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Tour De France
Tour de France Local name Le Tour de France Region France and nearby countries Date July Type Stage Race (Grand Tour) General Director Christian Prudhomme History First edition 1903 Number of editions 92 (2005) First winner Maurice Garin Most wins Lance Armstrong (7) Latest winner Lance Armstrong Most career Yellow Jerseys Eddy Merckx (111) Most career stage wins Eddy Merckx (33) The Tour de France (French for "Tour of France"), often referred to as
La Grande Boucle, Le Tour or The Tour, is the most
famous and prestigious road bicycle race in the world. It has been held annually
since 1903, interrupted only by World War I and World War II, and is contested
over the course of three weeks each July. It is a long-distance stage race
competition for professional cycling teams, travelling through France and its
nearby countries. The winner is the individual rider who finishes the course of
the race in the least accumulated time. Other major stage races include the Giro d'Italia (Tour of Italy) and the
Vuelta a España (Tour of Spain). The Giro d'Italia, Tour de France and World
Cycling Championship constitute the Triple Crown of Cycling. While the other two
European Grand Tours are well-known in Europe and attract many professional
cyclists, they are relatively unknown outside the continent, and even the UCI
World Cycling Championship is only familiar to cycling enthusiasts. The Tour de
France, in contrast, has long been a household name around the globe, even
amongst people who are not generally interested in pro cycling, and is for
cycling what the FIFA World Cup is to football (soccer) in terms of global
popularity. The race is the world's largest annual pro sporting event, measured
in the number of viewers. Since 2005, the race has been a part of the UCI ProTour race series. The most
recent Tour was the 2005 Tour de France. The Tour was founded as a publicity event for the newspaper L'Auto
(ancestor of the present l'Équipe) by its editor and co-founder, Henri
Desgrange, to rival the Paris-Brest et retour ride (sponsored by Le
Petit Journal), and Bordeaux-Paris. The idea for a round-France stage race
is also credited to one of his journalists, Géorges Lefèvre, with whom Desgrange
had lunch at the Café de Madrid in Paris on 20 November 1902. L'Auto
announced the race on January 19, 1903. Promotion of the Tour de France
certainly proved a great success for the newspaper; circulation leapt from
25,000 before the 1903 Tour to 65,000 after it; in 1908 the race boosted
circulation past a quarter of a million, and during the 1923 Tour it was selling
500,000 copies a day. The record circulation claimed by Desgrange was 854,000,
achieved during the 1933 Tour. Today, the Tour is organised by the Société du
Tour de France, a subsidiary of Amaury Sport Organisation (ASO), which is
part of the media group that owns l'Équipe. The Tour is a "stage race", divided into a number of stages, each
being a race held over one day. The amount of time it takes each rider to
complete each stage is noted, recorded and accumulated. Riders who finish in
the same group are awarded the same time, with possible subtractions
due to time bonuses. Two riders are said to have finished in the same group if
the gap between them is less than one bike-length. A crash in the final
kilometer of a normal stage means that all riders in the same group entering the
final kilometer are given the same time. The ranking of the riders according to
accumulated time is known as the General Classification, or GC. The overall
winner is the one who is ranked first on GC at the end of the final stage. It is
possible to win the overall race without winning any individual stages (which
Greg LeMond did in 1990). Winning a Tour de France stage is considered a great
pro cycling achievement, more prestigious than winning most single day races,
regardless of one's overall standing in the GC. Although the number of stages
has varied in the past, recently the Tour has consisted of about 20 stages, with
a total length of between 3,000 and 4,000 km (1800 to 2500 mi). In addition to
the race for the overall win, there are several additional competitions. The
leaders of these competitions are represented by certain coloured jerseys; see
below for more information. The Tour is nowadays contested by professional teams backed by commercial
sponsors, but the event began as a race for individuals; slipstreaming and other
team tactics were initially savagely condemned by Desgrange, and he only
accepted their inevitability during the 1920s. Even when commercial cycling
teams had become commonplace in other events, the Tour was contested by national
teams for several years during the 1950s and early 1960s. Most stages take place in France though it is very common to have a few
stages in nearby countries, such as Italy, Spain, Switzerland, Belgium,
Luxembourg and Germany as well as non-neighbouring countries such as the
Republic of Ireland, United Kingdom (visited in 1974 and 1994, and will start
the 2007 tour) and the Netherlands. The three weeks usually includes two rest
days, which are sometimes used to transport the riders long distances between
stages. In recent years, the first stage had been preceded by a short individual time
trial (1 to 15 km), called the prologue. This was scrapped in 2005, with
the presumption that future editions will see the prologue reinstated. The
traditional finish is in Paris on the Champs-Élysées. During the Tour, various
stages occur, including a number of mountain stages, individual time trials and
a team time trial. The remaining stages are held over relatively flat terrain.
