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Tour de France 2022 Stage 6 profile and route map: Binche – Longwy

The longest stage of the race is an undulating trek through the Ardennes culminating with a punchy uphill finish in the most Welsh-sounding town in France. The Mur de Pulventeux (800m at 12.3% just 6km from the finish) should shred the peloton ahead of a reduced uphill sprint on the Cote des Religieuses. Stream the Tour de France live and on-demand on discovery+

Tour de France Stage 6 Preview: No Rest for the Battered

After a tough day on the cobbles, the Tour's longest stage will present yet another challenge for riders.

109th tour de france 2022 stage 5

Stage 6 - Binche to Longwy - 219.9km - Thursday, July 7

No rest for the battered and weary after the Tour’s pivotal cobbles stage: it’s followed by the longest of the race, and the Tour’s first uphill finish. The 219.9km route essentially traces the Franco-Belge border on a southeast trajectory, taking the race toward the Vosges region and the first summit finish on Stage 7.

But today is all about the short, sharp climbs, in particular the Category 3 Côte de Pulventeux just before the finish and then the climb to the line in Longwy. The Pulventeux isn’t much of a climb, at just 800 meters long. But it features a 12-percent gradient and the crest is a mere 5km from the finish, so it’s an ideal launching pad for a late-race move.

We’d expect to see an early breakaway, although one rider we don’t think will factor is EF’s Magnus Cort. With just three minor climbs, his KoM lead is safe, and he deserves a day off after four straight stages in the break. The sprinters’ teams will also sit this stage out, and with its length and spot in the race—after the cobbles stage but just before Friday’s first true summit finish on the “Super” Planches des Belles Filles climb—it’s a likely candidate for another long breakaway success.

Any number of other riders will be looking for the late-race catch and counterattack on or near the Pulventeux. Much of the dynamic will come down to whether the break gets a big lead it can defend and which teams do the chasing. Again, expect the sprinters teams and the banged-up Jumbo-Visma team of race leader Wout van Aert to take it pretty easy, so other teams will have to step up. If the frontrunners are within reach, the race behind will be spicy in the final 20km. If not, expect a ceasefire.

The finish is tricky. The descent off the Pulventeux isn’t steep, but features a hairpin around 3km to go. The ramp to the finish starts not long after that, with its own switchback coming with around 800 meters to go and just after a short, steep section of 11 percent gradient. Positioning here will be key, so expect a fight among the GC riders who were taught a sharp lesson on Stage 4 when a small group of favorites briefly got clear on the final climb. If anyone is caught out, rivals may try to take a few seconds, and if the stage win itself (and the 10/6/4-second bonuses for the podium) is in play, it’ll be a chaotic fight.

Riders to Watch

After the chaotic, rough-and-tumble Roubaix stage, many riders will be looking for a day off. But it’s the Tour, and any number of stage hunters will be on the move. Movistar has been fairly quiet thus far and that could change on this stage. Lotto-Soudal’s Tim Wellens is a good candidate for a long-range move, and Trek-Segafredo might be active as well with Toms Skujins or Quinn Simmons after just missing the win on Stage 5. If the break is caught, then GC riders will be worth keeping an eye on as well as puncheur-style finishers like Michael Matthews (BikeExchange-Jayco), Matej Mohoric (Bahrain-Victorious), and Ag2r’s Bob Jungels and Benoit Cosnefroy.

When to Watch

It’s roughly the final 20km of this one that’s going to be most interesting. The size of the gap to a breakaway there will tell us a lot about what to expect over the race’s final 30 minutes. If it’s under a minute, they’ll likely get caught; over two minutes, they’ll likely stay clear, and anywhere in between is a toss-up. If your feed is running by a little after 10:30 Eastern, you’ll catch all the fireworks.

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Tour de France stage six preview

All you need to know about the route, timings, and what to expect from today's stage

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Tour de France

Stage six of the Tour de France 2022 starts in Binche, and finishes 212.9 kilometres later, in Longwy.

As today’s stage runs through perfect breakaway country maybe some overall contenders will be tempted to slip a beer from the renowned brewing town of Binche in their back pocket to quench their thirst on the race’s longest stage – maybe.

When is stage six of the Tour de France taking place?

The Tour de France stage six takes place on Thursday, July 7. It will start at 11.15am BST, and is estimated to finish at 16.29 BST.

How long is stage six of the Tour de France?

The Tour de France stage six will be 219.9km long.

Tour de France stage six: expected timings

Tour de france stage six route.

Tour de France stage six

Although the parcours looks like a nailed on day for the break to succeed, the punchy finish could well mean any escapees will be hunted down by a peloton packed with riders who’ll fancy their chances of success. 

The finale is a little different from the one where Peter Sagan won in 2017. It’s been beefed up significantly with the addition of the Côte de Pulventeux 6km from the finish. Averaging 12% for 800m, it should shake out some wannabe stage winners. Following that, the riders will hit the Côte des Religieuses, which winds for 1.6km up to the finish, the gradient briefly reaching 11%.

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Tour de France stage six: what to expect 

Timing is key to success on this stage. Back in 2017, BMC, notably Richie Porte, worked hard to set up Greg Van Avermaet, while Bora’s Rafał Majka sat in behind them with Peter Sagan on his wheel. With 250 metres remaining, Sagan decided it was time to take advantage of the armchair ride that Majka had provided for him. He went to the front, stomped on the pedals, pulled one foot out, got it back in again and still had enough in hand at the line to hold off Michael Matthews’ late charge. However, the new Pulventeux climb offers an opportunity to lighter and more explosive riders.

