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Stage 21 of the Tour de France live - 07/23/2023

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Jonas Vingegaard seals 2022 Tour de France triumph in Paris – as it happened

Jasper Philipsen sprinted to victory in Paris as Jonas Vingegaard of Jumbo-Visma clinched his triumph in the overall race

  • 24 Jul 2022 Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin–Deceuninck) wins Tour de France Stage 21!
  • 24 Jul 2022 Preamble

Triumphant: Jumbo-Visma’s Jonas Vingegaard, Wout Van Aert, Tiesj Benoot, Sepp Kuss and Christophe Laporte cross the finish line.

Jeremy Whittle reports from Paris:

C’est la vie, c’est la guerre, c’est le Tour. That is it for another year. Thank you for reading, thanks for emailing and tweeting, and see you soon for more. I will be back tomorrow for stage two of the Tour de France Femmes. We will have a report for stage 21 of the men’s race coming up soon. Au revoir.

Tadej Pogacar, the beaten champion, has a chat with Eurosport and is asked how it felt to ride into Paris in second, rather than first position on GC: “I was still really happy to be here. I was really proud with my other teammates. We were riding strong. Yeah, it was not bad at all, I was enjoying it a lot today.”

On the brewing Vingegaard rivalry: “I think we [the fans] are going to have a really great next couple of years in front of the television ... me, I will for sure enjoy these years on the bike, because I love the challenge.”

Will he celebrate tonight? asks Bernie Eisel for Eurosport. “I guess so. We will see what we have prepared ... For sure we’re going to have a nice day, a nice night. Tomorrow I’m already on stage two of the Tour de Femmes, to support my fiancee. Tomorrow I cheer on, then I need to go home and set up some telecoms stuff. Busy life.”

And there you have it. Tadej Pogacar, the two-times Tour de France champion, has to get home and sort out his broadband connection. Then he can start thinking about next year, maybe watch some Tour highlights on YouTube ...

On the podium.

Jumbo-Visma’s Jonas Vingegaard holds his daughter Frida on the podium.

Mads Pedersen (Trek-Segafredo) has a chat, and is asked about his stage 13 win: “It was definitely one of the last options for me in this Tour. I planned to go all in for the first week, but I was a little bit sick before, so to have this stage win is absolutely amazing ...

“Cycling is the new national sport in Denmark. It’s absolutely crazy ... of course with the start in Copenhagen it was really special for all of us. And to see all these people on the road, we didn’t expect that, not that many people. Of course with Jonas in the yellow jersey it makes cycling grow even more, and now we see half the Danish people here [in Paris], so that’s pretty amazing.”

Vingegaard, the champion , speaks while holding his young daughter: “It’s just incredible. I mean, now I’ve finally won the Tour. Now nothing can go wrong anymore and I’m sitting with my daughter, and it’s just incredible.

“It’s the biggest cycling race of the year, and it’s the biggest one you can win, and now I’ve done it, and no one can take this away from me.

“I always had the feeling that at least I could fight for the win. But I think yeah, in the end, when I really started believing was after Hautacam. I mean, I always believed in it, but then I was really thinking: something has to go almost wrong before I don’t win, that was after Hautacam .”

He is asked about seeing all the Danish fans in Paris: “That was really incredible for me. So many Danes here, so many Danes arrived to see me ride in the yellow jersey. I appreciate it so much and I have to say thank you to every Dane who’s here and that has been cheering for me for three weeks now, it means everything to me.”

How will he celebrate his victory? “Tuesday I have to go to Holland ... Wednesday in Copenhagen, Thursday in the town I live in, and Friday I’ll be on the couch for one week.

“Of course I’m super happy about my victory now. Of course now I want to celebrate, relax, but then I also want more [Tour de France victories], yes.”

“Where’s my make-up,” asks south London’s Fred Wright (Bahrain-Victorious) when he appears for a chat on Eurosport.

“I’ve loved it. I loved it last year, but to be that percentage or so stronger, and be able do stuff in the races, it’s been so much fun ... You get so wrapped up in it. It’s only when you look at your phone afterwards that you’re like: ‘Oh yeah, actually, this is the Tour de France’.”

Adam Blythe tells him how brilliant his performances have been. “You’re trying to get me a bit emotional again ... it’s great, I’ve loved every minute of it. Even the mountains: it’s suffering, but it’s beautiful suffering. It’s been great – I’m happy.”