With the variety of stages, sprinters may win stages, but the overall winner is
almost always a master of the mountain stages and time trials. The itinerary of the race changes each year and alternates between clockwise
and anti-clockwise direction around France. (For example, the most recent Tour
(2005) was a clockwise direction Tour - visiting the Alpes first and then the
Pyrenees. Next year's race can be expected to visit those two mountain ranges in
the reverse order.) Some of the visited places, especially mountains and passes,
recur almost annually and are famous on their own. The most famous mountains are
those in the hors-categorie (peaks where the difficulty in climbing is
beyond categorization), including the Col du Tourmalet, Mont Ventoux, Col du
Galibier, the Hautacam and Alpe d'Huez. Although the tour is often won in the
mountain stages, the length and variety of terrain ensures that only an
all-round rider can win the race. (A notable exception in recent years being the
late Marco Pantani, the winner in 1998, who was a mountain climbing specialist.) From 1984 to 2003 there was a race called La Grande Boucle Féminine
Internationale, which was unofficially considered Tour de France for women.
1903 to 1939 Henri Desgrange 1947 to 1961 Jacques Goddet 1962 to 1986 Jacques Goddet and Felix Levitan 1987 to 1988 Jean-François Naquet-Radiguet 1988 to 1989 Jean-Pierre Courcol 1989 to 2005 Jean-Marie Leblanc 2005 to present Christian Prudhomme
Since 1975, the final stage always finishes on the Champs-Élysées in Paris,
which, being cobbled, is an unpleasant surface to cycle on, though not as much
as the famous Paris-Roubaix. The race takes multiple turns over the avenue,
which is lined with enormous spectator crowds. This stage is not usually
competitive in terms of the overall lead since it is a flat sprinters' stage,
and the leader is likely to have a sufficiently large margin to be
unchallengeable. There have been exceptions, however. In 1987, with Stephen
Roche leading Pedro Delgado by only 40 seconds after the final time trial,
Delgado broke away from the peloton on the Champs-Elysées, threatening to snatch
victory at the last minute. (In fact he was caught, he and Roche both finished
in the peloton, and Roche thereby won the Tour.) In recent years the Tour organisers have experimented with holding the final
time trial as the final, rather than as the penultimate, stage. Most famously,
the final stage of the 1989 Tour saw Greg LeMond overtake Laurent Fignon's
overall lead by just 8 seconds, the closest winning margin in the Tour's
history. It is unlikely that this would be repeated in the future. The particularly tough climb of Alpe d'Huez is a favourite, providing a stage
finish in most Tours. In 2004, in another experiment, the mountain time trial
ended at Alpe d'Huez. This seems less likely to be repeated, following
complaints of abusive spectator behavior from the riders. Another famous
mountain stage is the climb of the Mont Ventoux, often claimed to be the hardest
climb in the Tour due to the harsh conditions there. The Tour usually features
only one of these two climbs in a year. To host a stage start or finish brings prestige, and a lot of business, to a
town. Whereas formerly each stage would start at the preceding stage's finish
line, making a continuous course for the race, nowadays each stage can often
start some distance from the previous day's finish, to allow more towns to share
in the glory. Sometimes the Tour will jump very long distances between stages,
requiring a rest day to allow riders to be transported. The prologue and first stage of the Tour are particularly prestigious to
host. Usually one town will host the prologue (which is too short to go between
towns) and also the start of stage 1. In some years, like 2005, there is no
prologue. The Tour alternates between starting inside and outside France;
traditionally, the first few stages are in a neighbouring country.
