash prize of €5,000, given in honour of the long-standing Tour organiser who died in 2000.  

Co du Tourmalet eastern ascent 2023

What is today's finish like?

Word in the peloton is that its harder than it looks on paper. In theory this is lesser beast than the Tourmalet, indeed the race organsier has only given it a first category rating, but I've been told its deceptive and there could well be time gaps on this climb.

Much like the Tourmalet the steepest sections are towards the top and tired legs could pay a price there.

Cauterets-Cambasque climb on Tour de France 2023

Australia celebrates Jai Hindley's yellow jersey coup

Although, unsurprisingly, cricket dominates the coverage, the Australian press have begun to get excited about the potential for a second yellow jersey winner in Jai Hindley.

Marine Vinall, writes in her profile of the rising star in The Age : "after  Hindley stood on the Tour’s podium for the first time after his stage five victory  and claimed the yellow jersey with a 46-second lead over Vingegaard, he has announced himself as a serious contender."

News.co.au reports that Hindley has "thrust himself into contention" to win the yellow jersey after his "epic win" yesterday.

While Sophie Smith (full disclosure: who is formerly of this parish and is currently travelling with Cycling Weekly on the race) reports for ABC : "Pundits at the Tour remain focused on defending champion Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma), and Yates' teammate Tadej Pogačar, the two-time winner and Slovenian prodigy who lost time on stage five, as the two big yellow jersey favourites.

"But Hindley believes that the general classification is "wide open" and it's very clear he's arrived thoroughly prepared.

"'Stage six, I think this final climb is really tough, actually a lot tougher than what it says on paper, so I think there we can expect some gaps," he said of Thursday's summit finish."

Jai hindley wins stage 5 of the Tour de France 2023

Who is the peloton's best footballer?

The Dutch funsters at Tour de Tietema took a football to the start the other day to find out.

Col du Marie-Blanque Strava stats

The Strava KOM for the final climb of yesterday's stage, held by Richie Porte, got obliterated yesterday. 

Worth noting that Jonas Vingegaard has not been uploading his rides from the Tour de France and neither has Jai Hindley.

Strava leaderboard Col du Marie Blanque after Tour de France 2023

5km to start: The stage is underway currently rolling through the neutral zone.

4km to start: Alexander Kristoff has to change a wheel. No real issues with the race at this pace.

144km to go: We're off and Wout van Aert (Jumbo-Visma) attacks straight away! 

He's got a small group with him, including Julian Alaphilippe. Will Bora-Hansgrohe be happy with him going up the road?

Jersey wearers recap

Yellow - Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe)

White - Tadej Pogacar (UAE Emirates) 

Green - Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck)

Polka-dot - Felix Gall (AG2R Citroen)

142km to go: The van Aert group has quite a big gap. Alaphilippe driving the pace there's c.10-15 of them with others coming across.

James Shaw seems to be there.

139km to go: The only have a gap of eight seconds and Alaphilippe tries to push the group on.

138km to go: Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Deceuninck) is among the escapees as is Michal Kwiatkowski (Ineos Grenadiers).

133km to go: The peloton seems to have locked the front down so these are the break of 15 riders.

Wout van Aert (Jumbo-Visma), Matteo Trentin (UAE Emirates), Michal Kwiatkowski (Ineos Grenadiers), James Shaw (EF Education-EasyPost), Julian Alaphilippe (Soudal - Qucik-Step), Nikias Arndt (Bahrain Victorious), Benoit Cosnefroy (AG2R Citroen), Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Decuninck), Bryan Coquard (Cofidis), Gorka Izagirre (Movistar), Kristis Neilands (Israel-Premier Tech), Christophe Juul-Jenson (Jayco-AlUla), Matis Louvel (Arkea Samsic), Tobias Halland Johannessen (Uno-X), Jonas Gregaard (Uno-X)

They have a gap of 55 seconds now, but there are five further riders coming across.

132km to go: The five trying to bridge are 35 seconds behind.

131km to go: It is in fact six riders coming across and they includ Neilson Powless , who had the polka-dot jersey until yesterday. He's on a mission to get it back I suspect.

126km to go: The chasers aren't making much progress as the break powers on. The gap from the from to the peloton is now 2-30 but the chasers are still 35 second behind the break.

124km to go: They're making progress now just 12 seconds to go.