Peter Sagan speaks! He is asked about the final sprint on Eurosport. “Pretty messy ... On the last turn my chain dropped ... I started my sprint but Jakobsen was in the front. His chain dropped out ... I came over, I gained some positions, but in the end it was not enough.”

There you go: Jaksobsen dropped his chain, says Sagan, which explains why he was nowhere in the end.

How was his Tour? “For me it was quite easy. A lot of years I was dealing with media every day, podium, I did it with green jersey ... interview stuff, people around the hotel ... just quite good. The average speed was high, every day full gas.”

And what about his performance? “It could be better, it could be worse, that’s life. No victory but I’m here, I finished. It’s quite special [in Paris].

“Wout van Aert is like some kind of new level. If you see his results in Tour de France , it’s very impressive. Sprint, time trial, climb ... I don’t know why he doesn’t go for yellow jersey ... it looks like easy, he can go [for yellow].”

The outgoing champion, Tadej Pogacar, speaks about his late attack on the final lap in Paris: “It was kind of funny. Thomas and Ganna on the right side, me on the left. Fuck, it was funny, because I said to Pippo [Ganna] two kilometres before, I said to him: “We go for an attack?” And we were sprinting against each other. And i think I was just dead by the Triomphe, on the roundabout, finished.”

Philippe Gilbert, after riding his final Tour stage, speaks to Eurosport: “Happy to be in Paris. It was a tough tour, really difficult, and I’m happy to have made it.”

What made it difficult? Wout van Aert? “Yeah. Pretty much him. No, the speed was crazy, out of control. We went with a plan every day, and it ended up with the opposite. Some days we thought it would be controllable, with a nice [breakaway] group like it used to be, but it would end up with a crazy strong group to chase, and finishing with almost 50 [km/h] average. It was dry every day, so it means fast. A lot of tailwind, so it was really fast, fast.

“It’s nice when you can decide yourself, when you stop. That’s my decision and I’m happy to take it. I enjoyed also today. It was nice, yeah.”

Bradley Wiggins remembers rooming with Gilbert 20 years ago when they rode for Française des Jeux. “I never imagined you’d go on to have the career you had. You’ve won everything there is to win in the sport.”

“The same for me about you,” Gilbert replies. “We achieved our goals, I won the one-day races and you won the stage races.

“My career is not over,” the legendary strong man Gilbert concludes. “I want to rest now, and finish on a good note, I hope to win one more race this year.”

Simon Geschke has a chat with Eurosport: “It was a really fun time in the mountains jersey ... if I’d lost it after two days, I’d have been like: ‘That was fun’. But the longer you keep it, the longer you start believing that you can take it all the way to Paris. I thought I had a realistic chance, actually, but on the last mountain stage I made a few mistakes here and there probably. In the third week the energy levels reached their limits and that was it.”

“Too bad, but that’s part of the sport. The head wanted it more than the legs, but at least I got to wear it to Paris. Kind of a strange feeling, but still nice for the pictures, I guess. It’s a privilege to wear a jersey in the Tour de France . For sure I enjoyed it today also although I was only second in the mountains classification ... it’s sort of a little achievement, as well.”

Simon Geschke (Cofidis) in polka-dots.

Surely you have to question why Groenewegen sprinted so early? It looked like a bit of panic. All he was likely to do was lead out Philipsen, or Ewan, or Sagan, or AN Other. As it happened, Philipsen was in the perfect position to benefit, right on Groenewegen’s wheel. And it was an utterly dominant win by Philipsen in the end. No doubt Mark Cavendish is sitting at home and thinking he could have won that. It was a bad day for both Quick-Step and Jakobsen, who didn’t feature at all.

Today’s stage winner Philipsen speaks: “I cannot believe [it], it’s a childhood dream coming true, this will take a while to realise. I’m just super-proud of the team, that we finished the Tour like this, it’s the cherry on the cake.

“I think it [the final kilometre] went ideal for me. I was in a great position. I think Dylan was forced to launch early and I could really stay in his wheel and do my final sprint when I wanted ... I’m super happy and proud that I could win in this Champs-Elysees, the dream of any sprinter.