1910: French racer Adolphe Helière drowned at the Côte d'Azur during a rest
day. 1935: Spanish racer Francesco Cepeda died after plunging down a ravine on
the Col du Galibier.[4] 1967: Friday July 13, Stage 13: English rider Tom Simpson died of heart
failure on the ascent of Mont Ventoux. Amphetamines and alcohol were found in
Simpson's jersey and bloodstream. His death prompted tour officials to begin a
programme of drug testing.[4] 1995: July 18, stage 15: Italian racer Fabio Casartelli crashed at
approximately 88 km/h descending the Col de Portet d'Aspet. Casartelli, not
wearing a helmet, received massive trauma to the top of his head from a concrete
block and died on the scene[4]. Apart from the deaths of riders, another two fatal accidents have also
occurred. 1957, July 14, motorcycle rider Rene Wagter and his passenger journalist for
Radio Radio-Luxembourg Alex Virot slipping on road metal (gravel) off a road
without railing in the mountains near Ax-les-Thermes.[4] 1958, Official Constant Wouters dies after an accident with sprinter Andre
Darrigade in the 6th stage of the tour.
Apart from the overall competition of winning the Tour, each edition of the
race has two further classifications, the points and the mountain competitions.
Tallied at the end of each stage, the current leaders of the three competitions
are required to wear a corresponding, distinctly coloured, jersey during the
next stage. Jerseys are awarded in a ceremony immediately following each stage,
sometimes before trailing riders have finished the stage. Where a single rider
leads in the competition for more than one jersey, they wear the most
prestigious jersey to which they are entitled, and the second-placed rider in
each of the other classifications becomes entitled to wear the corresponding
jersey. For example, in the first week it is common for the overall
classification (yellow jersey) and points (sprint) competition (green jersey) to
be led by the same rider. In this case the leading rider will wear the yellow
jersey and the rider placed second in the points competition will wear the green
jersey. A rider who leads a classification for a stage of the Tour gets three copies
of the coloured jersey. The jersey bears their team logo, and the copy that they
are awarded immediately after the stage end must have the logo attached in a
matter of minutes, so this is done by a rapid process that can be done in the
field but which yields an inferior jersey. Overnight, a high-quality jersey is
printed to be worn the next day. They also get a high-quality jersey to keep as
a souvenir: the ones that are worn get dirty and are sometimes damaged by the
day's cycling. The Tour's jersey colours have been adopted by other cycling stage races, and
have thus come to have meaning within cycling generally, rather than solely in
the context of the Tour. For example, the Tour of Britain has yellow, green, and
polka-dot jerseys with the same meaning as in the Tour de France. The Giro
d'Italia notably differs in awarding the overall leader a pink jersey, having
been organized and sponsored by La Gazzetta dello Sport, an Italian sports daily
newspaper with pink pages. Its King of the Mountains wears a green jersey.
The maillot jaune (yellow jersey), worn by the overall time leader, is
most prized. It is awarded by calculating the total combined race time up to
that point for each rider. The rider with the lowest total time is the leader,
and at the end of the event is declared the overall winner of the Tour.
Desgrange added the yellow jersey in 1919 because he wanted the race leader to
wear something distinctive and because the pages of his magazine, L'Auto, were
yellow. Additional time bonuses, in the form of a number of seconds to be
deducted from the rider's overall time, are available to the first 3 riders to
finish the stage or cross an intermediate sprint (see below). As of 2005, the
first 3 places to finish are awarded bonuses of 20, 12 and 8 seconds
respectively, while the first 3 places at intermediate sprints are awarded 6, 4
and 2 seconds. However, these bonuses are rarely significant enough to cause
major upset in the classement géneral (general classification). Sometimes a rider takes the overall lead during a stage and gets sufficiently
far ahead of the yellow jersey wearer such that his current time lead is greater
than his time deficit to the yellow jersey in the general classification; when
this happens, this rider may be referred to as being "the yellow jersey on the
road". No jerseys are exchanged in this situation.