Tour de France stage six: riders to watch

The climbs aren’t long enough for Ardennes Classics riders to prevail, so once again we're looking at the likes of MVDP. But make no mistake, the GC riders must be at the front too. A first stage win for Tadej Pogačar?

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Peter Cossins has been writing about professional cycling since 1993, with his reporting appearing in numerous publications and websites including Cycling Weekly ,  Cycle Sport  and  Procycling - which he edited from 2006 to 2009. Peter is the author of several books on cycling - The Monuments , his history of cycling's five greatest one-day Classic races, was published in 2014, followed in 2015 by  Alpe d’Huez , an appraisal of cycling’s greatest climb. Yellow Jersey - his celebration of the iconic Tour de France winner's jersey won the 2020 Telegraph Sports Book Awards Cycling Book of the Year Award.

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Tour de France 2022 Parcours etappe 6: Binche - Longwy

Tour de France 2022

In vertrekplaats Binche was de Tour maar één keer eerder. In 2019 vertrok de 3e etappe vanuit de plaats, die een zekere faam geniet vanwege de Mémorial Frank Vandenbroucke, en 215 kilometer later pakte Julian Alaphilippe de zege in Épernay.

Ook nu hebben de renners een lange race voor de boeg. Sterker, het is de langste van de hele Tour. Het parcours gaat de hele dag op en af, maar het echte vuur ligt in de finale te wachten.

De Ronde van Frankrijk finishte tweemaal eerder in Longwy. In 1982 pakte één van de vele nieuwe Merckx’en uit de Belgische wielergeschiedenis er de buit. Het was één van in totaal vier Touretappezeges die Daniël Willems in zijn loopbaan behaalde. De Vlaming stopte na zeven seizoenen als prof en overleed in 2016, net zestig jaar oud.

Vijf jaar geleden arriveerde de Tour nogmaals in vestingstad Longwy. De streep was getrokken bij de citadel en dat betekende een slotklimmetje van 1,6 kilometer à 5,8%. Peter Sagan klopte Michael Matthews nipt in de sprint. Even later kwamen Daniel Martin en Greg Van Avermaet over de lijn, na 2 seconden gevolgd door de grote groep.

Dezelfde finale staat nu weer op het menu. De eerste 500 meter van het citadelklimmetje is met een stijgingspercentage van 8,2% het lastigst. Daarin zit ook de steilste strook van 11%. Richting de top wordt het meer een vals plat.

Om het nóg mooier te maken verwerken de renners vlak daarvoor ook nog de Côte de Pulventeux, een Muur van 800 meter à 12,3%. Vanuit de afdaling loopt de weg al direct vals plat op, waarna het slotklimmetje van 1,6 kilometer verschijnt, de zogenaamde Côte des Religieuses.

De eerste drie renners aan de finish krijgen 10, 6 en 4 bonificatieseconden.

De route zelf rijden? Download GPX etappe 6 .

Ook interessant: uitslag etappe 6 Tour de France 2022.

Tour de France 2022 etappe 6: routes, profielen en meer

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Tour de France 2022 etappe 6: route - bron:letour.fr

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rit 6 tour de france 2022

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  • 5 MAJKA Rafał (DNS #17)
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rit 6 tour de france 2022

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  • 12 BENOOT Tiesj
  • 13 KRUIJSWIJK Steven (DNF #15)
  • 14 KUSS Sepp
  • 15 LAPORTE Christophe
  • 16 VAN AERT Wout
  • 17 VAN HOOYDONCK Nathan (DNS #20)
  • 18 VINGEGAARD Jonas

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  • 21 THOMAS Geraint
  • 22 MARTÍNEZ Daniel Felipe
  • 23 CASTROVIEJO Jonathan
  • 24 GANNA Filippo
  • 25 PIDCOCK Thomas *
  • 26 ROWE Luke
  • 27 VAN BAARLE Dylan
  • 28 YATES Adam

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  • 31 O'CONNOR Ben (DNS #10)
  • 32 BOUCHARD Geoffrey (DNS #8)
  • 33 CHEREL Mikaël (DNS #16)
  • 34 COSNEFROY Benoît
  • 35 DEWULF Stan *
  • 36 JUNGELS Bob
  • 37 NAESEN Oliver (DNF #11)
  • 38 PARET-PEINTRE Aurélien (DNS #16)

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  • 41 VLASOV Aleksandr
  • 42 GROßSCHARTNER Felix
  • 43 HALLER Marco
  • 44 KÄMNA Lennard (DNS #16)
  • 45 KONRAD Patrick
  • 46 POLITT Nils
  • 47 SCHACHMANN Maximilian
  • 48 VAN POPPEL Danny

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  • 51 JAKOBSEN Fabio
  • 52 ASGREEN Kasper (DNS #9)
  • 53 BAGIOLI Andrea *
  • 54 CATTANEO Mattia
  • 55 HONORÉ Mikkel Frølich *
  • 56 LAMPAERT Yves
  • 57 MØRKØV Michael (OTL #15)
  • 58 SÉNÉCHAL Florian

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  • 61 MAS Enric (DNS #19)
  • 62 ERVITI Imanol (DNS #18)
  • 63 IZAGIRRE Gorka (DNS #21)
  • 64 JORGENSON Matteo *
  • 65 MÜHLBERGER Gregor
  • 66 OLIVEIRA Nelson
  • 67 TORRES Albert
  • 68 VERONA Carlos