“It couldn’t be better. We had some disappointments earlier this Tour, things that went not the way we wanted. But to finish off in style like this, to win stage 15 and then again on 21, on the most beautiful stage for a sprinter, it’s just unbelievable.”

Top 10 on stage 21:

1) Philipsen 2hr 58min 32sec 2) Groenewegen 3) Kristoff 4) Stuyven 5) Sagan 6) Lecroq 7) Van Poppel 8) Ewan 9) Hofstetter 10) Wright

Kristoff (who finished third) sums up the final sprint: “Unfortunately there was a big movement maybe 300m to go, everybody had to stop pedalling a bit, and we lost a bit of momentum, otherwise I think we could have been closer to Jasper ... anyway I’m happy with third place. Caleb was maybe a bit angry with me, but I felt I was fair, I made a straight line. I got the wheel of Groenwegen and Caleb was a bit boxed in because of that, but that’s not my fault.”

On the final straight, Luka Mezgec took up the leadout for BikeExchange on the left-hand side, trying to set up Groenewegen. Ewan looked pretty much in perfect position but was ultimately boxed in and didn’t even bother to sprint. Groenewegen was second, Kristoff third, Stuyven fourth and Sagan fifth!

Philipsen got on Groenewegen’s wheel - the BikeExchange–Jayco rider went early - and Philipsen timed it perfectly, completely dominating his rival in the final metres after springing out from behind Groenewegen and heading for the clear road on the right. Ewan looked unhappy to be boxed in by Kristoff. A really bad Tour de France for the Australian and for Lotto Soudal.

Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin–Deceuninck) wins Tour de France Stage 21!

Wow! Philipsen’s second stage win of the race is sealed in Paris! Back down the road, Jumbo-Visma ride across the finish line in formation. Jonas Vingegaard safely negotiates the final stage and wins his first Tour de France .

Alpecin-Deceuninck team’s Belgian rider Jasper Philipsen celebrates winning the stage.

1km to go: Thomas (Cofidis) attacks!

2.5km to go: Ewan is well placed for Lotto Soudal and has teammates around him. Philipsen (Alpecin–Deceuninck) is right up there. Jakobsen is going to have a say, too ...

3.5km to go: Politt leads for a while then pops and drops back. Simmons is there for Trek-Segafredo and Pedersen ... The peloton speeds towards the famous tunnel for one final time.

5km to go: Around the Arc for the final time. Ineos are on the front with Ganna. Trek-Segafredo are massed near the front. Politt is up there for Bora. BikeExchange working for Groenewegen. It’s all happening.

6.3km to go: Thomas and Ganna attack on the left for Ineos! Pogacar attacks off the front on the other side of the road! Pogacar isn’t letting his Tour de France crown go without at least reminding us all that he still exists!

7.5km to go: The riders round the right-hand bend which leads up to the start-finish line for the penultimate time. The Arc de Triomphe is visible in the distance. As the bell sounds for the final lap, Schachmann and Rutsch are overwhelmed by the charging peloton. The crowd roars! We are all back together!

8.5km to go : And then there were two. Schachmann and Rutsch are up front together, the two Groupama-FDJ riders having fallen out of it.

9km to go: HUGE ride by Schachmann of Bora-Hansgrohe, on the front again and stamping on the pedals as hard as he can. He has clearly ridden himself into some very good form at this Tour.

11km to go: Schachmann does another turn, then flicks his elbow to ask Jonas Rutsch to have a go. The turns at the front are becoming shorter and shorter as the fatigue really sets in. Are the sprinters’ teams just holding off a touch? No – the gap is now six seconds.

12km to go: Cracking ride by the four up front, this is. They are holding the peloton at around 10sec as they round the Arc de Triomphe. Mind you, the four is now down to three: Le Gac’s tank is empty and he drops back to the bunch.

15km to go: The break’s advantage drops to under 10 seconds. They will be getting swallowed up before too long. Looking grim-faced, Schachmann puts in another desperate dig to try and keep away. These guys are basically sprinting now to try and keep their advantage ... and it does creep back up to 11sec to mark the effort they are putting in.

18km to go: Doull has been dropped by the escape group so they are down to four. The gap is holding at 15sec. Le Gac and Duchesne, the Groupama-FDJ teammates, take it up at the tête de la course .

