Tour de France

Nicknamed La Grande Boucle, often shortened to just Le Tour, the Tour de France is the world’s greatest bike race and biggest annual sporting event.

The Tour de France was founded in 1903 as a publicity vehicle for the newspaper l’Auto and is now owned by the Amaury Sport Organisation (ASO) which also owns l’Auto’s descendent, French sports newspaper l’Equipe and promotes numerous other bike races including the Paris-Roubaix one-day classic and the Vuelta a Espana (Tour of Spain).

Over 23 days in July, the Tour comprises 21 days of racing — known as stages — and two rest days that give the riders a chance to recover. The terrain that stages traverse varies from relatively flat to the high mountains of the Alps and Pyrenees.

Most stages are ‘mass-start’ with the whole race starting together, and there are usually one or two time trial stages in which riders race against the clock, either individually or as a team.

The Tour’s overall leader is determined by aggregate time and wears a yellow jersey. The colour echoes the yellow paper used for l’Auto but was not introduced until 1913 or 1914.

How to build a Tour de France team from scratch: Tudor Pro Cycling’s CEO on reaching the biggest race in the world within three years and creating a squad that’s “here to stay”

How do you go about creating a team to race the Tour in just a few years? We popped by the rest day hotel of Fabian Cancellara and Julian Alaphilippe’s Tudor team, who are making their debuts at this year’s race, to find out

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Ineos Grenadiers head carer leaves Tour de France as anti-doping authority launches fresh investigation into 2012 texts

The long-term staff member, the former personal soigneur of Chris Froome, has received a request from the International Testing Agency to attend an interview over alleged texts with convicted doping doctor Mark Schmidt

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Tadej Pogačar crashes into Visma-Lease a Bike team car as driver “brake checks” him before start of Tour de France queen stage – but yellow jersey says “we’re good”

Aggressive tactics by Visma this morning…

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“This will sound super arrogant, but some guys can stay quiet”: Tour de France leader Tadej Pogačar hits back at “arrogance” and “bullying” claims after rival team boss says “the big boys want to crush the little boys”

“Arrogance is one thing, trying to win the Tour de France is another thing,” the yellow jersey said, while also noting that cycling is growing in the UAE after being questioned on the nation’s human rights record

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“Prankster” invades Tour de France finish on bike and tackled by police after jumping barriers moments before sprint

The 31-year-old member of the public, wearing a Decathlon-AG2R jersey and with a fake number pinned to his bike, made it across the finish line before he was shoulder barged by a member of the French riot police

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Cyclist apologises after angry van passenger lambasts him for “not using pavement”, holding up traffic, and “ruining my day” – but rider’s “be kind” message divides opinion; No more Red Bulls for Onley; Tour de France sprint chaos + more on the live blog

After hauling himself over the top of the Ventoux, Ryan Mallon’s ready for a nice, easy transition day packed with all the cycling news and views you could want on the Wednesday live blog

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Lance Armstrong’s old boss accuses UCI of “hypocrisy” after governing body hits out at Tour de France for granting access to controversial Belgian — despite lifetime doping ban

The UCI said that it’s looking into why Johan Bruyneel, who appeared as a guest on a Flemish cycling programme and was present at the start of stage 12, was accredited by the Tour organisers ASO

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The Giant on the Giant: When the Tour de France’s tallest, heaviest rider conquered Mont Ventoux – and held off Marco Pantani

“I just kept singing James Brown’s ‘I Feel Good’ – to forget about how I really felt,” says Eros Poli, whose stage-winning exploits on the Ventoux in 1994 have been immortalised in a new film

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Tadej Pogačar riding special edition Colnago Y1Rs as Tour de France hits Mont Ventoux: paper-thin finish, sprint shifters and weight-saving accessories complete unique build

After destroying the field aboard a hill climb version of his favoured aero bike on stage 13, the race leader deploys another modified version of the Colnago Y1RS built to tackle a long, varied stage with a fearsome Ventoux finish

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Two eras, one climb: Pogacar’s Colnago vs Armstrong’s Trek on Mont Ventoux

As Tadej Pogacar could take a big step towards ensuring a fourth Tour de France title on Mont Ventoux, we look back at Lance Armstrong’s 2000 climb on the same mountain. The tech has changed dramatically

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