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  • 71 MARTIN Guillaume (DNS #9)
  • 72 PÉRICHON Pierre-Luc
  • 73 GESCHKE Simon
  • 74 IZAGIRRE Ion
  • 75 LAFAY Victor (DNF #13)
  • 76 PEREZ Anthony
  • 77 THOMAS Benjamin
  • 78 WALSCHEID Max (DNS #16)

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  • 81 HAIG Jack (DNF #5)
  • 82 CARUSO Damiano (DNS #18)
  • 83 GRADEK Kamil
  • 84 MOHORIČ Matej
  • 85 SÁNCHEZ Luis León
  • 86 TEUNS Dylan
  • 87 TRATNIK Jan
  • 88 WRIGHT Fred *

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  • 91 GAUDU David
  • 92 DUCHESNE Antoine
  • 93 GENIETS Kevin *
  • 94 KÜNG Stefan
  • 95 LE GAC Olivier
  • 96 MADOUAS Valentin
  • 97 PINOT Thibaut
  • 98 STORER Michael *

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  • 101 VAN DER POEL Mathieu (DNF #11)
  • 102 DILLIER Silvan
  • 103 GOGL Michael (DNF #5)
  • 104 KRIEGER Alexander
  • 105 PHILIPSEN Jasper *
  • 106 PLANCKAERT Edward
  • 107 SBARAGLI Kristian
  • 108 VAN KEIRSBULCK Guillaume

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  • 111 BARDET Romain
  • 112 DAINESE Alberto *
  • 113 DEGENKOLB John
  • 114 EEKHOFF Nils *
  • 115 HAMILTON Chris
  • 116 LEKNESSUND Andreas *
  • 117 TUSVELD Martijn
  • 118 VERMAERKE Kevin * (DNF #8)

rit 6 tour de france 2022

  • 121 KRISTOFF Alexander
  • 122 BYSTRØM Sven Erik
  • 123 GOOSSENS Kobe
  • 124 MEINTJES Louis
  • 125 PASQUALON Andrea
  • 126 PETIT Adrien
  • 127 VAN DER HOORN Taco
  • 128 ZIMMERMANN Georg *

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  • 131 LUTSENKO Alexey
  • 132 RIABUSHENKO Alexandr
  • 133 DOMBROWSKI Joe
  • 134 FELLINE Fabio (DNF #17)
  • 135 GRUZDEV Dmitriy
  • 136 MOSCON Gianni (DNF #8)
  • 137 VELASCO Simone
  • 138 ZEITS Andrey

rit 6 tour de france 2022

  • 141 URÁN Rigoberto
  • 142 GUERREIRO Ruben (DNS #9)
  • 143 BETTIOL Alberto
  • 144 BISSEGGER Stefan *
  • 145 DOULL Owain
  • 146 CORT Magnus (DNS #15)
  • 147 POWLESS Neilson
  • 148 RUTSCH Jonas *

rit 6 tour de france 2022

  • 151 QUINTANA Nairo
  • 152 BARGUIL Warren (DNS #13)
  • 153 BOUET Maxime
  • 154 CAPIOT Amaury
  • 155 HOFSTETTER Hugo
  • 156 LOUVEL Matis *
  • 157 OWSIAN Łukasz
  • 158 SWIFT Connor

rit 6 tour de france 2022

  • 161 EWAN Caleb
  • 162 FRISON Frederik
  • 163 GILBERT Philippe
  • 164 JANSE VAN RENSBURG Reinardt
  • 165 KRON Andreas *
  • 166 VAN MOER Brent *
  • 167 VERMEERSCH Florian *
  • 168 WELLENS Tim (DNS #17)

rit 6 tour de france 2022

  • 171 PEDERSEN Mads
  • 172 CICCONE Giulio
  • 173 GALLOPIN Tony
  • 174 KIRSCH Alex (DNF #6)
  • 175 MOLLEMA Bauke
  • 176 SIMMONS Quinn *
  • 177 SKUJIŅŠ Toms
  • 178 STUYVEN Jasper

rit 6 tour de france 2022

  • 181 SAGAN Peter
  • 182 BOASSON HAGEN Edvald
  • 183 BODNAR Maciej
  • 184 BURGAUDEAU Mathieu *
  • 185 LATOUR Pierre
  • 186 OSS Daniel (DNS #6)
  • 187 TURGIS Anthony
  • 188 VUILLERMOZ Alexis (DNS #10)

rit 6 tour de france 2022

  • 191 FROOME Chris (DNS #18)
  • 192 BOIVIN Guillaume (DNS #21)
  • 193 CLARKE Simon (DNS #15)
  • 194 FUGLSANG Jakob (DNS #16)
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  • 197 NEILANDS Krists
  • 198 WOODS Michael (DNS #21)

rit 6 tour de france 2022

  • 201 MATTHEWS Michael
  • 202 BAUER Jack
  • 203 DURBRIDGE Luke (DNS #10)
  • 204 GROENEWEGEN Dylan
  • 205 JANSEN Amund Grøndahl
  • 206 JUUL-JENSEN Christopher
  • 207 MEZGEC Luka
  • 208 SCHULTZ Nick

rit 6 tour de france 2022

  • 211 BONNAMOUR Franck
  • 212 BARTHE Cyril
  • 213 GOUGEARD Alexis
  • 214 LECROQ Jérémy
  • 215 LEMOINE Cyril
  • 216 MOZZATO Luca *
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Tour de France 2022: overzicht

Tour de france 2022.

rit 6 tour de france 2022

Tour de France 2022: Route and stages

Tour de France 2022

Read about the entire route of the Tour de France.