124km to go: And they've made it the break is now 20 riders strong. Bora-Hansgrohe are doing the work in the front of the peloton.

119km to go: Stefan Küng (Groupama-FDJ) is pictured off the back of the peloton while Mathieu van der Poel dros back from the break to speak to his DS in the team car behind.

The race is on the third category climb that comes before the intermediate sprint.

The break's lead is a little under 3 minutes.

117km to go: We're hearing the descent off the Tourmalet may be a bit wet. It'll be a while before we get there.

116km to go: Kasper Asgreen (Soudal - Qucik-Step) is driving the break on. 

There's a lot of chat around the race that UAE with their, shall we say, enthusiastic approach to the race have paid the price yesterday with Pogačar losing time. 

Now maybe they have made tactical errors there but it's made for much more entertaining racing so I for one would rather they continue with their devil-may-care approach to the Toru de France. Rather that than be boring.

What do you think? Let me know on Twitter or [email protected]

Further to my last update here's Adam Yates's take.

Adam Yates on criticism of UAE‘s tactics yesterday: ‘We’re not racing a bunch of farmers.’ July 6, 2023

110km to go: The gap to the break is over 3 minutes now. The main GC teams are amassed around their guys in the peloton.

Jai Hindley tells GCN he was initially thinking of the GC battle yesterday, not the stage,  but there's a long way to go in this race.

Snazzy threads

A post shared by AG2R CITROËN TEAM (@ag2rcitroenteam) A photo posted by on

105km to go: EF Education sports director Andreas Klier tells the TV that Neilson Powless might want to win the stage but that'll be up to the likes of Bora, Jumbo and UAE and how hard they chase.

100km to go: It's all quiet as it's about 5km to the intermediate sprint.

97km to go: Bryan Coquard, MAthieu van der Poel and Wout van Aert seem to shape up for the sprint.

95km to go: They just roll through with Bryan Coquard (Cofidis) taking the maximum 20 points. Wout van Aert rolls through second.

93km to go: At the other end of the race Mark Cavendish (Astan Qazaqstan) is among those riders dropped from the peloton.

93km to go: Wout van Aert's 17 points at that intermediate sprint move him up to third in the green jersey competition.

However, both he and Coquard are some distance behind Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck). The green jersey holder has 150, Coquard has 104 and van Aert 92.

Col d'Aspin

We're coming to the bottom of the first major ascent of the day, Col d'Aspin. It's not the worst of the day but it is a first category climb.

88km to go: It's 11km to the top of the Aspin and Kasper Asgreen is pushing the pace in the break. The breaks advantage is 3-22.

86km to go: Jumbo have challenged Bora's position at the head of the peloton.

85km to go: Maxim van Gils (Lotto-Dstny) has to stop to get a front wheel puncture changed in the peloton.

Bora have re-established control of the pace.

It's worth noting that there's 3,700m of climbing on today's stage and the vast majority is packed into this 80km or so.

From now until the finish the riders are mostly either going up or down, rarely flat.

82km to go: Asgreen is still at the front of the break. Bit of pressure on Alaphilippe this I'd say.

Mark Cavendish is with lead-out man Cees Bol, not sure where the rest of the sprinters are. He doesn't look like he's having a great time, unsurprisingly.

81km to go: Jonathan Vaughters, the EF Education boss who is workign for TV this week, tells us he thinks that Mark Cavendish will win in the back end of the race if he wins at all. 

That is, as Vaughters points out, what he did in the Giro d'Italia . 

80km to go: Jai Hindley loses one wing-man as Jordi Meeus goes out of the back of the peloton. As the teams designated sprinter he wasnt' goign to be a whole heap of help for the rest of the day so that's not really a big loss for the Australian.

80km to go: There are 3km left to the top of the Col d'Aspin and, well, Asgreen continues to lead the break up the mountain.

80km to go: Jumbo-Visma come to the front of the peloton and wrestle control away from Bora-Hansgrohe.

Meanwhile, up front Wout van Aert now comes to the front of the break in a move that seems to make no obvious sense. 

Sagan goes out the back of the bunch.

79km to go: Coquard and others are beginning to be dropped from the break.

79km to go: Agreen has been dropped to. His work for Alaphilippe done for the day. Nikias Arndy (Bahrain Victorious) and Matteo Trentin (UAE Emirates) also fall out the back of the break.

