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Tour de France: Pogacar wins stage 17 but Vingegaard holds firm – as it happened

Tadej Pogacar and Jonas Vingegaard put on a dominant display, leaving the pack far behind before battling it out for the stage win

  • 20 Jul 2022 Stage 17 report
  • 20 Jul 2022 General classification after stage 17
  • 20 Jul 2022 Stage 17 result
  • 20 Jul 2022 Pogacar wins stage 17 but Vingegaard holds on to GC lead!
  • 20 Jul 2022 Stage finish set up for Vingegaard v Pogacar
  • 20 Jul 2022 Wout van Aert wins green jersey race
  • 20 Jul 2022 Allez!
  • 20 Jul 2022 Rafal Majka withdraws due to injury
  • 20 Jul 2022 Preamble

Tadej Pogacar celebrates as he crosses the finish line to win stage 17.

Pogacar wins stage 17 but Vingegaard holds on to GC lead!

Jonas Vingegaard kicks for home first, and Pogacar responds – the two GC leaders are in an uphill sprint for the line! It’s the defending champion who prevails, getting back ahead of his rival just before the line. A psychological boost for Pogacar, but aside from the loss of four bonus seconds, Vingegaard has done enough today.

Stage 17 report

Time to sign off; I’ll leave you with Jeremy Whittle’s report from Peyragudes. Thanks for joining me, it’s been real. Until next time ...

Here is Thursday’s stage – the final day in the Pyrenees, and probably the last chance for Pogacar to wrestle the yellow jersey back from Vingegaard. Three titanic climbs, and another summit finish at Hautacam. Better get some rest, lads.

General classification after stage 17

  • J Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) 67h 53m 54s
  • T Pogacar (UAE-Team Emirates) +2m 18s
  • G Thomas (Ineos) +4m 56s
  • N Quintana (Arkea-Samsic) +7m 53s
  • D Gaudu (Groupama-FDJ) +7m 57s
  • R Bardet (DSM) +9m 21s
  • L Meintjes (Intermarché) +9m 24s
  • A Vlasov (Bora-Hansgrohe) +9m 56s
  • A Yates (Ineos) +14m 33s
  • E Mas (Movistar) +16m 35s

Here’s Tadej Pogacar: “To take the stage win is incredible – the way we rode today with four (riders), without Rafal (Majka). I felt so good with the pace, Brandon (McNulty) and Mikkel (Bjerg) were so great today.

“Tomorrow, we’ll see if we can do more – but I’m happy for today to have won. I gave absolutely everything, to the line.”

Stage 17 result

  • T Pogacar (UAE-Team Emirates) 3h 25m 51s
  • J Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) st
  • B McNulty (UAE-Team Emirates) +32s
  • G Thomas (Ineos) +2m 7s
  • A Lutsenko (Astana) +2m 34s
  • R Bardet (DSM) +2m 38s
  • D Gaudu (Groupama-FDJ) +3m 27s
  • A Vlasov (Bora-Hansgrohe) +3m 32s
  • L Meintjes (Intermarché) st
  • N Quintana (Arkea-Samsic) st

“I didn’t feel quite as light on the pedals as on other days,” says Geraint Thomas. “I didn’t want to go into the red (to stay with the leading trio), so I decided to sit back and avoid blowing up on the final climb.”

The former Tour winner is still on course for the podium, but he ends the day almost five minutes behind Vingegaard in the battle for the overall title. It’s appropriate that tomorrow’s stage starts in Lourdes, because G now needs a miracle.

“Pleased to see Pogacar riding up the Peyragudes climb on the big chain ring,” notes Paul Griffin. “Exactly how I would approach an 8km, 8% climb, two-and-a-half weeks into a grand tour. My training plans are available on Bebo, fax and nailed to good quality lamp posts.”

Wow, that was something else. Absolutely superhuman from both riders. I’m exhausted just watching. Brandon McNulty comes home in third place, Geraint Thomas in fourth. With Romain Bardet running out of steam, Alexey Lutsenko comes home in fifth place.

250m to go: McNulty finally drops off and Pogacar pushes for home – but both leaders look like they’re moving in slow motion on this brutal final stretch ...

500km to go: Pogacar doesn’t seem to have a final burst in him – and the GC battle won’t be settled today. But who fancies the stage win?

1km to go: It’s 16% gradient all the way to the line, and the leading trio grit their teeth and keep rolling. Vingegaard decides to move in between the Team Emirates duo – will he make a late charge or is it just mind games?

1.5km to go: McNulty keeps hauling and Vingegaard looks tired – but does Pogacar have a late burst in him to shake his shadow off?

2km to go: Thomas has opened a slight gap over Bardet. But never mind that – what’s happening up the road? Still no big move from Pogacar, who still looks so fresh, particularly compared to some of the heavyweight names labouring further down the climb.

3km to go: McNulty looks a broken man at the front of this leading trio. Pogacar is up on his heels, looking back and front. The gradient is about to hit 16% ... it’s crunch time.

4km to go: The virtual GC has Thomas more than four minutes behind Vingegaard, with Quintana and Gaudu in the top five, but now more than seven minutes back. The gap between the race leader and Pogacar is 2min 22sec; if the Slovenian can even make a dent in that, he’ll see that as a good result.

5km to go: The crowds are getting bigger, the bends getting tighter, the road getting steeper. Vingegaard is still looking comfortable in behind Pogacar, though, only lifting briefly out of his saddle. The pace is around 15km/h; the gap to Thomas and Bardet has grown to 1min 25sec.

6km to go: Brandon McNulty is still hauling the two title rivals up this final climb. It’s very much a waiting game until the defending champion makes his move.

7km to go: With Pogacar still being relentlessly shadowed by Vingegaard up ahead, we get a look at the chasers – and Romain Bardet has found a second wind. He pulls clear of that quintet, joined by Geraint Thomas. The two men have a quick word – presumably ready to work together to keep the top two in sight.

Geraint Thomas is cheered by spectators.

8km to go: Bardet and Leknessund have worked together to rally and join Thomas, Lutsenko and Vingegaard’s Jumbo-Visma teammate, Sepp Kuss. They’re still more than a minute behind the leaders, who are racing up the gentle start of this climb as if it were downhill.

