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Tadej Pogacar takes a bow as he crosses the line to clinch victory on stage six of the Tour de France

Pogacar hits back to win stage six of Tour de France and close on Vingegaard

  • Slovenian catches rival by surprise with violent acceleration
  • Vingegaard takes yellow jersey as Jai Hindley wilts

Wrist injury or no wrist injury, Tadej Pogacar is unlikely to ever back down. After losing time in the first Pyrenean stage to Laruns, the Slovenian came out fighting on stage six of the Tour de France, a mountain finish to Cauterets-Cambasque, throwing down the gauntlet to the defending champion, Jonas Vingegaard.

In what was his 10th stage win in the Tour and yet another virtuoso solo attack from the 2020 and 2021 victor, Pogacar justified the belief that, despite his long lay-off, he will get better as the race goes on.

Afterwards, buoyed by reaching double figures in stage wins, he joked: “I’m coming for you Mark Cavendish! It’s a bit cocky to say that, but I’m happy to have just one stage win. Today I was just as happy as when I first won three years ago.”

The pendulum that seemed to be swinging inexorably in favour of last year’s winner has now begun to move back towards Pogacar. But the 24-year-old dismissed talk of his win as revenge. “It’s good to win today and take back some time,” he said. “I feel a little bit of relief and feel much better now.”

Pogacar’s success was the result of a shock attack on Vingegaard, just under 4km from the finish at the Cambasque mountain resort.

Unable to respond to the UAE Emirates rider’s violent acceleration, the Dane was compensated by his first yellow jersey of this year’s race and a pat on the back from the French president, Emmanuel Macron.

“I’m super-happy to be back in the maillot jaune ,” Vingegaard said. “I hoped to stay with Tadej but he was really strong on the last climb, so he deserved to win.”

Jumbo-Visma’s team leader benefited from some stellar support on his way to his latest yellow jersey, with both of his teammates, Wout van Aert and Sepp Kuss, giving their all on the towering climb of the Col du Tourmalet.

“I was thinking when they started pulling on the Tourmalet: ‘Shit, if it’s going to happen like yesterday we can pack our bags and go home,’” Pogacar said. “Luckily I had good legs today and could follow on the Tourmalet quite comfortably. I just put myself in the right position, ready to go, but like I said, I was hanging on for dear life.”

Jonas Vingegaard with Tadej Pogacar on stage six

While Vingegaard and his teammates stuck to their plan, Pogacar, bereft of help in the closing kilometres, was having to improvise. “You can have plan A, plan B, plan C – the whole alphabet – and a hundred different things can happen,” said the stage winner. “In cycling it’s so difficult to follow the tactics because there are so many circumstances you can’t predict.”

As the peloton exits the Pyrenees, the pair look closely matched, with just 25 seconds separating them. “I guess it will be an exciting Tour this year,” Vingegaard noted, deadpan.

While Pogacar and Vingegaard moved ahead on the penultimate climb, the overnight race leader, Bora-Hansgrohe’s Jai Hindley wilted. After less than 24 hours in the yellow jersey, Hindley’s hopes went south as the leading groups rode past the ski station at La Mongie, 4km from the top of the giant climb of Tourmalet. The Australian managed to fight back on the long descent that followed, limiting his deficit to Vingegaard to just 1min 34sec at the finish, with Simon Yates fourth overall a further 1min 40sec back.

“That was just an epic day riding round in the yellow jersey and doing some mythical climbs,” Hindley said. “To be honest, I got my arse handed to me, but really enjoyed it.”

Vingegaard appeared as enthused about President Macron as many in the crowd. Asked what the head of state had said to him he struggled to recall, before responding: “He said it was nice to see me again – I think he remembered me from last year.”

Pogacar dedicated his stage win to his partner, Urska Zigart, who was forced to abandon the women’s Giro d’Italia, the Giro Donne, after crashing and suffering a concussion. “Of course, today she was already at home not racing. She gave me all the power,” he said. “This one was for her.”