19km to go: The likes of Lotto Soudal are working desperately to set up a sprint. Their sports directors will be yelling down the team radios and no mistake. But will they simply be setting up the likes of Wout van Aert to win in Paris again? If as expected it’s a big bunch sprint, surely Jakobsen or Ewan will have the raw speed to win it ...?

How about Alexander Kristoff (Intermarché–Wanty–Gobert Matériaux), a man who has won in Paris before, and who tends to excel when everyone else is knackered?

Jonas Vingegaard, wearing the overall leader’s yellow jersey, passes the Louvre Museum

20km to go: Here we go. Into the final 20km of a truly epic Tour de France . The advantage for this five-man break is 15sec.

The riders in the break are Schachmann, Duchesne, Rutsch, Le Gac and Doull.

21km to go: #LargelyCeremonial

You get a different perception of the Largely Ceremonial and Processional Paris stage when you’re actually there. It’s unbelievable how fast the riders go on the circuit, and it’s exhilarating to see. Plus, Paris is the greatest city in the world. — Edward Pickering (@EdwardPickering) July 24, 2022

22km to go: Boasson Hagen has a mechanical and grabs a replacement bike. That’ll be another lung-bursting effort to get back into the peloton, let alone do anything to try and lead out his teammate Peter Sagan.

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LIVE COVERAGE OF THE 109TH TOUR DE FRANCE BEGINS THIS FRIDAY, JULY 1 ON PEACOCK & USA NETWORK

Live Coverage of All 21 Stages of Tour de France Concludes Sunday, July 24 at 10 a.m. ET on Peacock & USA Network

Peacock Presents Exclusive Daily Tour de France Pre-Race Shows

Special Final Weekend Coverage Live on NBC & Peacock on Sat., July 23 at 8 a.m. ET (Stage 20)

Production Elements Include Enhanced Augmented Reality Features, Interactive Stage Maps, GPS Race Tracking & More

STAMFORD, Conn. – June 27, 2022 – NBC Sports will present three weeks of wall-to-wall live and encore coverage of the 109 th Tour de France on Peacock and USA Network. Daily live coverage of the Tour de France, featuring all 21 stages, begins Friday, July 1, at 9:30 a.m. ET on Peacock and USA Network with the Tour de France Pre-Race Show , followed by Stage 1 at 10 a.m. ET on Peacock and USA Network.

Coverage continues throughout each day of the 21-stage event, beginning with the Tour de France Pre-Race Show on Peacock, followed by live race coverage. Final weekend coverage culminates on Saturday, July 23, with Stage 20 live at 8 a.m. ET on NBC and Peacock, and final stage coverage on Sunday, July 24, live at 10 a.m. ET on Peacock and USA Network.

Peacock will provide live streaming coverage of every stage of the 2022 Tour de France, featuring live, start-to-finish coverage of every stage . Peacock’s coverage includes simulstreams from USA Network and NBC shows, as well as commentary from the world feed. Peacock will also feature full-stage replays, highlights, stage recaps and rider interviews.

To sign-up and watch every minute of live action from the 2022 Tour de France, click here .

Peacock’s expansive programming features live sports coverage including MLB Sunday Leadoff , golf, NASCAR, INDYCAR, Triple Crown horse racing, the USFL, Sunday Night Football , Olympic sports, Premier League, Notre Dame Football, and much more. Peacock also offers daily sports programming on the NBC Sports channel which streams Peacock Original  Brother from Another and staples like The Dan Patrick Show , Pro Football Talk Live , and  The Rich Eisen Show .

2022 TOUR DE FRANCE

The 2022 Tour de France will cover a total distance of approximately 2,079 miles, beginning in Copenhagen, Denmark, and finishing 23 days later in Paris. The Tour begins with an individual time trial for the first time since 2017, and the riders will fly from Denmark to France following Stage 3.

Expected yellow jersey frontrunners in this year’s field include two-time defending champion Tadej Pogačar (UAE-Team Emirates) of Slovenia, Primož Roglič (Jumbo-Visma), who won this year’s Paris-Nice and placed second in the 2020 Tour de France, 2021 Tour de France runner-up Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma), Alexandr Vlasov (BORA – hansgrohe) and Dani Martinez (INEOS Grenadiers). Green jersey contenders expected to compete include Wout van Aert (Jumbo-Visma), Fabio Jakobsen (QuickStep-AlphaVinyl), Caleb Ewan (Lotto Soudal), Sam Bennett (Bora – hansgrohe), Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck), and seven-time Tour de France points classification winner Peter Sagan (TotalEnergies).