The final climb: Here we go, then. McNulty is still here helping out his UAE teammate, but make no mistake – this will be Vin v Pog, for the stage win and quite possibly the destiny of the yellow jersey.

There are 10km to go, all uphill – but it’s the final 2.5km at a brutal 16% gradient that could be crucial. Have a look!

⛰ Last climb of the day: here is the 3D profile of Peyragudes ⛰ Dernière ascension du jour, voici le profil 3D de l'ascension vers Peyragudes ! #TDF2022 pic.twitter.com/Da3Gh1fdYC — Tour de France™ (@LeTour) July 20, 2022

12km to go: The leading trio lead Geraint Thomas and his fellow chasers by more than a minute, as we hit the valley floor and pass Lac Génos. A brief moment of serenity.

“The leaders are about to head through Loundenvielle, and then Loudervielle,” notes Martyn Lunn in more tourist-troubling scenes.

18km to go: This descent will offer GC contenders faint hope of getting back into the race, but there are already big time gaps. Thomas is a minute behind, in a group with Lutsenko and Kuss; Quintana and Gaudu are almost five minutes behind the leaders.

Pogacar attacks! Within sight of the summit, Tadej Pogacar puts the hammer down. It’s the same tactic we saw yesterday, and again Vingegaard is able to hold him off. The stage and GC leaders begin the day’s final descent together.

21km to go: This UAE-Team Emirates duo have absolutely laid waste to the field on this penultimate climb – but despite dropping his Jumbo-Visma support, Pogacar and McNulty have not shaken off Vingegaard yet. It looks like he’ll hang on to the peak here – but we’re set for a battle royale on the final ascent.

Stage finish set up for Vingegaard v Pogacar

Geraint Thomas is dropped! Is this the end of his faint hopes of GC glory? The former winner can’t live with the pace set by McNulty and Pogacar, with only Vingegaard hanging on. Leknessund is overtaken, and that imperious trio now lead the race.

23km to go: The yellow jersey group is trimmed to four – with UAE’s McNulty sticking with the three race leaders. They have cruised past a back-pedalling Bardet, absorbed Uran and are rolling relentlessly towards the race leader, Leknessund. 3km to go until the top of the climb ...

24km to go: There are cracks emerging further up the road too, with a number of that leading group hitting a wall and getting hoovered up by Pogacar and co. DSM’s Andreas Leknessund has made what looks a doomed push for a solo breakaway, with EF’s Rigoberto Uran behind them.

25km to go: GC contenders falling away by the minute now – Nairo Quintana the latest to drop back. David Gaudu has been dropped, while teammate Thibaut Pinot has fallen away and has been overtaken by the yellow-jersey group. Only Geraint Thomas is sticking with Vingegaard and Pogacar, who still have lieutenants alongside them.

26km to go: The Category 1 Col de Val Louron-Azet looms ahead – it’s a 10.7km climb at a 6.8% gradient. In the small group of favourites, UAE Team-Emirates are putting on the pressure – and Wout van Aert can’t live with it. The green jersey slips back, and it’s advantage Pogacar ...

28km to go: Simon Geschke has been dropped by the leading group – I’m not sure if he had another mechanical issue – and he is being led back by teammate Pierre-Luc Perichon. They’re 30 seconds behind the leaders, with the yellow jersey group a further 30 seconds back. The slower pace has allowed Yates and Pidcock to rejoin that group as we hit the day’s third climb.

30km to go: It’s all over for Pinot and Lutsenko – they are swallowed up the chasing group, which now contains 16 riders:

Pinot (Groupama-FDJ), Lutsenko (Astana), Bardet, Hamilton and Leknessund (DSM), Van Baarle (Ineos), Uran (EF Education), Konrad (Bora-Hansgrohe), Mühlberger (Movistar), Teuns (Bahrain), Zimmermann (Intermarché), Simmons and Ciccone (Trek-Segafredo), Juul Jensen (BikeExchange-Jayco), Jungels (AG2R-Citroen), Castroviejo (Ineos).

35km to go: We’re currently at the lowest point on the road between these four climbs; temperatures in the valleys are mid-20s, while it’s under 20 degrees on the upper mountain slopes. We have just whizzed past two adjacent towns, Guchen and Guchan. That must have tripped a few tourists up in the past.

The day’s final climb up to Peyragudes has plenty of Tour history – with happy memories for Romain Bardet and Chris Froome.

⛰ Stages to Peyragudes have always echoed in the history of the Tour! 🏆 From @alejanvalverde to @romainbardet , only skilled climbers have won there on the Tour! #TDF2022 pic.twitter.com/FytumIHMMC — Tour de France™ (@LeTour) July 20, 2022

38km to go: Eek, a wobbly moment for Pinot on the descent – it’s not his strong suit – with Lutsenko leading and looking more comfortable. The Bardet group have stabilised, now 30 seconds behind the leading duo and a minute clear of the GC contenders.

Thibaut Pinot meets a Norwegian fan.

KOM result at Horquette d’Anzican: That mechanical problem wasn’t too costly for Geschke, with Ciccone only picking up two points on the Cat 2 climb.

1. Thibaut Pinot, 5 pts 2. Alexey Lutsenko, 3 pts 3. Giulio Ciccone, 2 pts 4. Pierre-Luc Perichon, 1 pt

45km to go: The yellow jersey group are closing in on the group of chasers, moving at a pace that neither Tom Pidcock nor Adam Yates could handle. Yates began the day in sixth place overall, but he’s been left in the dust and is rapidly falling behind his rivals.

47km to go: As the two leaders begin their second descent, a nightmare moment for Geschke, who needs a bike change within 1km of the summit. He misses out on a handful of very useful King of the Mountains points.

Horquette d’Anzican (Cat 2 summit) Pinot and Lutsenko have made their breakaway stick – they are now 45 seconds clear of the Bardet/Geschke group, who are looking over their shoulders with the peloton only 30 seconds behind. It’s the Frenchman who crosses the summit first.

@niallmcveigh Whilst long time followers of Pinot know that this break will almost certainly end in tears, it would be lovely to see him get a stomp on up the road and provide us with the thrilling heroics he so often aims (not always accurately) for. — Andy H (@DoctorCuriosity) July 20, 2022

Indeed – and remember, France are still waiting for a home stage win on this year’s Tour. I hope my old mucker MaliciousA is watching.