The maillot vert (green jersey) is awarded for sprint points. At the
end of each stage, points for this jersey are gained by the riders who finish
first, second, etc. The number of points for each place and the number of riders
rewarded varies depending on the type of stage - flat stages give the winner 35
points down to 1 point for the 25th rider; medium mountain stages give the
winner 25 points down to 1 point for the 20th rider; high mountain stages give
the winner 20 points down to 1 point for the 15th rider. This is because,
generally speaking, the more mountainous a stage is, the less likely the chance
of a sprint finish between many riders. Points are also awarded for individual
time trial stages: 15 for the winner down to 1 for the 10th rider. Additional
points are available at intermediate sprint contests, usually occurring 2 or 3
times in each stage at pre-determined locations; currently 6, 4 and 2 points are
available to the first 3 riders at each sprint.
The "King of the Mountains" wears a white jersey with red dots (maillot à
pois rouges), referred to as the "polka dot jersey". At the top of each
climb in the Tour, there are points for the riders who are first over the top.
The climbs are divided into categories from 1 (most difficult) to 4 (least
difficult) based on their difficulty, measured as a function of their steepness
and length. A fifth category, called Hors categorie (outside category) is
formed by mountains even more difficult than those of the first category. Although the best climber was first recognized in 1933, the distinctive
jersey was not introduced until 1975. The colours were decided by the then
sponsor, Poulain Chocolate, to match a popular product. In 2004, the
scoring system was changed such that the first rider over a fourth category
climb was awarded 3 points while the first to complete a hors category
climb would win 20 points. Further points over a fourth category climb are only
for the top three places while on a hors category climb the top ten riders are
rewarded. Additionally beginning in 2004, points scored on the final climb of
the day were doubled if said climb was at least a second category climb.
There are three lesser classifications, though only one of them awards the
leader with a jersey. The maillot blanc (white jersey) is like the yellow
jersey, but only open for young riders who are less than 25 years old on January
1 of the year the Tour is ridden. The "fighting spirit" award goes to the most
combative rider of the previous stage. Each day, a group of judges awards points
to riders who made particularly attacking moves the day before, and the rider
with most points in total gets a white-on-red (instead of a black-on-white)
identification number. While this is usually given to the winner of the previous
stage, it is not always so, especially during flat stages where aggressive
riders might be caught by the peloton before a mass sprint. At the end of the
tour, an award is given to the rider who was thought to be the most aggressive
bike racer throughout the entire three week tour. Finally, there is a team
classification. For this classification, the time of the first three riders from
each team is added after each stage. The Tour currently has 21 teams of 9 riders
each (when starting), each sponsored by one or more companies - although at some
stages of its history, the teams have been divided instead by nationality. The
team classification is not associated with a particular jersey design. As in all road races, current national road race champions can wear their
national jerseys in "ordinary stages"; the current world champion can wear the
rainbow jersey. National time-trial champions are allowed to wear their national
jerseys in time-trial stages only. National championships are held the weekend
before the tour starts, and many of the tour favourites and team leaders do not
compete in them. Often, therefore, national championship titles are held by
domestiques or young, "up-and-coming" riders.
Historically, there was a red jersey for the standings in non-stage-finish
sprints: points were awarded to the first three riders to pass two or three
intermediate points during the stage. These sprints also scored points towards
the green jersey and bonus seconds towards the overall classification, as well
as cash prizes offered by the residents of the area where the sprint took place.
The sprints remain, with all these additional effects, the most significant now
being the points for the green jersey. The red jersey was abolished in 1989. There also used to be a combination jersey, scored on a points system based
on standings for the yellow, green, red, and polka-dot jerseys. The jersey
design was a patchwork, with areas resembling each individual jersey design.
This was abolished in the same year as the red jersey.