Seven Americans are expected to participate in this year’s Tour de France: 27-year-old American Sepp Kuss (Jumbo-Visma), who made his Tour de France debut in 2020, Brandon McNulty (UAE-Team Emirates), a 24-year-old riding in his second Tour de France, Matteo Jorgenson (Movistar), Quinn Simmons (Trek – Segafredo), Neilson Powless (EF Education-EasyPost), Kevin Vermaerke (Team DSM), and Joe Dombrowski (Astana Qazaqstan Team).

COMMENTATORS

NBC Sports’ coverage of the 2022 Tour de France features Phil Liggett , universally known as the “voice of cycling,” who will call play-by-play race action, marking the 50 th time he will cover the Tour de France , and his 45 th time calling the race on television. Bob Roll will join Liggett on the call as an analyst, with Liggett and Roll on site at each stage of the Tour de France for the first time since 2019. Steve Porino and former professional cyclist Robbie Hunter will serve as reporters.

Paul Burmeister will host daily pre-race and post-race studio coverage, along with former professional cyclist and analyst Christian Vande Velde and American Grand Tour champion Chris Horner .

PRODUCTION HIGHLIGHTS

NBC Sports will integrate several features into its coverage of this year’s Tour de France:

  • NBC Sports will utilize a cutting edge “Virtual” graphics Telestrator, which debuted throughout the 2019 Tour de France and produces augmented reality cyclist graphics for the commentators to move and analyze
  • The enhanced augmented reality features will include 3-D animated maps that track where the riders are in real-time on the route and profile the stage terrain
  • Hunter will have a camera focused on him as he reports to offer real-time updates on race situations, while traveling aboard a motorcycle on the course
  • Real-time data of course gradients and the riders’ speeds

NBC Sports’ coverage will include real-time speeds of both the leaders and the peloton, and additional maps that show more detailed versions of the finishes and each mountain climb.

Coverage will also utilize several production enhancements and updated graphic elements, including a pointer feature to easily identify and focus on one rider in the peloton, and exclusive profiles on teams and riders.

NBC SPORTS GROUP SOCIAL MEDIA:

Fans can keep up with the Tour de France through NBC Sports’ social media platforms throughout the race, including exclusive behind-the-scenes photos, interviews, video clips, up-to-date news reports and stories from around the cycling world through the NBC Sports Cycling Facebook page and @NBCSNCycling on Twitter. In addition, fans can visit NBCSports.com/cycling for a live stream schedule, stage maps, results, routes and more.

NBC SPORTS’ 2022 TOUR DE FRANCE SCHEDULE

(subject to change, all times ET)***All live coverage on NBC and USA Network is also available on the NBC Sports app:

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Nbc sports, peacock to remain exclusive u.s. home of tour de france.

109th Tour de France 2022 - Stage 21

PARIS, FRANCE - JULY 24: (L-R) Andrea Bagioli of Italy and Quick-Step - Alpha Vinyl Team and Guillaume Van Keirsbulck of Belgium and Team Alpecin-Fenix lead the peloton during the 109th Tour de France 2022, Stage 21 a 115,6km stage from Paris La Défense to Paris - Champs-Élysées / #TDF2022 / #WorldTour / on July 24, 2022 in Paris, France. (Photo by Tim de Waele/Getty Images)

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NBC Sports, Peacock and the Amaury Sport Organisation (A.S.O.) today announced a six-year extension for exclusive U.S. media rights for the Tour de France.

Beginning with the 111 th Tour de France in June 2024, Peacock will become the exclusive home of the Tour de France in the United States through 2029 with live start-to-finish coverage of every stage . Select stages will also simulcast live on NBC throughout the three-week event. Daily coverage on Peacock will include NBC Sports-produced pre- and post-race studio shows, full-stage replays, highlights, stage recaps, rider interviews, and more.

As part of its previous agreement, NBC Sports and Peacock will present full live coverage of 110th Tour de France this summer (July 1-23, 2023). NBC Sports’ full coverage schedule for the 2023 Tour de France will be announced in the coming months.