50km to go: Cracks emerging in the group of heavyweights leading the peloton, with Tom Pidcock falling away. Tadej Pogacar’s team may be depleted, but they are setting the tempo through Mikkel Bjerg, followed by Van Aert and Vingegaard.

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le tour de france stage 17

Tour de France 2024 - Stage 17

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Le Dévoluy is delighted to welcome two stages of the 111th Tour de France on July 17 and 18, 2024! Stage 17, 17/07: St-Paul-Trois-Châteaux > Superdévoluy. Stage 18, 18/08: Gap Barcelonnette via Col du Festre.

  • Christian Prudhomme's comment: "Setting course for the southern Alps, the crossing of the Drôme presents no major obstacles. The rest of the program is sure to inspire a large breakaway group, whose members will have their chance have a chance, provided they can make their mark on the last 40 kilometers. We'll see over the Col Bayard, but the selection should be selection is more likely to be made on the road to the Col du Noyer du Noyer (7.5 km at 8.4%), and the final climb to... Read more Christian Prudhomme's comment: "Setting course for the southern Alps, the crossing of the Drôme presents no major obstacles. The rest of the program is sure to inspire a large breakaway group, whose members will have their chance have a chance, provided they can make their mark on the last 40 kilometers. We'll see over the Col Bayard, but the selection should be selection is more likely to be made on the road to the Col du Noyer du Noyer (7.5 km at 8.4%), and the final climb to the in view of the Superdévoluy resort. Stage 17: https://www.letour.fr/fr/etape-17 Show less

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Tour de France 2023 Route stage 17: Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc - Courchevel

Tour de France 2023

A glorious fight for the breakaway is in the pipeline. Following a rolling section of 15 kilometres the riders enter the Col des Saises, which is a climb of 13.4 kilometres at 5.1%. The route descends to Beaufort only to return to climbing, this time on the Cormet de Roselend, an ascent of 19.9 kilometres at 6%. Let’s see how the breakaway rolls by now.

Following a prolonged downhill the Côte de Longefoy throws in 6.6 kilometres at 7.5% before the route continues to climbs at shallow gradients to Notre-Dame-du-Pré. Still 55 kilometres to go when the riders move through the resort village.

The Tour descends to Moûtiers and moments later, in Brides-les-Bains, the Col de la Loze opens on a gentle note. The climb totals almost 30 kilometres, but the first half is nothing special. The gradients go up to 7% after Méribel, which is still nothing compared to the last 5 kilometres. This part of the Col de la Loze was first paved in 2019 and it’s extremely irregular. Still, the average gradient of the last 5 kilometres sits at over 10%.

A 6 kilometres downhill, with a short uphill halfway, leads to the last 600 metres. Which is another insane ramp at 10.8%.

The first three riders on the line gain time bonuses of 10, 6 and 4 seconds, while the first three on the Col de la Loze get 8, 5 and 2 seconds.

Ride the route yourself? Download GPX stage 17 2023 Tour de France.

Another interesting reads: results 17th stage 2023 Tour de France.

Tour de France 2023 stage 17: routes, profiles, more

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Tour de France 2023, stage 17: route - source:letour.fr

Tour de France stage 17 AS IT HAPPENED: Jonas Vingegaard extinguishes Tadej Pogačar's GC hopes on Col de la Loze

Live updates from the seventeenth stage of the 2023 Tour de France which includes the monstrous Col de la Loze

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Good morning, Welcome to our live coverage of stage 17 of the 2023 Tour de France . Have you all recovered from the drama of yesterday's time trial yet? We're getting closer and closer to Paris now. Today's stage of the race has been billed as the "Queen stage" and rightly so. It finishes with a brutal ascent of the hors categorie Col de la Loze. Fasten your seat belts and get ready, it's bound to be a good one. You can reach out to me on Twitter - @thewlistt throughout the day and let me know how you see the day going. 

Jonas Vingegaard

Here's a little look at the picture in the overall standings going into today's brutal stage. Jonas Vingegaard leads the race by 1-48 over his nearest rival Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) in second. The Danish rider put in one of the time trial performances of the ages yesterday to extend his overall lead. 1. Jonas Vingegaard (Den) Jumbo-Visma in 63-06-53 2. Tadej Pogačar (Slo) UAE Team Emirates, at 1-48 3. Adam Yates (GBr) UAE Team Emirates, at 8-52 4. Carlos Rodriguez (Spa) Ineos Grenadiers, at 8-57 5. Jai Hindley (Aus) Bora-Hansgrohe, at 11-15 6. Sepp Kuss (USA) Jumbo-Visma, at 12-56 7. Pello Bilbao (Spa) Bahrain Victorious, at 13-06 8. Simon Yates (GBr) Jayco AlUla, at 13-46 9. David Gaudu (Fra) Groupama-FDJ, at 17-38 10. Felix Gall (Aut) AG2R Citroën, at 18-19

There were doubts about the weather this morning at the start with thunder storms rumbling overhead. However, it appears that's now cleared up in Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc. Here's a video shared by Orla Chennaoui of Eurosport and GCN this morning of the rain earlier today. 

Our teams in France waking up to this today… 🤔 Remember what Tadej said about hoping for bad weather? pic.twitter.com/noNbmiGWrD July 19, 2023

Although as I say, reports from those on the ground in France suggest the weather has cleared up now. 

When the Col de la Loze was first introduced to the Tour de France in 2020, many shuddered and grimaced at the sheer sight of it. It's an absolute monster of a climb, that's fair to say. Today's 165.7km stage includes three early climbs which includes the Cormet de Roselend, but the Col de la Loze should completely destroy the peloton in the finale today. 

Tour de France 2023 route profiles

Right! Here we go! The riders are off and into the neutralised section. It's a short one today, just 3.3 kilometres, so expect them to get this out of the way pretty quickly.  

We'll have a full stage report online for you at the end of today. Cycling Weekly journalists Vern Pitt, Adam Becket and James Shrubsall are on the ground today. They'll be bringing you all the reaction from Courchevel later on this evening. 

TDF 2023 stage 17

With over 5,000 metres of elevation gain today, it's no wonder the stage has been dubbed as the "Queen Stage." Here's the full profile of the 167 kilometres from Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc to Courchevel. Will Tadej Pogačar go all out and grab the time back that he needs?

