How to Watch & Understand the Tour De France

By James Raia, published Jul 02, 2007
Published Content: 119  Total Views: 60,553  Favorited By: 4 CPs
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The Tour de France is the world's largest free sporting event. Spectators can watch every stage in person and along the entire route, this year from London (July 7) to Paris (July 29) without admission.

Where To Watch: Like golf tournaments or motor sports, the best vantage points to witness the race is subjective. Many fans camp for days in the Pyrenees or the Alps to watch the strenuous climbs to L'Alpe d'Huez or Les Deux Alpes or any of the race's famous peaks.

Others bring a picnic lunch and a bottle of wine and pick a less crowded stop in the countryside or in a cafe in a small village and watch the entourage progress. Keep in mind, race roads always close several hours before the riders and other pre-race vehicles arrive. In short, get there early and prepare to stay for many hours.

History of the Tour: The race debuted in 1903 when it was won by Frenchman Maurice Garin. Since then, the host nation has had 36 winners, but none since 1985 when Bernard Hinault claimed his fifth title. Belgium has had 18 winners, followed by Italy with nine titlists.

Floyd Landis' victory in 2006 was the 11th by an America, all in the past 21 years. Lance Armstrong won seven consecutive times (1999-2005) and Greg LeMond won the race three times (1988, 1989-90.)

The Tour By Numbers: As per tradition, each year's course is announced in the previous October. The exact mileage of the Tour changes each year, but usually it's around 2,200 miles and includes 20 stages and one or two rest days. The field is usually comprised of 20 teams, 16 automatic selections based on world rankings and four at-large teams selected by the race organization.

Riders compete on international trade teams, not for their countries. Teams usually riders from several countries, and usually cyclists from an estimated two-dozen countries participate in the race. The cyclists can encounter rain to snow and temperatures near freezing to more than 90 degrees.

2006 Tour de France.

Credit: Wikicommons

Copyright: Wikicommons

Comments
Showing Comments 1 - 5 of 5
 
 
Nice piece. I hope that Versus has it's Internet broadcast again like it did when it was the outdoor network. I listened to the race at work and then watched when I got home. Nice work.

Posted on 07/06/2007 at 7:07:00 AM

 
Excellent Article!!!

Posted on 07/03/2007 at 11:07:00 PM

 
Thank you. Good catch on Maurice Garin. I'll notify AC editors. Thanks for reading. Cheers, james Raia, www.byjamesraia.com

Posted on 07/03/2007 at 10:07:00 AM

 
nice article on the race. I saw it last year just after they left Beziers. I waiting the heat with hundreds of others for a couple of hours, got my trinkets which included a hat and then finally they came and 5 seconds later they were gone. They went past me so fast I couldn't even't make out the different 'best' shirts.

Posted on 07/03/2007 at 9:07:00 AM

 
Nice overview. I'm pretty sure the 1903 winner's name was Maurice Garin.

Posted on 07/03/2007 at 8:07:00 AM

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