“We’re excited to reach this long-term agreement with A.S.O. to present the world’s most prestigious cycling event live on Peacock for years to come,” said Jon Miller, President, Acquisitions and Partnerships, NBC Sports. “With the Tour de France and our extensive cycling portfolio, we are proud to continue as the home of cycling in the United States, while continuing to bolster Peacock’s best-in-class slate of live sports programming.”

“We are delighted to be able to extend our long-term partnership with NBCUniversal, which promotes the Tour de France and all the major A.S.O. sporting events to the American public on a cross-platform basis, including women’s cycling such as the Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift that NBC Sports has supported since the first edition in July 2022. The combined coverage via Peacock, which will show the entire races from the beginning to the end, and network television, will ensure that everyone has access to the best of world cycling. Super fans won’t miss any of the twists and turns that cycling holds. NBC Sports will remain the home of cycling in the United States for another six years and in 2029 we will celebrate the 29th anniversary of a historic partnership that is proof of America’s sincere love for cycling and the Tour,” declared Yann Le Moenner, CEO of A.S.O.

As part of the agreement, NBC Sports will present many additional A.S.O. events throughout the year, including cycling events such as La Vuelta a España, which is the final Grand Tour event of the year following the Tour de France, La Vuelta Feminina by Carrefour.es, the Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift, the Spring Classics including the men’s and women’s Paris-Roubaix, Paris-Roubaix Femmes avec Zwift, the Ardennaises Classics (men and women) that are La Fleche Wallonne and Liege-Bastogne-Liege, Criterium du Dauphine, and Paris Tours. Also included are the Schneider Electric Marathon de Paris, the world’s second-largest marathon, and the Dakar Rally , the world’s most challenging off-road endurance race.

Comcast/NBC Sports has served as the U.S. home of the Tour de France since 2001.

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Tour de France

tour de francia sport

Les parcours 2024

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Le Tour 2023 (H) en résumés

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Le Tour 2023 (F) en résumés

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Les programmes du Tour

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Histoires de grands départs du Tour de France

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Les articles à lire

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Franceinfo- Tour de France 2024

tour de francia sport

Suivez sur France.tv le Tour de France Hommes et le Tour de France femmes.

Un an après la première victoire de Jonas Vingegaard, devant Tadej Pogacar, les coureurs retrouvent les routes de France mais pas seulement. Après le Danemark en 2022, le Tour de France s'élance cette année de l'Espagne et plus précisément de Bilbao. Après trois jours au Pays Basque (côté espagnol) les coureurs traverseront les Pyrénées avant de traverser le centre de la France pour filer dans les Alpes. Un seul contre-la-montre au programme (22 km) pour cette édition 2023, lors de la 16e étape, avant de conclure la Grande Boucle à Paris, sur les Champs-Elysées. 

Du 23 au 30 juillet 2023, ce sera au tour des femmes de s'élancer pour la deuxième édition de cette course de 8 étapes, dirigée par Marion Rousse. Lors de la première édition, Annemiek van Vleuten (Movistar) s'est largement imposée devant sa compatriote Demi Vollering (Team SD Worx) et la Polonaise Katarzyna Niewiadoma. Cette année les coureuses vont partir de Clermont-Ferrand pour terminer cette grosse semaine à Pau, avec un contre-la-montre de 22 km. Après avoir traversé le Massif Central, direction les Pyrénées avec une arrivée au sommet et quelle étape ! Après être parties de Lannemezan, les athlètes vont grimper le Col d’Aspin (12 km à 6.5%) avant de conclure avec le tant redouté Col du Tourmalet (17 km à 7.3%).

Suivez le Tour de France 2023 Hommes et Femmes, grâce aux extraits, résumés et replays sur France.tv

Questions fréquentes

Quelles sont les étapes du Tour de France Hommes cette année ?