  • Tour de France 2023
  • Tour de France
  • Australia sport
  • Jonas Vingegaard

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Tour de France 2023 stage 6 LIVE: Winner, highlights and standings after Pogacar stuns Vingegaard

Tadej Pogacar bounced back in vintage fashion to win the sixth stage of the Tour de France on Thursday, gaining a psychological edge over Jonas Vingegaard even though the defending champion took the overall leader’s yellow jersey.

The Slovenian, who lost ground to Vingegaard in Wednesday’s first mountain stage, resisted his rival’s attack in the Col du Tourmalet before going solo on the final climb to Cauterets-Cambasque and beating the Jumbo Visma rider by 24 seconds.

After Australian Jai Hindley, who claimed the yellow jersey on Wednesday, was dropped before the top of the Tourmalet, Vingegaard and Pogacar were set to fight for the stage win on the last ascent, a 16-km effort at 5.4%.

Pogacar attacked with 2.7km left, taking Vingegaard by surprise after the Dane’s team had done everything to set him up for the win all day.

Overall, Vingegaard leads Pogacar by 25 seconds and third-placed Hindley by one minute and 34 seconds.

Follow all the latest updates from stage six below:

Tour de France 2023 - Stage Six

Highlights – final kilometre of stage six, tadej pogacar wins stage six.

3km to go: Pogacar attacks Vingegaard close to summit finish

95km to go: Bryan Coquard takes 20 points in the sprint ahead of Wout van Aert

115km to go: Neilson Powless claims two KOM points atop Cote de Capvern-les-Bains

16:46 , Lawrence Ostlere

A look back at that final kilometre:

Tadej Pogacar wins stage six

16:39 , Lawrence Ostlere

You can take a look at the full standings in every category in the race tracker above.

16:37 , Lawrence Ostlere

The two superstars of this Tour de France salute one another:

Respect 🤜🤛 @TamauPogi and Jonas Vingegaard. #TDF2023 pic.twitter.com/MaT9ORhFiM — Tour de France™ (@LeTour) July 6, 2023

Jonas Vingegaard takes the yellow jersey

16:34 , Lawrence Ostlere

That was great fun. Vingegaard now leads the Tour de France by 25 seconds from Pogacar. Jai Hindley is third at +1min 34sec, and no one else is within three minutes.

Stage six – top five finishers

16:29 , Lawrence Ostlere

1. Tadej Pogacar2. Jonas Vingegaard, at 23’’3. Tobias Halland Johannessen, à 1’22’’4. Ruben Guerreiro 2’06’’5. James Shaw, 2’15’’

16:28 , Lawrence Ostlere

Take a look at that ruthless attack:

💥 @TamauPogi ATTACKS! Vingegaard is not in his wheel! 💥 @TamauPogi ATTAQUE ! Vingegaard n'est pas dans sa roue ! #TDF2023 pic.twitter.com/tLG4iLcCdM — Tour de France™ (@LeTour) July 6, 2023
🏆 🇸🇮 @TamauPogi , ladies and gentleman! 🏆 Mesdames et Messieurs : 🇸🇮 @TamauPogi ! #TDF2023 pic.twitter.com/CfD0qc4Kaz — Tour de France™ (@LeTour) July 6, 2023

16:26 , Lawrence Ostlere

Jai Hindley comes in two and a half minutes down on the leaders – he will give up the yellow jersey to Jonas Vingegaard. Pogacar will be second in the general classification, about half a minute down on the Danish reigning champion. What a Tour we have in store now.

16:23 , Lawrence Ostlere

What an assault by Pogacar! He wins stage six with that unmatchable solo attack to the summit at Cauterets. Vingegaard comes home 23 or 24 seconds down, as well as some time bonus too.

Tour de France stage six – Pogacar closes in on finish line

16:22 , Lawrence Ostlere

400m to go: The road flattens out and this will suit Pogacar nicely – he is going to sprint to the line...