Please click on the links in underneath scheme for in-depth information on the individual stages.

Tour de France 2022 stages

Tour de france 2022: route, profiles, more.

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Tour de France 2022: entire route - source:letour.fr

More about the Tour de France

Tour de france 2022: the route, tour de france 2022 route stage 1: copenhagen - copenhagen.

Tour de France 2022

Tour de France 2022 Route stage 2: Roskilde - Nyborg

Tour de France 2022

Tour de France 2022 Route stage 3: Vejle - Sønderborg

Tour de France 2022

Tour de France 2022 Route stage 4: Dunkirk - Calais

Tour de France 2022

Wout van Aert

Hoe Wout naar groen vloog in de Tour de France

Onderdeel van dit verhaal

rit 6 tour de france 2022

Wout van Aert

Verliefd op de fiets sinds zijn acht jaar en, zoals een echte vlaming kan beamen, niet vies van een spat modder. wout van aert heeft de spirit - én de benen natuurlijk - van een kampioen.

Belgium

Samenvatting

  • 1 Rit 1: Een vliegende start in de openingstijdrit
  • 2 Rit 2: Van Aert plakt geel
  • 3 Rit 4: Gele winst voor Wout
  • 4 Rit 6: Wout eert zijn gele trui nog een laatste keer
  • 5 Rit 8: Wout wint in de sprint
  • 6 Rit 15: Wout blijft gaan
  • 7 Rit 17: Zeker van de groene trui met nog 4 ritten te gaan
  • 8 Rit 18: Wout geeft ritwinst op voor gele kopman
  • 9 Rit 20: Wout gaat nog een keer
  • 10 Rit 21: Tijd voor een feestje in Parijs!

Dit was de 4e Tour van Wout

© Kramon/Red Bull Content Pool

De Tour de France door de lens van topfotograaf Kramon

Van belgisch kampioen cyclocross naar geel in de tour …, rit 1: een vliegende start in de openingstijdrit.

Een vliegende start voor Wout in de openingstijdrit in Kopenhagen

Rit 2: Van Aert plakt geel

Eerste gele trui ooit voor Wout in de Tour de France

Het voelt geweldig om deze trui eindelijk aan te kunnen trekken. Ik ben al een paar keer heel dichtbij geweest, maar eindelijk is het zover! Wout van Aert

Rit 4: Gele winst voor Wout

Wout vliegt over de streep in Calais

© Michael Steele/Getty Images

Deze trui geeft je vleugels. Dit is zeker een van mijn mooiste overwinningen. Het is heel speciaal om te winnen in het geel. Wout van Aert

Rit 6: Wout eert zijn gele trui nog een laatste keer

Wout in het geel op de kasseien in Roubaix

Rit 8: Wout wint in de sprint

Een groene overwinning in Lausanne voor Wout

Dit was een belangrijke rit voor mijn plaats in het puntenklassement. Ik voelde heel veel druk voor de sprint. Wout van Aert

Rit 15: Wout blijft gaan

Rit 17: zeker van de groene trui met nog 4 ritten te gaan.

Wout onderweg naar Carcassonne tijdens de 16e etappe

Wout zette een ijzersterke prestatie neer op de Hautacam

Rit 18: Wout geeft ritwinst op voor gele kopman

Rit 20: wout gaat nog een keer.

Wout zette de beste tijd neer tijdens de tijdrit naar Rocamadour

Ik ben ontdaan na 3 waanzinnige weken. Vandaag was dan ook nog het droomscenario. Wout van Aert

Rit 21: Tijd voor een feestje in Parijs!

Dubbel feest voor Jumbo-Visma!

Tour de France 2023

Latest news from the race.

Vinokourov: Cavendish continuing is great news for all cycling, not just Astana Qazaqstan

Vinokourov: Cavendish continuing is great news for all cycling, not just Astana Qazaqstan

How Jonas Vingegaard transformed from 'the little guy' to Jumbo-Visma leader

How Jonas Vingegaard transformed from 'the little guy' to Jumbo-Visma leader

Jonas Vingegaard given hero's welcome in Copenhagen

Jonas Vingegaard given hero's welcome in Copenhagen

Tour de france 2023 results.

Stage 21: Jonas Vingegaard crowned Tour de France champion in Paris / As it happened

Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) won the Tour de France for the second  year in a row after finishing safely in the main field with his Jumbo-Visma teammates. Jordi Meeus (Bora-Hansgrohe) sprinted to victory on the Champs-Elysées, beating green jersey Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck) by less than a tyre width to take his first stage victory of the Tour de France.

Vingegaard topped the general classification with a 7:29 ahead of Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) and 10:56 on Pogačar’s teammate Yates.

Stage 20: Tour de France: Pogacar rebounds to take stage 20 victory as Vingegaard seals his second overall title / As it happened

Rebounding after a disastrous stage 17 on Col de la Loze, Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) won the final mountain stage of the 2023 Tour de France. Crossing the line in third, with the same time, was Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) who is set to claim the overall victory for a second year, with just Sunday’s final parade stage to Paris left to race. Felix Gall (AG2R-Citroën) was second on the stage. Thibaut Pinot (Groupama-FDJ), who delivered one final attack on his home roads to the delight of the huge crowds massing the roads, was caught on the final climb.

There were no changes in the top 3 on the general classification, Vingegaard, Pogačar and Adam Yates (UAE Team Emirates) are set to be on the final podium. Fourth on the stage, Simon Yates (Jayco-AlUla) moved up to fourth overall.