In an ordinary stage, all riders start simultaneously and share the road. The
real start (départ réel) usually is some 2 to 5 km away from the starting
point, and is announced by the Tour director in the officials' car waving a
white flag. Riders are permitted to touch (but not push or nudge) and to shelter behind
each other, in slipstream. The latter is called drafting and is an essential
technique. The one who crosses the finish line first wins. In the first week of
the Tour, this usually leads to spectacular mass sprints. While only finishers are awarded sprint points, all riders finishing in an
identifiable group (with no significant gap to the rider in front, as determined
by race officials) are deemed to have finished the stage in the same time as the
lead rider of that group for overall classification purposes. This avoids what
would otherwise be dangerous mass sprints. It is not unusual for the entire
field to finish in a single group, taking some time to cross the line, but being
credited with the same time as the stage winner. Time bonuses are awarded at some intermediate sprints and stage finishes to
the first three riders who reach the specified point. These bonuses generally
are a maximum of 20 seconds, and can allow a good sprinter to qualify for the
Yellow Jersey early in the Tour. Riders who crash within the last kilometer of the stage are credited with the
finishing time of the group that they were with when they crashed. This prevents
riders from being penalised for accidents that do not accurately reflect their
performance on the stage as a whole given that crashes in the final kilometre
can be huge pileups that are hard to avoid for a rider farther back in the
peloton. A crashed sprinter inside the final kilometre will not win the sprint,
but avoids being penalised in the overall classification. The final kilometre is
indicated in the race course by a red triangular pennant - known as the
flamme rouge - raised above the road. Some ordinary stages take place in the mountains, almost always causing major
shifts in the General Classification. On ordinary stages that do not have
extended mountain climbs, most riders can manage to stay together in the peloton
all the way to the finish; during mountain stages, however, it is not uncommon
for some riders to lose 40 minutes to the winner of the stage. The so called
mountain stages are often the deciding factor in determining the winner of the
Tour de France. With the exception of the now traditional finish at the
Champs-Elysées all famous stages, like Alpe d'Huez and Mont Ventoux, are
mountain stages, and these often bring out the most spectators who line up the
roads by the thousands to cheer and encourage the cyclists and support their
favorites.
In an individual time trial each rider rides individually. The first stage of
the tour is often a time trial, known as a prologue. Here, riders start
in reverse order of race number, meaning the weakest rider on the lowest ranked
team will be first off, with the final rider being the defending champion,
wearing Number 1. The purpose of the prologue is to decide who gets to wear
yellow on the opening day, and provide a large and prestigious spectacle for one
lucky city. There are usually three or four time trials during the Tour. One of these may
be a team time trial (see below). Traditionally the final time trial has been
the penultimate stage, and effectively determines the winner before the final
ordinary stage which is not ridden competitively. On a few occasions, the race
organisers made the final stage into Paris a time trial. The most recent
occasion on which this was done, in 1989, yielded the closest ever finish in
Tour history, when Greg LeMond beat Laurent Fignon by eight seconds overall.
Fignon wore the yellow jersey for the final stage, with a narrow lead of 50
seconds, and was beaten by LeMond's superior time trial performance. Although
other riders had used aerodynamic aids in previous tours, LeMond's aero
handlebars and helmet were considered a major factor in his victory.
Often in the first week of the Tour there is a team time trial (TTT), in
which each team rides together without interference from competing teams. The
team time is determined by the fifth rider to cross the line; all riders
ahead of the fifth rider, and those finishing within one bike length of each
other, are awarded this same time. Riders who finish more than one bike-length
behind their respective teams are awarded their own individual times. 2005 time limits 2nd: 20" 12th: 2' 00" 3rd: 30" 13th: 2' 10" 4th: 40" 14th: 2' 20" 5th: 50" 15th: 2' 30" 6th: 1' 16th: 2' 35" 7th: 1' 10" 17th: 2' 40" 8th: 1' 20" 18th: 2' 45" 9th: 1' 30" 19th: 2' 50" 10th: 1' 40" 20th: 2' 55" 11th: 1' 50" 21st: 3' 00" The TTT has been criticized for strongly favoring the strong teams and
handicapping strong riders from weaker teams. To address this criticism, the
2004 and 2005 editions of the Tour limited the maximum team time
difference relative to the fastest team, according to the team rankings on the
stage. The following table indicates the maximum time penalty added to the
winning team's time that a team will receive, according to its team time
placing. However, this does not apply to riders finishing behind their own
teams, and does not protect riders in case of crashing in the last kilometer,
unlike during normal stages. For example, a team that finishes in 14th place, six minutes behind the
winning team, would lose only two minutes and 20 seconds in the General
Classification relative to the winners of the TTT. If the team time had been
2:13 behind the winning team, then the team time will be 2:13 assuming that this
were still the 14th place. In 2006 there will be no TTT in the Tour.