164km to go: Here we go! Christian Prudhomme waves them off and the attacks fly almost immediately as multiple riders try to get an early breakaway going. 

Looks like it's Magnus Cort (EF Education-EasyPost) and Valentin Madouas (Groupama-FDJ) who have pushed on to try their luck. Krist Neilands (Israel-Premier Tech) and a couple of riders from DSM are trying to join them.

Those two riders have been reeled back in, although expect someone like Cort to try again. 

and just as I write that.... he's managed to get in the next group to try their luck! Cort is up the road again along with Harold Tejada (Astana Qazaqstan), Mads Pedersen (Lidl-Trek) and several others. We'll have the full list in a moment.

Wow! There were no major attacks just then but the high intensity at the front of the peloton briefly caused a split in the bunch. Adam Yates (UAE Team Emirates) and Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe) were both caught out there along with multiple other riders. It looks like it's pretty much back together, although that will have been a scary moment for Yates and co there. 

So the breakaway has about 35 seconds now on the main field. It's all about the battle for the King of the Mountains jersey. Giulio Ciccone (Lidl-Trek) is up the road along with his teammate Mads Pedersen, Neilson Powless (EF Education-EasyPost), Luca Mezgec (Jayco-AIUla) and Jonas Gregaard (Uno-X). 

Giulio Ciccone

Here's Ciccone in the polka-dot jersey at the start this morning.

150km to go: Quick-Step are really putting the hammer down on the front of the peloton. They desperately want one of their riders in that break this morning. Julian Alaphilippe has just dashed off the front of the bunch with a couple of other riders in an attempt to bridge across to the leaders as they begin the first climb of the day, the Col de Saisies. 

Woah! Tadej Pogačar has just hit the deck in a small crash in the main field. Looks like it was only the Slovenian that went down, but not an ideal start at all. 

He's back up and riding and looks absolutely fine but as I say, not an ideal start for him at all.   I expect the stress levels in the UAE camp have ramped right back up. 

Meanwhile the break now has 11 seconds on the peloton thanks to the efforts of Alaphilippe, Mattias Skjelmose (Lidl-Trek), Ben O'Connor (AG2R Citreon) and a few other riders in the second group on the road. Marc Soler from UAE Emirates and Victor Lafay (Cofidis) are both there too. 

148km to go: Ciccone along with Powless and Gregaard are still up the road but only just. The race is nearly all back together for now. 

Giulio Ciccone

Here's a closer look at the remnants of the breakaway led by Ciccone in the polka dot jersey. A few of the chases including Skjelmose have managed to get across the gap but it's not going to last for much longer. 

That initial breakaway has been bolstered by some serious firepower now. An immensely strong group packed full of quality is at the head of the race. Simon Yates is in there which is a big surprise.... especially as he's eighth overall.  

Felix Gall is up the road too. 

Here's the group in full: Rafal Majka (UAE Emirates) Thibaut Pinot (Groupama-FDJ) Rigoberto Uran (EF Education-EasyPost) Julian Alaphilippe (Soudal Quick-Step) Jack Haig (Bahrain Victorious) Giulio Ciccone (Lidl-Trek) Mattias Skjelmose (Lidl-Trek) Felix Gall (AG2R Citroen) Rui Costa (Intermarche-Circus-Wanty) Kevin Vermaeke (DSM) Krist Neilands (Israel-Premier Tech) Simon Yates (Jayco-AIUla) Lawson Craddock (Jayco-AIUla) Chris Harper (Jayco-AIUla) Clement Champoussin (Arkea-Samsic) Jonas Gregaard (Uno-X)

Neilson Powless has been dropped.

Here's Tadej Pogačar's little incident here earlier courtesy of ITV Cycling. 

Pogačar has been down! 😬#TDF2023 #ITVCycling pic.twitter.com/ajyJdTJJTN July 19, 2023

139km to go: There was a little bit of panic earlier as to the whereabouts of Jonas Vingegaard's teammates in the remnants of the main field. Dylan van Baarle is leading the peloton for Jumbo-Visma, Tiesj Benoot is there too as is Wout van Aert and a couple of others including Sepp Kuss. Panic?! What panic?!

138km to go: Wow! Benoot is really riding here and is absolutely shredding that group containing Vingegaard and Pogacar already. Jumbo are absolutely intent on putting the Slovenian under even more pressure today.

137km to go: That big effort from the Benoot led group has brought Pogacar, Vingegaard and several other riders across to the breakaway. Meanwhile Ciccone has just taken maximum points at the top of the Saisies. That puts the Italian 15 points clear of Neilson Powless in second place in the mountains classification.

135km to go: Alaphilippe, Ciccone and Neilands have continued that acceleration over the top of the climb and onto the descent of the Saisies. The Frenchman is bombing it down the descent and seems absolutely desperate to get a stage win today. Sorry Julian, but I think that'll be a tall order with whose racing behind you. 

This is pretty terrifying stuff from Alaphilippe here! He is absolutely gunning it. Average speed of just under 80 kph at the moment.

Quick reminder that there's three more categorised climbs to go today. The Cormet de Roselend, the Cote de Longfoy and the Col de la Loze. 

127km to go: Ciccone, Neilands and Alaphilippe are together now and continuing to push on. They've got about 18 seconds on the second group on the road now which is the yellow jersey group.

123km to go: Jack Haig is leading the GC group down the Saisies in pursuit of the trio up ahead. Looks like it was Vermaeke from DSM who went just before him. 

Alaphilippe is first across the intermediate sprint there at Beaufort. From there it's pretty much straight onto the Cormet de Roselend. 

118km to go: Haig, Skjelmose, Vermaeke and Gregor Muhlberger (Movistar) are almost with the Ciccone led trio up ahead.

117km to go: and they're with them as the Roselend kicks up! 

The lead group has just over a minute now on the yellow jersey group. There are several smaller groups of chasers dotted in no-mans land between them. Haig drives the break on along with Skjelmose. 

114km to go:  As they continue to push on up the Roselend, Majka and Soler from UAE looked to launch a move and push on in search of the break. Tiesj Benoot and Wilco Kelderman (Jumbo-Visma) were straight onto it though with Wout van Aert hovering behind. 