Tour de France stage six – Pogacar passes flamme rouge in front

16:21 , Lawrence Ostlere

1km to go: Pogacar passes the flamme rouge with a 15 second lead over Vingegaard now...

Tour de France stage six – Pogacar pushes on towards stage win

16:20 , Lawrence Ostlere

1.5km to go: Vingegaard has done brilliantly to keep in touch – the gap is down to only seven seconds – but Pogacar is surely going to win the stage...

Tour de France stage six – Pogacar leaves Vingegaard behind

16:19 , Lawrence Ostlere

2km to go: Wow, what an attack by Pogacar. He looked cooked yesterday; now he looks unbeatable. He leaves Vingegaard about 10 seconds back down the mountain – can he increase the gap before the finish?

Tour de France stage six – Pogacar attacks!

16:17 , Lawrence Ostlere

3km to go: Pogacar remains locked on Vingegaard’s wheel. This is calm, sensible stuff from the Slovenian two-time champion, who usually takes the showman option... but now Pogacar attacks!

Tour de France stage six

16:15 , Lawrence Ostlere

3.5km to go: Vingegaard continues to keep a steady pace, and he glances back to see if Pogacar wants to attack and take the lead – Pogacar declines. That is not in his nature, to be defensive, but tactically it is the right move. He can save his legs for the top and beat Vingegaard to the win and the bonus seconds. Kwiatkowski falls back, unable to keep up.

Tour de France stage six – Vingegaard attacks!

16:12 , Lawrence Ostlere

4km to go: Van Aert pulls aside and Vingegaard accelarates! Pogacar is the only one of the lead group who can keep with him, and Vingegaard sees that and slows down. Kwiatkowski takes the opportunity to bridge back to the front two, and it’s now a three.

16:10 , Lawrence Ostlere

5km to go: The yellow jersey group of Jai Hindley and a bunch of other riders are about two and a half minutes behind the leaders, who remain locked on Van Aert’s wheel.

Tour de France stage six – Van Aert awarded combativity prize

16:05 , Lawrence Ostlere

7.5km to go: In news that won’t shock anybody, Wout van Aert has won the day’s combativity prize for the most aggressive rider.

Tour de France stage six - Powless loses contact

16:03 , Lawrence Ostlere

8.5km to go: Van Aert looks so strong. What a phenomenal performance by the Belgian, once again, who has been attacking on the front all day, having also challenged for sprints and hilly stages earlier this week. The definition of an elite all-rounder.

His pace is forcing Neilson Powless to lose contact with the leaders. So the front eight becomes seven:

Tobias Halland Johannessen (Uno-X), Ruben Guerreiro (Movistar), James Shaw (EF Education), Michal Kwiatkowski (Ineos), Jonas Vingegaard and Wout van Aert (Jumbo-Visma), and Tadej Pogacar (UAE Emirates).

15:59 , Lawrence Ostlere

10km to go: So what is going to unfold at the front? At some point soon Wout van Aert is going to step aside and let Vingegaard attack, you would think. Pogacar will try to follow – he failed to do so yesterday, but he looks strong and composed right now.

Can any of the rest of this group challenge the big two for the stage win? Michael Kwiatkowski has lots of experience in these scenarios and Ruben Guerreiro is a strong climber. But the realistic answer is, no.

15:55 , Lawrence Ostlere

12km to go: The road isn’t too steep right now but legs must be starting to burn after such a brutal day at the end of a tough opening week to this Tour de France. The second group are about three minutes behind the lead pack, and the yellow jersey of Jai Hindley is in there. He will still have big ambitions for the podium, despite losing yellow today, and that is the battle in that second group now.

Emannuel Buchmann, Simon and Adam Yates and David Gaudu are all in that second group and have designs on a high GC placing.

Tour de France stage six – front group begin final cimb

15:49 , Lawrence Ostlere

16km to go: Wout van Aert leads the front eight on to the final climb. It doesn’t start too sharp but it tips up over 10% gradient near the top, where you would think we will see a Pogacar-Vingegaard showdown.