Jumbo seem to be plotting something here but its not terribly clear what it is.

78km to go: Presumably Jumbo want a higher pace in the peloton to put pressure on Jai Hindley, Pogacar and co, but they don't want to catch the break just yet and so have told van Aert to up the pace there too.

I imagine they'd like to catch van Aert on the final climb or perhaps at the top of the Tourmalet.

Some of the descent of the Tourmalet is quite shallow as is the opening slopes of the last climb so an engine like van Aert would be very useful there.

76km to go: Neilson Powless (EF Education-EasyPost) powers out of second wheel to take the maximum KOM points at the top of the climb.

He's in the virtual polka-dot jersey now.

74km to go: In the peloton, the pace set by Jumbo continues to dispatch riders out the back as they approach the top of the Col d'Aspin.

73km to go: It's worth a time check to remind ourselves the break has 3-18 on the peloton as they descend.

It's nice and dry on the road and Mathieu van der Poel is railing the corners, with van Aert struggling a touch to keep up.

71km to go: Van der Poel flicks the elbow for van Aert to come through but the Jumbo rider shakes his head. It looks like the Dutchman is trying to split things up here but to what end it's not really clear.

It's all settled down again now.

70km to go: The fierce pace up the Col d'Aspin has reduced the break's number to closer to 15 riders.

64km to go: There has been some reforming out front and the break now stands at 16 riders.

Bora are leading the descent in the peloton.

Annemiek van Vleuten wins another Giro Donne stage

Annemiek van Vleuten wins stage seven of the Giro Donne 2023

Dutchwoman Annemiek van Vleuten won yet another Giro Donne stage today.

The pink jersey wearer has a nigh on unassailable lead in the pink jersey of 3-56 over her closest challenger Juliet Labous (DSM-firmenich).

The Movistar leader has won three stages of this race so far, and you wouldn't bet against her winning more. There's three left to go.

60km to go: Bora are back in charge at the front of the peloton as the race begins to climb again.

59km to go: Jai Hindley drops a bidon as a team-mate hands it to him thankfully it doesn't get caught in a wheel or cause him any trouble.

That could have been nasty.

58km to go: Julian Alaphilippe (Soudal - Quick-Step) attacks in the break with over 11km to go to the summit of the Tourmalet. James Shaw (Ef Education-EasyPost) is on his wheel, but no-one else is.

58km to go: To my eyes James Shaw's socks look alarming close to the UCI legal limit.

In case you don't know the sport's governing body says they can't go above half-shin. They even have a special machine to measure them that they use at stage starts sometimes.

57km to go: Van Aert is dragging  the break back to Shaw and Alaphilippe.

And he's caught them.

57km to go: Mathieu van der Poel is dropped from the break. There are 12 riders in the front group now.

56km to go: Jumbo-Visma has amassed at the front of the peloton again as Mads Pedersen (Lidl-Trek) is pictured going out of the back along with Cycling Weekly columnist and British Champion Fred Wright.

56km to go: I've just spotted that Adam Yates, who lost the yellow jersey yesterday, still has his yellow shades on.

Letting go is hard.

55km to go: The gap to the break has come down a bit by the way to 4-28.

It looks like Bora-Hansgrohe may be somewhat depleted in numbers but I can't be 100% sure from the pictures.

54km to go: It's 7km to the top of the Tourmalet but it's nice and sunny at the top so fears for wet roads may prove unfounded.

Bob Jungles (Bora-Hansgrohe) is dropped from the peloton.

53km to go: Jumbo are pressing on and the gap to the break has fallen to 3-35.

Bora don't have many team-mates left around the yellow jersey, though Emanuel Buchmann seems to be there.

51km to go: The gap to the break has stabalised at 3-30 but the peloton is greatly reduced now.

Jumbo have four riders with Vingegaard .

Hindley and Pogačar are joking with each other in the peloton just behind them.

51km to go: Van Aert continues to set the pace at the fornt of the break. James Shaw and Neilson Powless behind him look unfussed but further back ther are some faces in pain.

There's 3.7km to the top of the Tourmalet .

50km to go: Jumbo lose Dylan van Baarle from their mountain train.

They up the pace nd only Hindley and Pogačar can go with them. Vingegaard has two team-mates.

Up front Powless may be in trouble and is back at

Jai Hindley in trouble

50km to go: Hindley has been dropped. He's got no-one with him. There's 3km to the top of the Tourmalet still.