111km to go: 

We've now got a huge group of 34 men at the head of the race. Thibaut Pinot and Rigoberto Uran have made it across to them now to bring some extra firepower. 

It feels a little too big to go all the way as there will undoubtedly be a lot of different agendas in there. Marc Soler, Majka, Kelderman and Benoot also made it across. 

110km to go: Here's the full run down of whose there for now ----->>> Ties Benoot and Wilco Kelderman (Jumbo-Visma) Rafal Majka and Marc Soler (UAE Emirates) David Gaudu, Valentin Madouas, Thibaut Pinot and Stefan Kung (Groupama-FDJ) Magnus Cort and Rigoberto Uran (EF Education-EasyPost) Julian Alaphilippe and Dries Devenyns (Soudal Quick-Step) Pello Bilbao and Jack Haig (Bahrain Victorious) Giulio Ciccone and Mattias Skjelmose (Lidl-Trek) Ben O'Connor, Nans Peters and Felix Gall (AG2R Citroen) Rui Costa (Intermarche-Circus-Wanty) Guillaume Martin (Cofidis) Gregor Muhlberger (Movistar) Simon Yates, Chris Harper and Lawson Craddock (Jayco-AIUla) Aleksey Lutsenko (Astana Qazaqstan) Tobias Johanneson and Jonas Gregaard (Uno-X) Krists Neilands , Hugo Houle  and Nick Schultz (Israel-Premier Tech) Matthew Dinham and Kevin Vermaeke (DSM) Simon Gugliemi (Arkea-Samsic)

108km: Looks like Soler is dropping back to the yellow jersey group for UAE. 

Phil Bauhaus (Bahrain Victorious) has just abandoned the race. 

107km to go: Van Aert and Laporte (Jumbo-Visma) are leading the yellow jersey group behind the breakaway. Things are nicely poised for Jumbo just in case Pogacar and UAE are planning something.

103km: Ciccone looks like a man on a mission today. He's still leading the charge at the head of the breakaway as they push on. Stunning views from the Cormet de Roselend today. My colleague, Tom Davidson, says its the nicest climb he's ever ridden. I'm starting to see why now. 

Right! Speaking of Mr Davidson.... he's about to jump on while I'm off for some lunch! See you back here in one hour. 

Hello, Tom Davidson here. While my namesake gets his lunch, you can all feast on the beauty of Lake Roselend. 

I did this climb last summer, and I have never known water to be so beautifully turquoise. 

🤩 Le Lac de Roselend#TDF2023 pic.twitter.com/yopl5gkf4j July 19, 2023

100km to go: Just one kilometre remains of the most stunning climb in the Alps. Polka-dot-jersey-wearer Ciccone is poised to dart for points at the front of this 34-rider breakaway group. 

99km to go: Right on cue, Ciccone takes maximum mountains points over the Cormet de Roselend. 

Wondering why there's a telephone booth at the top of the climb? 

According to Alltrails.com : "The cabin is located at the roche du Biolley belvedere, about 700m from the Plan Mya refuge. According to the owners of the shelter, their clients kept asking them where they could make a phone call. Not having a network at the shelter, the owners often joked by telling them that they could go to the telephone booth, previously a fictitious place. Years later, the owners decided to make this anecdote a reality and buy a telephone booth to install it at the belvedere of the rock of Biolley, the closest place with the network."

A random telephone box on top of Cormet de Roseland...sure#TDF2023 pic.twitter.com/0fGoBEfxtU July 19, 2023

91km to go: It's hard to tell at this point whether this is a day for the breakaway or the GC favourites. The peloton seems to be keeping the front group on a tight leash, allowing them 1-45 at the moment. 

88km to go: This descent will last another 20 or so kilometres before the riders reach the category-two Côte de Longefoy - an amuse bouche for the monstrous Col de la Loze that awaits. 

80km to go: We're still descending here. The gap to the break has pushed out a little bit to 1-50, but it's being closely policed. 

Vingegaard undergoes extra anti-doping tests

Jonas Vingegaard wins tour de france stage 16 time trial 2023

There has been a lot of skepticism about the top riders' performances over the past few stages, and as a result, Jumbo-Visma and UAE have been subject to additional anti-doping tests. 

According to Wielerflits , the two teams were visited by doping inspectors on their team buses ahead of today's stage. 

"I applaud this,” said Jumbo-Visma team manager Richard Plugge. “In fact, I also worked hard for this. In this way we are taking another step in the fight against doping. Jonas Vingegaard has had no less than four blood tests in the last 48 hours. We are happy to participate in this.”

A reminder that ASO have added giant crash mattresses to some of the descents on today's stage, one of a host of new safety measures .  

Here's a picture our colleague Adam Becket has just sent across. 

Mattresses on the col de la loze descent

66km to go: Back to the race and the breakaway is climbing. They're at the foot of the Côte de Longefoy. It's steep at 7.5%, but it's not the longest. They'll be over the summit and descending again in 6km. 

60km to go: The polka-dot-clad Ciccone goes unchallenged over the summit of the category-two climb. There are double points available on the next ascent, the Col de la Loze, as it marks the highest point of this year's race (2,304m).

Hello! Big thank you to Tom Davidson for his updates in the last hour. Tom Thewlis here, back and ready to take you through to the line. 

55km to go: This climb looks like it's starting to bite for a few riders in the break. We're on an 8% slope at the moment, so in principle this shouldn't challenge anyone, but Hugo Houle is distanced thanks to the furious pace being set by Nans Peters and AG2R.

54km to go: 3-12 to the breakaway and Van Aert is really putting the hammer down on the front of the yellow jersey group. Ineos briefly came to the head of the group with Omar Fraile, although that didn't last long whatsoever. 

52km to go: There are 24 hairpin bends on the way down from this climb hence the battle for positioning.

CRASH! and it's Egan Bernal!

Oh no! Just as we saw that there was going to be a bit of a fight for positioning in the start of that descent, Bernal's front wheel slipped in front of him and he slammed to the floor. 

51km to go: That's so unfortunate for Bernal. Luckily he looks ok, although it's very clear that's knocked his confidence a little. Hopefully he's ok and can just get to the finish now. 