Stage 19: Tour de France: Mohoric outsprints Asgreen in drag race to stage 19 finish / As it happened

There was no rest and little recovery on a wickedly fast stage 19 of the Tour, where the winning breakaway took 100 kilometres to go clear. Three riders attacked from the 36-rider move, with Matej Mohorič giving Bahrain Victorious their third stage win after Pello Bilbao on stage 10 and Wout Poels on stage 15. The GC contenders all came in together almost 14 minutes behind.

Stage 18: Tour de France: Kasper Asgreen seizes stage 18 victory from all-day breakaway / As it happened

Kasper Asgreen (Soudal-QuickStep) won the closing sprint on stage 18 of the Tour de France to hold off his breakaway companions and a surging peloton. After 185 kilometres at the front of the race with Victor Campenaerts (Lotto Dstny) and Kasper Asgreen (Soudal-QuickStep) and Jonas Abrahamsen (Uno-X), it came down to the final 200 metres to secure the win for Asgreen, leaving Pascal Eenkhoorn (Lotto Dstny), who had bridged across 58km earlier, in second and Abrahamsen third. 

There were no changes in the general classification on the largely-flat stage between Moûtiers to Bourg-en-Bresse, Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) remaining in yellow.

Stage 17:   Tour de France: Vingegaard dashes Pogacar's GC hopes on stage 17 across Col de la Loze / As it happened

Felix Gall (AG2R Citroën) attacked from a reduced front group with under 13km to go and held on for a solo victory across the Col de la Loze on stage 17 of the Tour de France. Race leader Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) stamped his authority on the queen stage by dropping his main rival Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) on the final climb. Pogačar finished the stage 7:37 down – 5:45 behind Vingegaard – leaving him still in second place overall but a massive 7:35 back of the Dane.

Stage 16: Tour de France: Vingegaard removes all doubt, crushes Pogacar in stage 16 time trial / As it happened

After two weeks of racing for seconds, Jonas Vingegaard finally carved out a significant gap over second-placed Tadej Pogačar in the stage 16 time trial in Combloux. Vingegaard won the stage by 1 minute 38 seconds over his rival to extend his lead in the GC to 1:48.

Stage 15: Tour de France: Wout Poels blasts to blockbuster stage 15 solo victory / As it happened

The stalemate between Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) and Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) continued on the third mountainous day in a row at the Tour de France. The duo marked each other’s attacks on the final climb to Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc and ultimately crossed the finish line together. Attacking from the break, Wout Poels (Bahrain Victorious) won stage 15 after an 11km solo ride to to claim his first Tour de France stage win.

Stage 14: Tour de France: Carlos Rodríguez strikes for win on stage 14 as Vingegaard gains valuable second on Joux Plane / As it happened

Rivals Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) and Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) continued their intense battle on the final climb on stage 14 of the Tour de France with the yellow jersey Vingegaard gaining one second in an evenly matched duel. Both riders used their respective teams to dispatch all the other riders before fighting it out on the Col de la Joux Plane. Carlos Rodríguez (Ineos Grenadiers) took advantage of the situation to fly down the descent to take the win in Morzine, and move up to third overall.

Stage 13: Tour de France: Kwiatkowski wins stage 13 on Grand Colombier as Pogacar closes in on yellow / As it happened

The Tour de France overall standings remained neck-and-neck between leader Jonas Vingegaard and Tadej Pogačar on stage 13, the second hors-categorie summit finish of the race. Michał Kwiatkowski (Ineos) won the stage from the breakaway, while UAE Team Emirates burned up the team to set up Pogačar. Vingegaard was on guard and fended his rival off until the final metres, losing eight seconds total but keeping the maillot jaune.

Stage 12:   Tour de France: Ion Izagirre secures solo victory on frantic stage 12 / As it happened

Ion Izagirre (Cofidis) won stage 12 of the Tour de France with a solo attack 30km from the line in Belleville-en-Beaujolais. His long-range breakaway rewarded the Basque rider with his second career Tour win, the last one coming in 2016. Mathieu Burgaudeau (TotalEnergies) outsprinted Matteo Jorgenson (Movistar) 58 seconds back to complete the podium. 

The hectic first half of the hilly 168.8km stage saw lots of attack, including Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Deceuninck) who was rewarded as the most combative rider. There were no changes between the top GC leaders, with Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) still in yellow and Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) in second and in the best young rider jersey.

Stage 11: Tour de France: Jasper Philipsen flies to fourth sprint victory on stage 11 / As it happened

Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck) showed more blistering speed, proving himself the best sprinter of the Tour de France on stage 11 to Moulins even without any lead-out from Mathieu van der Poel.

It was a squeaky clean sprint from the Belgian who has endured a flood of hate-mail about his previous sprints.

Daniel Oss (TotalEnergies) was the day's sole breakaway rider and caught with 13km to go. The GC standings remained the same as all of the contenders finished in the peloton.

Stage 10: Tour de France: Pello Bilbao scorches sprint from breakaway to win stage 10 / As it happened

Pello Bilbao (Bahrain Victorious) out-sprinted Georg Zimmerman (Intermarché-Circus-Wanty) and Ben O'Connor (AG2R Citroën) to win stage 10 of the Tour de France on a sizzlingly-hot day. The Spaniard was part of the day's breakaway that brought six riders into Issoire, where he claimed the first stage victory of his career.

The breakaway gained 2:53 on the group containing race leader Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma), rival Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) third-placed Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe) and Carlos Rodriguez (Ineos Grenadiers) to keep the top four in the GC standings the same.