Bilbao > Bilbao Vitoria-Gasteiz > San Sebastian Amorebieta-Etxano > Bayonne Dax > Nogaro Pau > Laruns Tarbes > Cauterets Mont-de-Marsan > Bordeaux Libourne > Limoges Saint-Léonard-de-Noblat > Puy de Dôme Vulcania > Issoire Clermont-Ferrand > Moulins Roanne > Belleville-en-Beaujolais Châtillon-sur-Chalaronne > Grand Colombier Annemasse > Morzine Les Gets > Saint-Gervais-Mont-Blanc Passy > Combloux Saint-Gervais-Mont-Blanc > Courchevel Moûtiers > Bourg-en-Bresse Moirans-en-Montagne > Poligny Belfort > Le Markstein Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines > Paris

Quelles sont les étapes du Tour de France Femmes cette année ?

Clermont-Ferrand > Clermont-Ferrand Clermont-Ferrand > Mauriac Collonges-la-Rouge > Montignac-Lascaux Cahors > Rodez Onet-le-Château > Albi Albi > Blagnac Lannemezan > Tourmalet Pau > Pau

Combien y a-t-il de coureurs au Tour de France Hommes ?

22 équipes sont invitées à disputer le Tour de France avec une sélection de 8 coureurs soit un total de 176 coureurs.

Combien y a-t-il de coureuses au Tour de France Femmes ?

22 équipes sont invitées à disputer le Tour de France avec une sélection de 7 coureuses (6 l’an dernier) soit un total de 154 coureuses.

Combien y a-t-il de contre-la-montre cette année ?

Le Tour de France Hommes compte un seul contre-la-montre dans cette édition 2023. Le mardi 18 juillet 2023, lors de la 16e étape, les coureurs s’élanceront pour 22.4 kilomètres entre Passy et Combloux, sur un terrain escarpé dans les Alpes. Le Tour de France Femmes compte également un seul contre-la-montre, lors de la 8e et dernière étape, le dimanche 30 juillet 2023. Au programme 22 kilomètres entre Pau et Pau.

Combien gagne le vainqueur du Tour de France Hommes ?

Au total 2,3 millions d’euros seront attribués et mis en jeu pour les équipes et les coureurs dont 500 000 € au vainqueur du classement général individuel final.

Combien gagne la vainqueure du Tour de France Femmes ?

Au total, 250.000 euros seront partagés entre les coureuses dont 50 000 € pour la vainqueure du classement général individuel final. La deuxième touchera 25 000 € et la troisième 10 000 €.

Qui a gagné le Tour de France Hommes en 2022 ?

Jonas Vingegaard a remporté l’édition 2022 avec une avance de 2mn43 sur Tadej Pogacar. Le Danois a remporté l’épreuve pour la première fois de sa carrière.

Qui a gagné le Tour de France Femmes en 2022 ?

Annemiek van Vleuten a remporté l’édition 2022 avec une avance de 3mn48 sur Demi Vollering. La Néerlandaise remporte cette épreuve pour la première fois de sa carrière.

Combien d’équipes françaises sont au départ du Tour de France Hommes ?

Cinq équipes françaises prendront le départ de cette édition 2023 : AG2R Citroën Team, Groupama-FDJ, Team Arkea-Samsic, Team Cofidis et TotalEnergies.

Combien d’équipes françaises sont au départ du Tour de France Femmes ?

Quatre équipes françaises prendront le départ de cette édition 2023 : FDJ-Suez, Cofidis, Arkéa Pro Cycling Team et St Michel-Mavic-Auber93.

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Lotte Kopecky Won’t Be Racing the Tour de France Femmes

Lotte Kopecky announced two weeks ago that she would be riding the Giro d’Italia Women in July, but was still uncertain about the Tour de France Femmes . This week the SD Worx-Protime rider confirmed that she’d opt out of the French tour in order to keep her focus during the summer Olympic Games .

Last year at the Tour , Kopecky wore the yellow jersey before teammate Demi Vollering took it over on the Col du Tourmalet. Thanks to an impressive performance in the opening stage, Kopecky spent six stages in yellow. She attacked with about 10 km left and crossed the finish line 41 seconds ahead of the rest of the peloton. Kopecky ended up the overall runner-up.

This year, the Belgian will be going all-in at the velodrome, where she hopes to win the first Olympic medals of her career. Trying to transition immediately from track racing to the Tour would just be too much. “The Omnium ends Sunday afternoon, the Tour starts Monday morning. That is almost unfeasible to do that in a good way,” said sporting manager Danny Stam, according to Sporza .

“Combining those two events would also be a very difficult task mentally. If you were to take Olympic gold, it’s too short a day to start the next morning in the Tour. She can now fully focus on the Games,” Stam added.