47km to go: We're roughly 20km from the start of the final climb, the Col de la Loze. Expect the current advantage to the break (3-09) to shatter once the road kicks up.

Jonas Vingegaard

Here's Jonas Vingegaard on the descent of the Cormet de Roselend. Will be interesting to see how this plays out when the Col de la Loze arrives and whether Jumbo will look to win the stage with the maillot jaune . 

37km to go: The Col de la Loze is almost upon us. It's the souvenir Henri Desgrange this year as the highest point in the race. The last five kilometres will almost certainly be the toughest point when the riders will face gradients of getting on for 24%. Brutal indeed.

Right! Here we go! The breakaway are onto the Col de la Loze. It's 28 kilometres of absolute hell. All the best to everyone having to ride that monster today.

32km to go: Uran and Alaphilippe are out the door! Ben O'Connor is on the front of the breakaway and ripping it up along with Jack Haig. Fair play to them both. If O'Connor or Haig want to win the stage they'll need to get rid of Simon Yates. I can't see either of them being able to do that. 

31km to go: O'Connor's AG2R teammate Felix Gall is locked into his wheel. Haig's colleague Pello Bilbao is sat just behind him. Meanwhile the peloton have just swept up Alaphilippe. 

Ben O'Connor

Here's Ben O'Connor in action. He's still leading the charge at the front of the breakaway. The Australian has had a bit of an underwhelming Tour, so this is his chance to potentially put things right. 

26km to go: Worth noting that Jack Haig has ridden the Tour of the Alps, Giro d'Italia, Criterium du Dauphine and now the Tour de France in quick succession. Pretty impressive to say the least. Haig would be a real worthy winner of the stage today.

26km to go: There are some serious climbers still left up the road today. At this rate unless Jumbo do something soon, expect one of these guys to go all the way. Yates is still there, as is Gall, O'Connor, Bilbao and Gaudu. All of those men are equally capable of winning the stage.

23km to go: Jonathan Castroviejo leads the yellow jersey group behind the breakaway. Dylan van Baarle is sat just beside him. A big surprise to see the Classics man still there for Jumbo-Visma. Usually it would be Sepp Kuss sat at the front of the bunch for Jumbo.

22km to go: The break is into the slight downhill that comes in the middle of the climb. It's a brief bit of respite for the leaders before the really serious stuff starts.

Tadej Pogacar

Great shot of Tadej Pogačar here. Does he have enough left in the tank to make up a bit of time today? It doesn't look like it at the moment.

16km to go: Van Baarle drops away from the yellow jersey group. Sepp Kuss is still in there for Jumbo alongside him and he still has two teammates up the road in the shape of Benoot and Kelderman. Haig dropped away at the head of the breakaway as the leaders started the toughest part of the climb coming out of Meribel. This is where it gets really nasty indeed.

15km to go: Whatever happens today, O'Connor deserves huge credit and praise for his ride in the breakaway. The Aussie has put in a huge effort at the head of the race which has forced Ineos to really chase from the yellow jersey group. Chapeau indeed.

Simon Yates is sat a couple of wheels down from O'Connor. He looks remarkably fresh. 

Right! That's it! O'Connor has dropped away now. He was all in for teammate Felix Gall. Chris Harper - Yate's Jayco AIUla teammate - has taken over at the head of the breakaway. When will Yates make his move for the stage win?

14km to go: Pogacar is dropped! He's clearly massively suffering! Jumbo have moved to the front of the bunch with Kuss and Pogacar has dropped like a stone!

13km to go: That doesn't look good whatsoever for the Slovenian! He looks exhausted! That's got to be the Tour done and dusted. When does Vingegaard make his move if he wants the stage win?!

13km to go: Tadej Pogačar has already lost another 20 seconds to Vingegaard here according to the commentators. 

Meanwhile Gall launches at the head of the race! Looks like Yates can't respond for now!

12km to go: Gall has already opened up a decent gap to Yates now. Majka is with Yates and Harper in the second group on the road. 

Tadej Pogačar looks absolutely spent. A really sad sight. His crash earlier today won't have helped things, but he looks absolutely burnt out. 

11km to go: Poor Pogačar. He's now lost nearly another minute to Vingegaard. Meanwhile Gall continues up ahead and is weaving all over the road. He looks exhausted.

11km to go: and this is where Vingegaard and Jumbo take flight! Huge turn from Benoot sets him up and he takes off like a rocket! Can he go on and win the stage?

10km to go: Vingegaard will be able to see Gall and the remnants of the breakaway up ahead through the hairpins. They are so high now. He's got 2-20 to make up if he still wants the stage win. 

Gall is in pieces here on the 13% slopes. Vingegaard is flying and just continuing to twist the knife in Pogacar's wounds. 

9km to go: Yates drops Majka and leaves him for dead. He's got 23 seconds on Yates and 1-53 on Vingegaard. Tadej Pogačar has just said on the team radio "I'm gone, I'm dead" poor Tadej indeed!

NO!!! The crowds are completely in the way and have caused the car at the head of a race to come to a standstill in front of Jonas Vingegaard. He's just been forced to a standstill and had to unclip.

Pello Bilbao has just lashed out at a fan. The riders are getting incredibly frustrated out there. 

Meanwhile Gall is screaming through the pain up ahead! Yates has 21 seconds to make up. 

Where are the Police or Gendarmes keeping the crowds back up here?! They're thinning out now but it's not a good look. 

7km to go: Vingegaard seems to have not been thrown whatsoever by having to stop back there. He's got nearly four minutes on Pogacar now. Gall is on the 24% section now! Wow!

5km to go: Vingegaard sails past Gaudu. He's 1-29 from the head of the race. Only Pello Bilbao can keep tabs on him.

3km to go: Gall took the KOM at the top of at the top of the Col de la Loze and takes this year's souvenir Henri Desgrange. Gall, Yates and Vingegaard and co are onto the descent towards the climb to Courchevel. 

Pogacar has only just crossed the summit of the climb. 

2.3 km to go: This is nail biting stuff! It's a two way fight between Gall and Yates for the stage win but its going to go down to the line! My word!

Jonas Vingegaard can sit up and relax now. He doesn't need another stage win. The Tour title is essentially wrapped up bar any major disaster. 

Gall has the stage win in the bag! What an effort from the Austrian!