Stage 9: Tour de France: Michael Woods triumphs with stage 9 victory atop Puy de Dôme / As it happened

The Tour de France reached the mythical ascent of the Puy de Dôme at the finish of stage 9 where Michael Woods (Israel Premier Tech) triumphed with the day's victory after being part of a large breakaway that gained upwards of 15 minutes on the main GC contenders during the stage.

On the upper slopes of the ascent, Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) then surged with 1.5km to go, to put valuable seconds into Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma). Vingegaard now leads Pogačar by 17 seconds in the battle for the yellow.

Stage 8: Tour de France: Mads Pedersen beats Jasper Philipsen to win crash-marred stage 8 / As it happened

Stage 8 was a highly anticipated day for the puncheurs, even so, Mark Cavendish had his sights set on a 35th career stage win at the Tour de France, but it wasn't meant to be as the Manxman crashed with 60km to go and forced to abandon the event.

In a chaotic finish to the hilly run-in to Limoges, which saw a late-race crash take down Simon Yates (Jayco AlUla), Mads Pedersen (Lidl-Trek) stormed to the victory in a close sprint ahead of Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck) and Wout van Aert (Jumbo-Visma). Jonas Vingegaard finished safely in the field and carries the yellow jersey into stage 9 with a finish at Puy de Dôme.

Stage 7: Tour de France: Philipsen denies Cavendish, completes hat-trick in Bordeaux / As it happened

Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck) blasted across the line in Bordeaux to win stage 7 of the Tour de France, winning by one bike length over Mark Cavendish (Astana Qazaqstan). Biniam Girmay (Intermarché-Circus-Wanty) finished third in the sprint.

For Philipsen, it was his third victory of the three sprint stages in the first week of the 2023 race. He bolted down the main avenue and passed Cavendish in the closing 50 metres, holding the Manxman's attempt at a record 35th Tour stage win  at bay.

Stage 6: Tour de France: Tadej Pogacar claws back time with victory at Cauterets / As it happened

Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) won stage 6 with a massive attack across the final 2.7km and stormed back into the general classification mix. He distanced Jonas Vingegaard at the line at Cauterets by 24 seconds, while the Jumbo-Visma rider took the overall lead and yellow jersey away from Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe), who was 2:39 back in sixth place. 

Vingegaard now has a 25-second advantage over rival Pogačar, while Hindley held the third spot in the overall, 1:34 back, after the massive 144.9km climbing day in the Pyrenees. 

Stage 5: Tour de France: Jai Hindley wins stage 5 as Vingegaard drops Pogacar in Pyrenees / As it happened

The first of the Pyrenean stages at the Tour de France had the potential to shake up the general classification, and it did just that as Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe) went on a day-long attack, won stage 5 into Laruns and took the yellow leader's jersey in the process.

Hindley moved into the overall race lead by 47 seconds ahead of Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) and 1:03 on Giulio Ciccone (Lidl-Trek), as Tadej Pogaçar (UAE Emirates) slipped to 6th now at 1:40 back.

Stage 4: Tour de France: Jasper Philipsen wins two in a row in crash-marred stage 4 / As it happened

There was no doubt who won stage 4 at the Tour de France, with Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck) securing his second-consecutive sprint stage win in Nogaro. A day for the sprinters ended in carnage, however, as several riders crashed along the motor speedway circuit that hosted the finish.

There were no changes to the overall classification as Adam Yates (UAE Team Emirates) finished in the field at the end of the 181.8km stage and will wear the yellow leader's jersey into stage 5.

Stage 3 - Tour de France: Jasper Philipsen wins stage 3 after impressive lead-out from Mathieu van der Poel / As it happened

Jasper Philipsen  (Alpecin-Deceuninck) rocketed across the line in a bunch sprint in Bayonne to win stage 3 of the 2023 Tour de France. A half a wheel behind, Phil Bauhaus (Bahrain Victorious) claimed second and Caleb Ewan (Lotto-Dstny) third.

All the general classification contenders, including Adam Yates (UAE Team Emirates) in the yellow jersey, finished safely in the field with no time changes after 193.5km from the hills of Spanish Basque territory to the roads of France.

Stage 2 - Tour de France: Victor Lafay gives Cofidis their first win since 2008 on stage 2 / As it happened

Victor Lafay (Cofidis) put in a stunning attack to claim stage 2 in San Sébastian. The Frenchman clipped off the front of a select group that formed after the Jaizkibel and stole the show from Wout van Aert (Jumbo-Visma), who won the sprint for second.

Tadej Pogačar added to his tally with a time bonus for third and also won the five bonus seconds atop the Jaizkibel ahead of Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma). His teammate Adam Yates held the lead by six seconds.

Stage 1 - Tour de France stage 1: Adam Yates wins ahead of twin brother Simon in Bilbao / As it happened

Adam Yates (UAE Team Emirates) won stage 1 of the Tour de France in Bilbao, outsprinting his brother Simon Yates (Jayco-Alula)  after the duo escaped together after the final climb of the Pike. Adam Yates leads the general classification by 8 seconds over his brother, and 18 seconds over his teammate Tadej Pogačar who finished third on the stage.

Enric Mas (Movistar) abandoned the stage after crashing with Richard Carapaz (EF Education-EasyPost) with 23km to go. Carapaz ultimately crossed the line, over 15 minutes from Adam Yates. Defending champion Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) along with other contenders Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe), David Gaudu (Groupama-FDJ) and Mikel Landa (Bahrain Victorious) are 22 seconds down overall.