GCN reported that Kopecky has “high hopes both on the road and track at the Olympics, where she will look to convert her successes from the World Championships into Olympic gold. The 28-year-old is a multiple world champion on the track across the Madison, Elimination, and Points race disciplines.”

So far, Kopecky’s best Olympic result was fourth place in the road race at the Tokyo Games.

Even though fans will be disappointed not to see Kopecky racing the Tour de France Femmes, there will still be plenty of action to watch. The World Champion will be racing the Tour of Britain Women in June before returning to the Giro d’Italia Women in July. And then, of course, the Olympics in Paris, which run from July 26 to August 11.

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Tour de France: stage four - Philipsen takes back-to-back wins as Yates retains yellow jersey

Tour de France preview; Stage-by-stage guide

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Chris Bevan

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That's me done... a chaotic finish to a very quiet day. You can relive all of stage four (if you really want to!) by scrolling back through this live page or switching over to our report.

The Tour heads for the high mountains tomorrow and enters the Pyrenees, with a 162.7km route from Pau to Laruns. Lots to enjoy there, with Britain's Adam Yates still in the leader's yellow jersey - bye for now.

'It was a hectic final'

More from Jasper Philipsen, who has just won stage four of the Tour de France: “It was really an easy stage, I think everybody wanted to save their legs for the Pyrenees tomorrow and the day after but the final kilometres entering the circuit there were some crashes so I hope everybody is OK and safe.

“It was a hectic final with the turns in the end I lost my team but in the final straight I found Mathieu van der Poel and he did an amazing pull to get me to victory. My legs were cramping and Caleb was coming close.”

'That was close'

"That was close in the end," Jasper Philipsen tells ITV. "I am glad they confirmed it (the result) quickly."

No joy for Cav

Mark Cavendish wasn't really in the race for the line, to be honest. He was well placed as they went on to the Nogaro motor-racing circuit with 3km to go and was on Wout van Aert's wheel, then Mads Pedersen, but did not get close to Jasper Philipsen in the final metres.

Philipsen gets the glory, again

So, the same 1-2-3 as yesterday, but with Caleb Ewan and Phil Bauhaus trading places. Belgium's Jasper Philipsen gets the glory, again.

The top five on stage four

1. Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck)2. Caleb Ewan (Lotto Dstny)3. Phil Bauhaus (Bahrain-Victorious)4. Bryan Coquard (Cofidis)5. Mark Cavendish (Astana Qazasqtan)

Half a wheel in it

I've just seen a replay of the finish - Jasper Philipsen beats Australia's Caleb Ewan by half a wheel, to clinch his second successive stage win. Mathieu van der Poel delivered Philipsen again, with people crashing out behind them.

Post update

Mark Cavendish finished fifth

Jasper Philipsen wins stage four of the Tour de France

Wow. That was just madness.

Crashes all over the road, Philipsen and Ewan go for the line.

Alexander Kristoff is well placed and being led out - we've had another crash. Cav is on Pedersen's wheel.

Wout van Aert has flown to the front and Cav is on his wheel.

1.5km to go

Fabio Jakobsen has crashed. Mark Cavendish has lost ground.

2.5km to go

Phil Bauhaus's team are taking over at the front and have stretched the front group right out.

Jumbo-Visma are at the front of the peloton now but Wout van Aert is still further back, something hasn't worked there - or has it? We are on the race track.

3.5km to go

Wout van Aert is further back, 30 riders down. Mark Cavendish is well-placed at the moment. Phil Bauhaus, second yesterday, is up there too.

4.5km to go

Mark Cavendish is working himself up to the front. Kees Bol is with him. We enter the motor-racing circuit at 3km.

5.5km to go

A bit of road furniture disrupts the rhythm at the front of the race, and the DSM-Fermenich team have lost some of their men. Mark Cavendish has got numbers around him from his Astana team but they are not at the very front at the moment.

The pace is rising all the time. Kees Bol who is Mark Cavendish's lead-out man is trying to get up there with him.

Mark Cavendish has drifted into the middle of the road and he's behind the Bora-Hansgrohe team now, who are one of those on the front. The pace is still steady, no-one has dropped the hammer yet.

tour de francia sport

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