He approaches the line and can relax.

Simon Yates will take second and has made big gains on GC here.

FELIX GALL WINS STAGE 17 OF THE TOUR DE FRANCE!! WHAT A DAY FOR THE AUSTRIAN. A VERY WORTHY WINNER INDEED.

Simon Yates grabs second

Vingegaard and Bilbao are coming to the line now. The Danish rider will have getting on for 8 or 9 minutes on Pogacar come the end of the day.

Right! Time for a stage report. We'll wrap everything up on here shortly. A stage report will follow.

Here's our stage report on a scintillating day of action at the Tour. 

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le tour de france stage 17

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Tour de France 2023 stage 17 preview - a brutal and decisive day of climbing

One of the hardest days of this year's Tour de France awaits the riders in stage 17,  featuring over 5,000 metres of climbing

Words: Stephen Puddicombe

Photos: Zac Williams/SWPix

Distance: 165.7km Start location: Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc Finish location: Courchevel Start time: 12:20 CEST Finish time (approx): 17:03 CEST

The quintessential Alpine climb is one that’s unforgivingly long and ascends at a relentless but steady gradient, and from where you can admire the stunning scenery of rocky landscape and snow-capped peaks. By contrast, it’s said that the summits of the Pyrenees are relatively shorter, with more uneven gradients, less well-paved roads, and surrounded by more greenery and forests.

These are generalisations that can become meaningless when you start to compare individual climbs in each mountain range with the other, and today’s Alpine epic only partially fits the stereotype. On one hand, it features the two longest climbs of the whole Tour, the 19.9km Cormet de Roselend, and the 28.1km Col de la Loze, but, after a steady first 14km in which the road rarely ramps up to more than 8%, the Col de la Loze turns into something much more atypical upon reaching a plateau halfway up at the Méribel ski resort.

Not only does the road narrow drastically, the gradient here fluctuates constantly and horribly with hairpins aplenty and multiple ramps of over 15%, making it impossible to get the kind of rhythm you’d hope to during such a long effort. And the worst is saved until last, with a final 4km that averages over 10%, including one section at 24%. As the highest point of the Tour, the thin air will make these slopes even more agonising.

This will be the second time the Tour has visited the climb following its debut in 2020, when Primož Roglič came out narrowly on top in another battle against Tadej Pogačar, while Miguel Ángel López won the stage and jumped up on GC into a podium position, only to lose it a few days later in the time trial. With no more stages to come against the clock this week, this is a real chance for mountain goats like López to make significant time. 

Tour de France stage 17 profile

Stage 17 profile sourced via ASO

Even before the Col de la Loze, there’s enough climbing today (over 5,000m, in fact) to make a strong case for this to be the queen stage of the Tour. The category one Col des Saisies greets the riders just 17km into the stage, and its descent is immediately followed by the cruelly long Cormet de Roselend. Things do calm down after that with a long descent prior to the relatively modest category two Côte de Longefoy, but the descent of that climb looks tricky, with technical corners and tight hairpins aplenty. From there they’ll start the mammoth effort up Col de la Loze which, though not quite a mountain top finish, may as well be — a fast 6.5km descent followed by viscous final kilometre rise to the finish in Courchevel in double digit gradients offers little scope for anyone dropped to make back any time. With just one mountain stage to come after, this climb could be the setting where the fate of the yellow jersey is fully determined. 

On the rest day the outlook on stage 17 may have been that it would see another tight battle for seconds between the race's top two,  Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) and Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates). After the decimation in the time trial, which saw Vingegaard put Pogačar from 10 seconds to an astonishing 1:48 back on GC, UAE will now need to plot an overthrow of the race leader on this stage if they have any hope of winning the Tour de France.

That may put paid to any chance of the breakaway staying away, which looked unlikely anyway considering the significant difficulty of the final climb. Therefore, it's extremely hard to look past Vingegaard or Pogačar winning here. 

The more than 5,000m of climbing does open up opportunities for the other pure climbers in the GC, particularly considering the top two are so far out of sight that they won't consider anyone else a threat to their position.

Carlos Rodríguez (Ineos Grenadiers) has remained in contention for podium spot, and his metronomic style of climbing could help him perfectly pace his effort to the top of the Col de la Loze. If he's to win though, he'll need Vingegaard and Pogačar to be concentrating on each other as they were on Joux Plane last weekend.

Eighth overall Simon Yates (Jayco-Alula) has the capabilities to win on a climb of this severity, having thrived on the likes of the Monte Zoncolan in the past at the Giro d'Italia.

We can't see past either Vingegaard or Pogačar winning this stage given its enormous difficulty. Like last year when he won on Peyragudes after losing a heap of time to his rival, we think Pogačar will win the stage with Vingegaard close behind.

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le tour de france stage 17

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  1. Tour de France 2021 Stage 17 Highlights

    le tour de france stage 17

  2. Tour de France stage 17 highlights

    le tour de france stage 17

  3. Tour de France 2021 Stage 17, LIVE: Pogacar wins, final results and

    le tour de france stage 17

  4. TOUR DE FRANCE STAGE 17 HIGHLIGHTS

    le tour de france stage 17

  5. Watch: Tour de France stage 17 highlights

    le tour de france stage 17

  6. Tour de France 2017

    le tour de france stage 17

COMMENTS

  1. Stage 17

    Profile, time schedule, all informations on the stage. Club 2024 route 2024 Teams 2023 Edition Rankings Stage winners All the ... TOUR DE FRANCE 2023 - VIDEO GAMES (PC, XBOX ONE, PS4 & PS5) Fantasy by Tissot Tour de France Cycling Legends (iOS, Android) Other events Broadcasters Media Games Collectible MonTour VIP Official shops Store Official games. PRO CYCLING MANAGER 2023 (PC) TOUR DE ...

  2. Extended Highlights

    Discover the Stage 17 highlights More information on :https://www.letour.frhttps://www.facebook.com/letourhttps://twitter.com/letourhttps://www.instagram.com...

  3. Tour de France: Stage 17

    Tour de France: Stage 17 - Analysis . Étape 17, les coureurs affrontent l'étape la plus difficile du Tour, avec un parcours montagneux de 165 km de Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc à Courchevel. Ce monstre d'étape contient une ascension de 2ème catégorie, deux ascensions de 1ère catégorie et une de catégorie HC, avec des milliers de mètres de dénivelé positif et une arrivée incroyable ...