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Who is racing the Tour de France

See the full 2023 Tour de France start list

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Find out how to watch the Tour de France with our comprehensive guide.

Tour de France 2023 route

The full 2023 Tour de France route was revealed at the official Tour de France presentation on 27th October .

The race starts across the border in the Basque Country, the first time the race has started there since 1992. A handful of hilly stages open the action before the race crosses the Pyrenees into France.

The route features only 22km of time trialling, all coming on the hilly stage 16. Four summit finishes also feature, including the Puy de Dôme for the first time in 35 years and the Grand Colombier in the Pyrenees.

The mountainous course brings a tough final week, concluding with a final showdown in the Vosges to Le Markstein on stage 20.

Tour de France 2023 contenders

Tour de France rivals: Tadej Pogacar and Jonas Vingegaard

2022 champion Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) will return to defend his title after dispatching two-time winner Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) last July. The Slovenian is racing after recovering from a fractured wrist in April, while Vingegaard starts off the back of the Critérium du Dauphiné.

Other big-name GC men lining up at the start in Bilbao include David Gaudu (Groupama-FDJ), Enric Mas (Movistar), Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe), Ben O'Connor (AG2R Citroën), Richard Carapaz (EF Education-EasyPost), and Mikel Landa (Bahrain Victorious).

See: Tour de France 2023 – Analysing the contenders

Tour de France 2023 teams

The 2023 Tour de France will be made up of 22 teams, 18 WorldTour teams, the two top-ranked second-division teams, and two discretionary wild-card teams.

Lotto Soudal and TotalEnergies made the cut as the best ProTeams of 2022, while Israel-Premier Tech and Uno-X were chosen as the two wildcard teams for the 2023 Tour de France .

Tour de France 2023 schedule

Tour de france history.

Jonas Vingegaard is the reigning champion, having won his first Tour de France in 2022. The Danish rider denied Tadej Pogačar a trio of consecutive victories, the Slovenian having snatched the 2020 title before dominating the 2021 race. 

Pogačar himself broke a Ineos/Sky stranglehold on the race, with the British team having won seven of the previous eight Tours de France with Egan Bernal, Geraint Thomas, Bradley Wiggins and four-time winner Chris Froome . Vincenzo Nibali, then riding for Astana, was the other man to break the British squad's dominance with a win in 2014.

The Tour wins record is currently held by four men, with Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault, Jacques Anquetil and Miguel Indurain all on five titles.

Peter Sagan getting once dominated the green jersey for the points classification but has been usurped in the past three years, with Wout van Aert establishing himself as the dominant man of all terrains in 2022. Sagan still holds the all-time green jersey record with seven wins in nine participations. Erik Zabel's six jerseys lie second, ahead of Sean Kelly's four.

In addition to his yellow jersey, Vingegaard won the polka-dot jersey for the mountains classification in 2022, as Pogačar did the previous two years.  Richard Virenque holds the record for polka dot jersey wins at seven, and it won't be beaten anytime soon as Pogačar and Rafał Majka are the only current riders to have won more than one king of the mountains title, with two.

Pogačar has won the white jersey for best young rider three years in a row and, at 24, is still eligible for a fourth crack in 2023.

Read on for a list of the riders with the most wins of the Tour de France, the most stage wins, as well as the major jerseys.

Most Tour de France overall wins

  • 5 – Jacques Anquetil, Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault, Miguel Indurain
  • 4 –  Chris Froome
  • 3 – Phiilippe Thys, Louison Bobet, Greg LeMond
  • 2 – Lucien Petit-Breton, Firmin Lambot, Ottavio Bottecchia, Nicolas Frantz, André Leducq, Antonin Magne, Sylvère Maes, Gino Bartali, Fausto Coppi, Bernard Thévenet, Laurent Fignon, Alberto Contador, Tadej Pogačar
  • 1 – Geraint Thomas , Egan Bernal , Jonas Vingegaard

Most Tour de France stage wins

  • 34 – Eddy Merckx, Mark Cavendish
  • 28 – Bernard Hinault
  • 25 – André Leducq
  • 22 – André Darrigade
  • 20 – Nicolas Frantz
  • 19 – François Faber
  • 17 – Jean Alavoine
  • 16 – Jacques Anquetiil, René Le Grevès, Charles Pélissiier ...
  • 12 – Peter Sagan
  • 11 – André Greipel
  • 9 – Tadej Pogačar , Wout van Aert
  • 7 – Chris Froome

Most Tour de France points classification/green jersey wins

  • 7 –  Peter Sagan
  • 6 – Erik Zabel
  • 4 – Sean Kelly
  • 3 – Jan Janssen, Eddy Merckx, Freddy Maertens, Djamolidine Abdoujaparov, Robbie McEwen
  • 2 – Stan Ockers, Jean Graczyk, André Darrigade, Laurent Jalabert, Thor Hushovd, Mark Cavendish
  • 1 – Michael Matthews , Sam Bennett , Wout van Aert

Most Tour de France polka dot jersey/mountains classification wins

  • 7 – Richard Virenque
  • 6 – Federico Bahamontes, Lucien Van Impe 
  • 3 – Julio Jiménez
  • 2 – Felicien Vervaecke, Gino Bartali, Fausto Coppi, Charly Gaul, Imerio Massignan, Eddy Merckx, Luis Herrera, Claudio Chiappucci, Laurent Jalabert, Michael Rasmussen, Rafał Majka , Tadej Pogačar
  • 1 – Nairo Quintana , Chris Froome , Warren Barguil , Julian Alaphilippe , Romain Bardet , Jonas Vingegaard

Tour de France 2023

  • 2023 Tour de France route
  • Tour de France past winners
  • Pogacar, Vingegaard and a duel far too close to call - Tour de France 2023 Preview

Stage 1 - Tour de France stage 1: Adam Yates wins ahead of twin brother Simon in Bilbao

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    The Mur de Pulventeux (800m at 12.3% just 6km from the finish) should shred the peloton ahead of a reduced uphill sprint on the Cote des Religieuses. Stream the Tour de France live and on-demand ...