Tour de France stage six – lead groups merge

15:39 , Lawrence Ostlere

23km to go: So there are now eight riders at the front...

Tobias Halland Johannessen (Uno-X), Ruben Guerreiro (Movistar), James Shaw (EF Education), Michal Kwiatkowski (Ineos), Jonas Vingegaard and Wout van Aert (Jumbo-Visma), Tadej Pogacar (UAE Emirates) and Neilson Powless (EF Education).

Van Aert is the man on the front, pulling them along.

Tour de France stage six - group two closing in on leaders

15:37 , Lawrence Ostlere

25km to go: The chasers – Van Aert, Vingegaard, Pogacar and Powless – are closing in on the front quartet (Johannessen, Guerreiro, Shaw, Kwiatkowski) as they all near the foot of the final climb to the summit finish at Cauterets. The gap between the groups is down to about 20 seconds and it seems they will soon be climbing all together.

The winner of this stage is almost certainly among these eight riders.

15:29 , Lawrence Ostlere

35km to go : As it stands, Vingegaard will take the yellow jersey from the shoulders of Jai Hindley, who was left behind on the Tourmalet when Jumbo-Visma upped the pace.

Tour de France stage six - two groups of four lead the way

15:25 , Lawrence Ostlere

38km to go: So, a quick summary.

Tobias Halland Johannessen (Uno-X), Ruben Guerreiro (Movistar), James Shaw (EF Education) and Michal Kwiatkowski (Ineos) are flying down the descent from the Tourmalet towards the foot of the final climb to the summit finish.

About 30 seconds behind them is the group containing Jonas Vingegaard and Wout van Aert (Jumbo-Visma), Tadej Pogacar (UAE Emirates) and Neilson Powless (EF Education).

15:17 , Mike Jones

47 km to go: Wout van Aert leads until the final 100m of the climb before Tobias Halland Johannessen (Uno-X) takes the maximum 20 points in the king of the mountains classification. He went through a bit of jostling with Ruben Guerreiro (Movistar) but pipped him at the line.

Vingegaard and Pogacar crest the mountain just 43 seconds behind them.

15:12 , Mike Jones

48km to go: Sepp Kuss has done his job for Jumbo-Visma teammate Jonas Vingegaard and drops away leaving a two horse battle between the reigning champion and Tadej Pogacar.

Up ahead the breakaway group are entering the final kilometre of the Col du Tourmalet.

15:08 , Mike Jones

49km to go: Jai Hindley can’t keep up with Jumbo-Visma and Pogacar so drops back to the peloton. Wout van Aert is working hard for his teammates in the breakaway.

Jonas Vingegaard is going to be the favourite to win this stage right now.

Under two kilometres to go for the leaders until they crest the Tourmalet.

15:05 , Mike Jones

50km to go: Oh wow. Jumbo-Visma and Jonas Vingegaard make their move to attack over the top of the Tourmalet. Tadej Pogacar and Jai Hindley stick with them with around five km for this group to go before the summit.

15:01 , Mike Jones

51km to go : Four kilometres to until the summit of Col du Tourmalet. The breakaway has lost a few members and is now down to just 10 riders which includes Wout van Aert, Julian Alaphilippe and Neilson Powless.

Powless and Alaphilippe will be competing for the KOM points.

14:57 , Mike Jones

14:53 , Mike Jones

53 km to go: The breakaway is hitting the more difficult parts of the climb now and the peloton has reduced the time gap to under four minutes.

Wout van Aert is controlling the pace and tempo of the leaders once again.

14:42 , Mike Jones

56.5km to go: Jai Hindley has a near miss as one of his Bora-Hansgrohe helpers tried to pass him a water bottle and dropped it. It bounced in between the wheels of the yellow jersey holder who breathes a sigh of relief and carries on up the mountain.

Shaw and Alaphilippe are drawn back into the breakaway pack as they didn’t try to work together to stay out front.