The Tour is immensely popular and important in France, not only as a sporting
event but also as a matter of national identity and pride. Any Frenchman who has
won the Tour becomes an object of public adoration in his native land. It is
said that any rider who has worn the yellow jersey, even for a day, will never
go hungry or thirsty again in France. Millions of spectators line the route
every year to see the Tour first-hand, some of them having encamped a week in
advance to get the best views. A recognizable part of the crowd each day is Didi
Senft who, dressed in a red devil costume, has been known as the Tour de France
devil or El Diablo since 1993. The inspiration for the costume is
attributed to the final kilometre of each Tour stage, called the Red Devil's
Lap. In the hours before the riders pass, a carnival atmosphere prevails. Any
amateur cyclist is free to attempt the course on his bicycle in the morning, and
after that there begins a garish cavalcade of advertising vehicles blaring music
and tossing hats, souvenirs, sweets and free samples of all sorts. As word
passes that the riders are approaching, the fans begin to encroach on the road
until they are often just an arm’s length from the riders.
The riders, unlike some of their fans, have traditionally tempered their
competitiveness and enthusiasm with an elaborate but unwritten code of conduct.
Whenever reasonably possible, one allows a rider to lead the peloton when the
race passes through his home village or on his birthday, and it often happens
that the winner of the stage held on Bastille Day is French. One does not attack
a leading rider who has suffered a mechanical breakdown or other misfortune, one
who is eating in the feed zone or one who is enjoying un besoin
naturel (roughly translated to a natural need, the practice of answering
nature's call). Unless the final stage is a time trial--or in the case of Pedro
Delgado attacking the yellow jersey of Stephen Roche in 1987 on the
Champs-Elysées--riders generally do not launch attacks on the leader of the Tour
on the final stage, giving the leader one final day to bask in the glory of
winning the yellow jersey. The rider ranked last in the general classification, who may wind up in Paris
with an overall time five or more hours slower than that of the winner, is
called the lantern rouge. The rider may just be a lowly domestique, but
such is the sympathy of the French public that finishing last is actually very
prestigious. The money a rider can generate through publicity is much greater if
he finishes last than second from last. Thus, in the past many riders have
attempted to engineer themselves into last place by artificial means. Other
riders may just be ill or slightly injured and unwillingly end up as the
lanterne rouge.
Much of the terminology used to describe the Tour de France is frequently
used in bicycle racing across the world. Terms specific to the Tour de France
include: course - all riders taken together, from the tête de la course
to the arrière de la course hors catégorie - a climb that is "beyond categorization", an
incredibly tough climb flamme rouge, or red kite - the red pennant hanging from an
archway at the start of the final kilometre (it may not always be exactly
one kilometre from the finish; it is roughly 1000 metres from the finish,
sometimes before where a crash may be likely, and/or where the erection of a
large, tent-like inflatable arch is easiest) lanterne rouge - meaning "red lantern" (as found at the end of a rail
train), the name for the overall last-place rider.