49km to go: Jai Hindley has lost 40 seconds to the Vingegaard, Pogacar group already. 

That's the equivalent of his advantage over the Dane on GC.

Vingegaard attacks!

48km to go: With just over 1km to go to the top Vingegaard attacks and Pogacar goes with him.

47km to go: Wout van Aert and the break come through the coloured smoke from fans' flares at the top of the Tourmalet.

Vingegard and Pogacar are close to joining up with them, just 46 second back.

Hindley is nearly two minutes behind them. He's losing big time today.

45km to go: Over the top of the Tourmalet Wout van Aert sits up a bit to wait for his team leader and 

Halland Johannessen is the first over the top of the mountain he's take the five thousand euro prize.

45km to go: This Tour is rapidly becoming all about Vingegaard and Pogacar today. If this gap persists Hindley will be some distance back and everyone else will be even further back.

Hindley is in the peloton led by UAE Emirates, who aren't exactly going to be chasing too too hard.

43km to go: Vingegaard is leading Pogacar down the descent with Powless close behind.

41km to go: French president Emmanuel Macron is busy glad handing people at the finish, in case you were interested.

Vingegaard has now bridged up to van Aert who'll do the lions share of the work down this descent.

48km to go: There are still a group out front which includes James Shaw, Reuben Guerrero and Michal Kwiatkowski they have 31 seconds on Vingegaard and Pogacar and co.

Behind them is the peloton at 2-34 behind the front of the race. That's where Jai Hindley now is.

38km to go: Vingegaard and Pogacar are passed the most twisty bit of the descent. Van Aert will likely earn his keep here.

32km to go: The distance is ticking down very fast on the descent as van Aert drags the Vingegaard group to within 10 second of the front of the race.

Hindley is now two minutes back. He'll definitely lose the jersey today.

30km to go: It's not that steep but they're flying down hill at 75kph.

28km to go: The good news for Hindley is although the time gaps would be were they to remain as they are now he'd still be on the third step of the podium such is his advantage of over a minute to his team-mate Emmanuel Buchmann.

25km to go: Vingegaard and co have now caught what was left of the break. the only teams with two riders are Jumbo with van Aert and vingegaaard and EF with Shaw and Powless.

There's also Halland Johannessen, Guerreiro (who's name I think I spelled wrong earlier, sorry Reuben) and Kwiatkowski.

And, of course, Tadej Pogačar.

24km to go: No-one is going to give van Aert any help here.

24km to go:  Pogačar says something to James Shaw but the British Tour debutant shakes his head.

23km to go: Buchmann is doing a lot of work on the front of the peloton to try and get his leader Hindley back in contention but he's outgunned by van Aert on this terrain. The gap had dropped below 2 minutes briefly but is now back to 2-15.

Van Aert is even putting his leader in a bit of difficulty! He eases up so the gap closes.

20km to go: Despite other teams, like Ineos having riders inthe group and a seeming incentive to work, the gap is going out to the front of the race as the riders get a final feed. It's now 2-25.

17km to go: Tom Southam, DS at EF, scomes on the radio to give his two riders some encouragement.

16km to go : Jonas Vingegaard went up the Tourmalet in 45-11, which is a record according to the bods at the host broadcaster.

The Grupetto is over 20 minutes behind.

16km to go: It's now 2-40 from the leaders to the yellow jersey group. Van Aert is, as some in the sport might say, doing the madness.

Cauterets-Cambasque

A quick reminder of the final climb, which they're just coming onto now. the bottom is fairly fast and you benefit from being in the wheels but the top is pretty vicious, mostly over 10%.

15km to go: Hindley is now 2-48 behind the leaders and has little hope of bringing it back.

14km to go: Buchmann is still slogging away at the front of the peloton. Jonathan Castroviejo, Ineos' reliable mountain engine, is sat behind him but he's not giving him any help.

The British squad have Carlos Rodriguez and Tom Pidcock as thier leaders in this group.

13km to go: The maximum speed achieved on the stage was set by Tadej Pogačar who hit 103kph on one of the descents today.

12km to go: Van Aert shows little signs of tiring, they're doing 37kph and the road is already pointing skyward.

10km to go: Powless looks a little on the limit as van Aert drives on. He knows no one is going to help him.

9km to go: Egan Bernal collects a bottle and hands it to Pidcock. 