  4. GC Battle Explodes In High Mountains Of The Queen Stage!

    Highlights from stage 17 of the Tour de France 2023. A brutal day in the Alps with over 5000m of elevation gain across 165.7km of racing. The Col des Saisies, Cormet de Roselend and...

  5. Tour de France: Vingegaard dashes Pogacar's GC hopes on stage 17 across

    Tour de France: Vingegaard dashes Pogacar's GC hopes on stage 17 across Col de la Loze. By Dani Ostanek. last updated 19 July 2023. Felix Gall wins queen stage from late breakaway...

  6. Tour de France 2022 Stage 17 results

    Tadej Pogačar is the winner of Tour de France 2022 Stage 17, before Jonas Vingegaard and Brandon McNulty. Jonas Vingegaard was leader in GC.

  7. Tour de France 2023 Stage 17 results

    Stage 17 » Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc › Courchevel (165.7km) Felix Gall is the winner of Tour de France 2023 Stage 17, before Simon Yates and Pello Bilbao. Jonas Vingegaard was leader in GC.

  8. Tour de France: Gall grinds to stage 17 win as Vingegaard opens up gulf

    Stage 17 report: The Austrian rider Felix Gall won stage 17 after the race leader Jonas Vingegaard increased his overall lead on Tadej Pogacar to seven minutes and 35 seconds with another...

  9. As it happened: Pogacar cracks on the Col de la Loze as Gall survives

    Marc Soler comforts Tadej Pogacar as they cross the line (Image credit: Michael Steele/Getty Images). Tour de France - Everything you need to know Vingegaard removes all doubt, crushes Pogacar in ...

  10. Tour de France LIVE: Stage 17 updates & results

    20 July 2022. Stage-by-Stage guide. Summary. Stage 17: Saint-Gaudens - Peyragudes,129.7km. The first of two big Pyrenean stages features four categorised climbs in the final 76km. Jonas...

  11. Tadej Pogacar wins stage 17 of the Tour de France ahead of leader Jonas

    Here's how it works. Pogacar triples up on stage 17 mountain mayhem at Tour de France. Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) saved his final blast for the closing 100 metres and won his third...

  12. Stage profiles Tour de France 2023 Stage 17

    Tour de France (2.UWT) 2023 » Stage 17 » Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc › Courchevel (165.7km) Profiles. Profiles for this race/stage. All stage profiles; Overview map; Profile. Map. Finish profile. Climb. Climb. Climb. Climb. Menu. Complementary results; Finish photo; Key events; Route. Profiles; Time table; Local circuit; Grand Tours. Tour de France; Giro d'Italia; Vuelta a España; Major ...

  13. Tour de France: Pogacar wins stage 17 but Vingegaard holds firm

    20 Jul 2022 11.06 EDT. General classification after stage 17. J Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) 67h 53m 54s. T Pogacar (UAE-Team Emirates) +2m 18s. G Thomas (Ineos) +4m 56s. N Quintana (Arkea-Samsic)...

  14. Tour de France 2024

    Le Dévoluy is delighted to welcome two stages of the 111th Tour de France on July 17 and 18, 2024! Stage 17, 17/07: St-Paul-Trois-Châteaux > Superdévoluy. Stage 18, 18/08: Gap Barcelonnette via Col du Festre. Christian Prudhomme's comment: "Setting course for the southern Alps, the crossing of the Drôme presents no major obstacles.

  15. Tour de France 2023 Route stage 17: Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc

    Wednesday 19 July - The 17th stage of the Tour de France travels from Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc to the altiport in the mountains above Courchevel. The finale features the brutal Col de la Loze, while the route adds up to 165.6 kilometres and takes in an elevation gain of 5,400 metres. The last 600 meters rise at - whoops - 10.8%.

  16. Tour de France stage 17 AS IT HAPPENED: Jonas Vingegaard extinguishes

    Live updates from the seventeenth stage of the 2023 Tour de France which includes the monstrous Col de la Loze. Cycling Weekly. EST. 1891. US Edition. Subscribe. × . Search. Sign in ...

  17. Tour de France stage 17 Live

    UAE lose Majka but go on the attack in the Pyrenees

  18. Tour de France 2023 stage 17 preview

    One of the hardest days of this year's Tour de France awaits the riders in stage 17, featuring over 5,000 metres of climbing. Words: Stephen Puddicombe. Photos: Zac Williams/SWPix. Distance: 165.7km. Start location: Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc. Finish location: Courchevel. Start time: 12:20 CEST. Finish time (approx): 17:03 CEST.

  19. Plans d'entraînement

    Plans d'entraînement. Le secret pour réussir ton objectif en cyclisme réside dans la détermination et la préparation. Il n'y a pas de raccourci, mais en te donnant les moyens nécessaires, tu peux atteindre tes objectifs. C'est pourquoi, en collaboration avec la FFC, nous te proposons un plan d'entraînement détaillé pour les 3 ...

  20. Official route of Tour de France 2024

    The number of stages: 8 flat, 4 hilly, 7 mountain (with 4 summit finishes at Saint-Lary-Soulan Pla d'Adet, Plateau de Beille, Isola 2000, Col de la Couillole), 2 time trials and 2 rest days. 176 The number of riders who will line up at the start of the Tour, divided into 22 teams of 8 riders each.

  21. Les stages et alternances chez EDF pour les jeunes talents

    5000 stagiaires pour le Groupe EDF en France dont plus de 1000 2nde et 3ème pour EDF SA. 4500 alternantes et alternants pour le groupe EDF en France. Nos programmes de stages et d'alternances sont conçus pour vous offrir une immersion passionnante dans le monde de la transition énergétique. Nouveauté cette année, nous allons accueillir des stagiaires de 2nde du 17 au 28 juin. En post-BAC ...

  22. Tour de France stage 17

    Tour de France stage 17 - Live coverage | Cyclingnews. Skip to main content. Follow live race text coverage as the race heads to the summit of the Col du Portet.

  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 Commitments key figures Sporting Stakes "Maillot Jaune" Collection The jerseys safety history Partners. Videos News Videos Photos Come to the ...