  8. Tour de France 2022

    Stage 6 brings the Tour de France's longest stage—a 219km ride from Binche to Longwy. Search. Subscribe; ... Jul 6, 2022. Save Article. Tim de Waele // Getty Images. Stage 6 - Binche to Longwy ...

  9. LiveStats for Tour de France 2022 Stage 6

    The question can be answered untill the finish of the stage. 220. .. During each stage of the Tour de France we will drop a quiz question in the LiveStats feed around the start of the stage. You can answer this untill the finish of the stage. If you are logged in, you are able to find your answers in the account section. 99.

  10. Stage 6

    2022 Edition Official App Other events ... TOUR DE FRANCE 2023 - VIDEO GAMES (PC, XBOX ONE, PS4 & PS5) Fantasy by Tissot Cycling Legends (iOS, Android) - Official Mobile Game Club. 2024 route. 2024 Teams. 2023 Edition. Grands départs. Tour Culture. 2023 Edition ...

  11. Tour de France 2022: Results & News

    Stage 2 - Tour de France: Fabio Jakobsen wins crash-marred sprint stage 2 in Nyborg | Roskilde - Nyborg. 2022-07-02199km. Results|Live report|Contenders. Stage 3 - Tour de France: Groenewegen wins ...

  12. Tour de France stage six preview

    published July 06, 2022. Stage six of the Tour de France 2022 starts in Binche, and finishes 212.9 kilometres later, in Longwy. As today's stage runs through perfect breakaway country maybe some ...

  13. Tour de France 2022 Parcours etappe 6: Binche

    Door: Kima Lee. Tour de France 2022 Parcours etappe 6: Binche - Longwy. Donderdag 7 juli - De 6e etappe van de Ronde van Frankrijk gaat in Binche, Wallonië, van start en finisht in Longwy, net over de grens in het zuidelijke deel van de Belgische Ardennen. De afstand mag er wezen: 219,9 kilometer.

  14. Tour de France 2021 Route stage 6: Tours

    Tour de France 2021 Route stage 6: Tours - Châteauroux. Thursday 1 July - Flat and undulating roads take the riders on the sixth day of the Tour de France from Tours to Châteauroux. A fast finisher is likely to celebrate at the end of the 160,6 kilometres race. The Tour de France visited Tours for the last time in 2013.

  15. Startlist for Tour de France 2022

    11 ROGLIČ Primož (DNS #15) 12 BENOOT Tiesj. 13 KRUIJSWIJK Steven (DNF #15) 14 KUSS Sepp. 15 LAPORTE Christophe. 16 VAN AERT Wout. 17 VAN HOOYDONCK Nathan (DNS #20) 18 VINGEGAARD Jonas. DS MAASSEN Frans, VAN DONGEN Arthur.

  16. Tour de France 2022: overzicht

    Tour de France 2022. rit datum start - finish type rit totaal winnaar leider; 1. 01/07: Kopenhagen - Kopenhagen: tijdrit. 13,2 km. Yves Lampaert.

  17. 2022 Tour de France

    The 2022 Tour de France was the 109th edition of the Tour de France.It started in Copenhagen, Denmark on 1 July 2022 and ended with the final stage on the Champs-Élysées, Paris on 24 July 2022. Denmark's Jonas Vingegaard (Team Jumbo-Visma) won the general classification for the first time. Two-time defending champion Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) finished in second place, and former ...

  18. Tour de France 2022

    The Tour de France 2022 Route The 109th Tour de France starts on July 1 in Copenhagen, Denmark and ends in Paris on Sunday July 24 after 3328km of racing. As Pogačar suggested, the 21 days really ...

  19. Tour de France 2022: Route and stages

    6-7: Tour de France 2022 route stage 5 Lille - Arenberg: 157.0: cobbles: 6: 7-7: Tour de France 2022 route stage 6 Binche - Longwy: 219.9: hills: 7: 8-7: Tour de France 2022 route stage 7 Tomblaine - La Planche des Belles Filles: 176.3: mountains: 8: 9-7: Tour de France 2022 route stage 8 Dole - Lausanne: 186.3: hills: 9: 10-7: Tour de ...

  20. Wout van Aert zijn Tour de France: 10 beste momenten!

    Rit 21: Tijd voor een feestje in Parijs! Tijdens de laatste rit van deze Tour besloot Wout om niet meer mee te sprinten op de Champs-Élysées. Vorig jaar won hij hier nog indrukwekkend tegen de ...

  21. Tour de France stage 5 preview

    Stage 5: Lille Métropole to Arenberg Porte du Hainaut. Date: July 6, 2022. Distance: 153.7km. Stage timing: 13:35 - 17:15 CEST. Stage type: Hilly. This year's Tour de France has so far seen ...

  22. Tour de France 2023: Results & News

    Stage 6: Tour de France: Tadej Pogacar claws back time with victory at Cauterets / As it happened. ... Jonas Vingegaard is the reigning champion, having won his first Tour de France in 2022. The ...