9km to go: It's been sunny today and Pogačar sprays some water over himself.

10km to go:  The ticker was wrong a moment ago. The climb looks to be getting a bit steeper as they enter a set of lacets. 

Neilson Powless is losing contact a bit. He's struggling more than his team-mate Shaw, which is a turn up for the books.

9.5km to go: A grimace is starting to creep across van Aert's face. The speed remains high though.

8.6km to go: Ineos have now started to work at the front of the peloton and the gap to the leaders has come down a touch to 2-30.

8km to go: Buchmann has dropped back but is still in the group.

7km to go: The terrain is rolling its not relentlessly uphill if they want to take back time it's here that strength in numbers would be of some use for Ineos and the rest of the peloton.

7km to go: Van Aert has been given the most aggressive rider prize for the day. Hardly surprising.

6.5km to go: They're going pretty fast still but in 1km time it's going to really ramp up.

The gap is 2-25 to the peloton.

5km to go: Neilson Powless is dropped from the front group. He's got his prize for today so it's not all bad for him. 

Van Aert is still drilling it. Not sure how much he has left though.

4.8km to go: The gradient is biting as you can really see the riders have slowed down.

Shaw is distanced. Kwiatkowski and Halland Johansson are still there.

4.6km to go: Vingegaard goes. Pogacar follows.

4.4km to go: Kwiatkowski is trying to bridge back up to them.

4.2km to go: Pogacar and Vingegaard look pretty comfortable. Kwiatkowski has made it back on.

The peloton, by the way, are 2.27 back.

4km to go: Vingegaard seems happy to set the pace, he's not looked at the others for a turn.

3.8km to go: Kwiatkowski is dropping back a bit a bike length has opened up and as Vingegaard gets out of the saddle he is decisively distanced.

3.6km to go: There's only two of them but they're moving quicker than the peloton, the gap has expanded to 2-37.

3km to go: This tour is really just the two of them now. Vingegaard is in and out of the saddle but Pogačar remains firmly in his.

2.8km to go: Egan Bernal swings off from the peloton. He's been in domestique mode this afternoon.

Jayco set the pace, working for Simon Yates, to limit his loses.

2.7km to go:  Pogačar attacks! And there's a gap!

Its a big one.

2.6km to go: The Dane can't respond and the Slovenian is flying he has 8 seconds.

2.5km to go: Rodriguez and Yates have clipped off the fornt of the peloton.

2.1km to go: Pogacar's pace looks ot have dropepd a touch. But he's holding the 8 second gap.

2km to go: Pogacar looks back to judge the gap he has. Can he up the pace again? Vingegaard is working his way back. Possibly. It's finely balanced.

1.5km to go: It's flattening off a bit now and Pogacar is grimacing as he tries to press home his advantage the clock says its going out to 13 seconds.

1km to go: Under the flamme rouge Pogacar pushes on. It's 17 seconds. He's about a minute down from yesterday, this'll make it a lot closer.

500m to go: Pogacar will get 10 bonus second on the line, Vingegaard will get six.

The gap is 23 seconds.

This bit is steep. Pogacar gets out the saddle.

 Pogačar bows in celebration as he wins the stage. 

His only real rival for the tour de France comes home 23 second down.

What a stage. Johansson comes home in third.

Johannessen sorry.

Hindley is trying to limit his losses.

Guerreiro comes in fourth. Shaw fifth - that's a hell of a ride from him.

Rodriguez and Hindley and Simon Yates are all coming in 2-39 down on Pogačar.

Adam Yates and Tom Pidcock and co come in 3-10 down.

What a stage that was! I'm off to write a race report.

And maybe get a stiff drink.

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Tour de France 2024 begynder i Firenze

Kampen om Tour de France-tronen kommer som altid til at stå mellem en bred vifte af store stjerner og spændende talenter. De seneste to år har danske Jonas Vingegaard vundet. Han kører for det hollandske storhold Visma - Lease a Bike. Han har både i 2022 og 2023 vundet foran sin ærkerival, sloveneren Tadej Pogačar. Kan han gøre det igen i 2024?

Tour de France 2023: Start times stage 16

Wout van Aert - Tour de France 2023: Start times stage 16

Michael Mørkøv is the first rider to leave the starting ramp at 13.05 (CEST). Yellow jersey Jonas Vingegaard is the last one at 17.00.