A casual fan, Scott Coady attended the 2000 Tour de France with the aim to
make a film. By chance, he got a press accreditation and went on to make The
Tour Baby!. His aim has been to raise $100,000 for the benefit of the Lance
Armstrong Foundation.[5] In 2005, two films were released, each chronicling the efforts of a single
team competing in the Tour de France. The German film Höllentour,
translated as "Hell on Wheels" in English, records the 90th Tour de France in
2003, the centenary year, from the perspective of Team Telekom. The film is
directed by Pepe Danquart who won an Academy Award for Live Action Short Film in
1993 for Black Rider (Schwarzfahrer).[6]
Also released was Danish film Overcoming by Tómas Gislason, which records
the 2004 Tour de France from the perspective of Team CSC. Höllentour at The Internet Movie Database Overcoming at The Internet Movie Database
The Tour de France also inspired Freddie Mercury, the lead singer of Queen,
to write the song "Bicycle Race" from 1978. In 1983, the German music group
Kraftwerk released the single Tour de France which was described as a
minimalistic "melding of man and machine".[7]
The single was later included on an entire Kraftwerk record dedicated to the
race, the Tour de France Soundtracks album from 2003. The German band
Sweetbox wrote a song titled Tour De France dedicated for the race which was
supposed to be on the European edition of the Adagio album in 2004. It didn't
make the album cut, but was later released on the Raw Treasures Volume 1 album
in 2005, a special album with some of the demo's and songs that were unreleased.
One rider has managed to win the Tour a record seven times: Lance Armstrong (USA) in 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, and 2005 (seven
consecutive years). [8] Four other riders have managed to win the Tour five times: Jacques Anquetil (France) in 1957, 1961, 1962, 1963 and 1964; Eddy Merckx (Belgium) in 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972 and 1974; Bernard Hinault (France) in 1978, 1979, 1981, 1982 and 1985; Miguel Induráin (Spain) in 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994 and 1995 (the first to do
so in five consecutive years). Three other riders have managed to win the Tour three times: Philippe Thys (Belgium) in 1913, 1914, and 1920; Louison Bobet (France) in 1953, 1954, and 1955; Greg LeMond (USA) in 1986, 1989, and 1990. Gino Bartali holds the record of longest time span between titles, having
earned his first and last Tour victories 10 years apart (in 1938 and 1948
respectively). In terms of nationality, riders from France have won most Tours (36),
followed by Belgium (18), United States (10), Italy (9), Spain (8), Luxembourg
(4), Switzerland and the Netherlands (2 each) and Ireland, Denmark and Germany
(1 each). One rider has managed to win the points competition a record six times: Erik Zabel (Germany) 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000 and 2001 (six consecutive
years) One rider has managed to win the "King of the Mountains" a record seven
times: Richard Virenque (France) in 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2003 and 2004. Two riders have won the "King of the Mountains" six times: Federico Bahamontes (Spain) in 1954, 1958, 1959, 1962, 1963, 1964 Lucien Van Impe (Belgium) in 1971, 1972, 1975, 1977, 1981, 1983
To finish the Tour de France, a cyclist must be in a very good physical
state. That said, even a rider who is chosen to ride but does not finish the
race will have had to have been very fit to be selected. Analysis of the 2005
competitors shows that: The tallest rider was Johan van Summeren at 1.98 metres (6 ft 5.5 in). The shortest was Samuel Dumoulin at 1.58 metres (5 ft 2 in). The heaviest rider was Magnus Backstedt at 95 kg (209 lb or 14 stone 13 lb). The lightest was Leonardo Piepoli at 57 kg (126 lb or 9 stone). Chris Horner and Laurent Lefevre shared the lowest resting heart rate, 35
beats per minute. The "average" rider in 2005 was 1.79 metres (5 ft 10 in) tall, weighed 71 kg
(157 lb, 11 stone 3 lb), and had a resting heart rate of 50 beats per minute.
^ “Ex-Kelme rider promises doping revelations” Velo
News, March 20, 2004. ^ “L’Equipe alleges Armstrong samples show EPO use in 99
Tour” Velo News, August 23, 2005. ^ “Armstrong's journey” CNNSI. ^ a b c d
The KOM Fabio Casartelli Memorial Page ^ Ian Melvin, The Tour Baby!, Cycling News,
October 8, 2004 ^ Blood, sweat and gears, The Sydney Morning Herald,
May 27, 2005 ^ Chris Jones, Kraftwerk, Tour De France
Soundtracks, BBC, August 4, 2003 ^ Lance Armstong has retired after last 7th win
Text and images
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