Most important start times ITT 13.05 – Michael Mørkøv 13.18 – Søren Wærenskjold 13.33 – Mikkel Bjerg 13.40 – Luke Durbridge

14.06 – Yves Lampaert 14.07 – Rémi Cavagna 14.31 – Kasper Asgreen 14.54 – Lawson Craddock 14.57 – Rigoberto Uran

15.22 – Neilson Powless 15.30 – Victor Campenaerts 15.33 – Stefan Küng 15.35 – Nelson Oliveira 15.39 – Michal Kwiatkowski 15.46 – Ion Izagirre 15.52 – Alexey Lutsenko

16.13 – Mattias Skjelmose 16.19 – Wout van Aert 16.30 – Jonathan Castroviejo 16.38 – Tom Pidcock

16.42 – Guillaume Martin 16.44 – David Gaudu 16.46 – Simon Yates 16.48 – Pello Bilbao 16.50 – Sepp Kuss 16.52 – Jai Hindley 16.54 – Adam Yates 16.56 – Carlos Rodriguez 16.58 – Tadej Pogacar 17.00 – Jonas Vingegaard

Another interesting read: route ITT to Combloux.

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Lefevere ziet Evenepoel volgend jaar graag in Sanremo en Ronde van Vlaanderen

tour de france morgen start

Staat Remco Evenepoel volgend seizoen aan de start van Milaan-Sanremo en de Ronde van Vlaanderen? Patrick Lefevere wil die mogelijkheid met zijn kopman bespreken. ‘Ik denk dat er een flandrien in hem zit.’

Neen, Soudal-QuickStep kan niet tevreden zijn met zijn klassieke voorjaar. Met de Scheldeprijs en Nokere Koerse bracht Tim Merlier nog een beetje vreugde, maar in de grote koersen bleef het team onder de verwachtingen. Het uitvallen van Remco Evenepoel heeft daar uiteraard mee te maken. Misschien had hij als tweevoudig winnaar van Luik-Bastenaken-Luik zondag Tadej Pogacar op La Redoute wel kunnen volgen.

Bij L’Avenir maakt Patrick Lefevere zijn balans op. “Onze Vlaamse klassiekers waren een grote teleurstelling. Ik zoek geen excuses. Misschien beantwoordt ons potentieel niet langer aan de verwachtingen.”

Daarom gooit Lefevere een piste voor 2025 op tafel. “Op het einde van dit jaar gaan we samen met Evenepoel bekijken of er een mogelijkheid is om hem aan de start te brengen van Milaan-Sanremo en via een zeer selectief programma door te gaan tot de Ronde van Vlaanderen. Na de Ronde moet hij dan wel rust krijgen om Luik-Bastenaken-Luik te kunnen rijden. Maar ik denk dat er een beetje flandrien in Evenepoel zit. Hij traint soms op deze wegen en wil op een dag dolgraag de Ronde rijden.”

View this post on Instagram Een foto die is geplaatst door Remco Evenepoel (@remco.ev) op 22 Apr 2024 om 3:27 PDT

Evenepoel revalideert momenteel van een gebroken sleutelbeen. Het herstel verloopt vlot, de plannen in de opbouw naar de Tour blijven onveranderd. Vandaag deed Evenepoel een fitnesstraining in een lab in Antwerpen, een nieuwe stap in zijn revalidatie.

Lefevere: “Zijn schouderblad doet momenteel meer pijn dan zijn sleutelbeen. Volgende week trekt hij naar de Sierra Nevada voor een hoogtestage. Evenepoel is heel ontspannen. Hij beseft dat hij nog veel tijd heeft.”

Na de hoogtestage rijdt Evenepoel ofwel de Dauphiné ofwel de Ronde van Zwitserland. Dan trekt hij weer op hoogtestage alvorens de Tour de France begint.

Geselecteerd door de redactie

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IMAGES

  1. Tour de France 2021 start list: Teams for the 108th edition

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  2. I morgen starter Tour de France

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  3. Morgen beginnt die Tour de France 2021

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  4. Vorschau: Die 9. Etappe der Tour de France 2020 führt durch die Pyrenäen

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  5. Tour de France 2024, svelate le tappe del Grand Départ dall'Italia

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  6. 8. Etappe

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COMMENTS

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  17. Tour de France 2023: Start times stage 16

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