14:37 , Mike Jones

58 km to go: Now then! Julian Alaphilippe kicks on and tries to some pace into the climb from the front of the peloton. James Shaw is up their with him but there’s a long, long way to go to the summit.

11km in fact.

14:36 , Mike Jones

59 km to go: Here is the virtual KOM classification after Col d’Aspin:

1. Neilson Powless (EF Education-EasyPost), 30

2. Felix Gall (Ag2r-Citröen), 28

3. Giulio Ciccone (Lidl-Trek), 19

4. Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe), 18

5. Daniel Martínez (Ineos Grenadiers), 15

That could all change by the time they get to the top of the Tourmalet though.

14:29 , Mike Jones

62 km to go: The breakaway has gone through a few kilometres in the long, arduous climb up the Col du Tourmalet. This trek is both gruelling and thrilling.

Wout van Aert, ever the competitor, is at the front. No surprises there.

14:25 , Mike Jones

65 km to go: The main attraction of this stage is the Col du Tourmalet. It’s a 17.1km climb up the iconic mountain which has an average gradient of 7.3%.

The gap between the breakaway leaders and the peloton is now up to four minutes 25 seconds. We’ll see how this climb goes to determine where this stage winner will come from.

14:22 , Mike Jones

67 km to go: American Neilson Powless moves back to the top of the King of the Mountains standings, taking the virtual polka dot jersey from Felix Gall. He said before the day that the KOM point were his target for stage six.

“I felt pretty good yesterday. I was just riding the wrong wave and missed the move.

“Today, I want to at least stay in the game a little bit. It depends. Felix Gall is a super strong climber, so it’ll be hard to take it off his shoulders. Today’s a really good opportunity for points but also a stage win.”

14:18 , Mike Jones

71 km to go: The breakaway flies down the descent as the peloton crests the top of Col d’Aspin. They’ve held the time gap at around 3’20” over the course of the category 1 mountain and seen well placed to catch up on the Tourmalet.

Mathieu van der Poel and Wout van Aert take to the front on the downhill.

14:14 , Mike Jones

76.8 km to go: Here we go then. Inside the final 500m for the climb up Col d’Aspin. Wout van Aert still has the lead across the 6% gradient.

Neilson Powless is on his wheel and bursts into the lead with 100m to go. He crosses the line and takes the maximum points in the KOM battle.

It’s been a good day for him and he’s back in the lead for the polka dot jersey.

14:07 , Mike Jones

79km to go: Jumbo-Visma are making a move. As they take to the front of the peloton, Wout van Aert, their man in the breakaway, blitzes to the head of the whole field too.

Van Aert steps on the pedal and takes charge with 2.2km to go until the top of the Col d’Aspin.

14:03 , Mike Jones

80km to go: Bora-Hansgrohe continue to control the peloton from the front and are holding the time gap to the breakaway at around 3’23”.

The peloton is stuck into the climb up Col d’Aspin now with the leading group having a touch over 3km left to the summit.

13:59 , Mike Jones

81.5 km to go: Benoît Cosnefroy can’t keep up with the pace of the breakaway as the group flies up the hill. Further back Fabio Jakobsen is dropped by the peloton and escorted by a few team-mates.

The European champion heavily crashed during the sprint on stage 4 and needs some help to get back into the main pack.

13:55 , Mike Jones

82 km to go: The second half of the Col d’Aspin reaches gradients of around 9% which is gruelling on the legs. Even more so with the knowledge that the harder, longer and steeper Col du Tourmalet is still to come.

13:50 , Mike Jones

85km to go: The kilometres are no longer flying by as the Col d’Aspin takes its toll on the leaders. They’re through four kilometres already.

It’s the 76th time for the peloton of the Tour de France to climb to Col d’Aspin.

Octave Lapize was first to crest in first position in 1910 and the lhe last person was Thibaut Pinot last year. The Frenchman is in the peloton right now but the second last “winner” of Col d’Aspin (in 2018) was his compatriot Julian Alaphilippe, who’s part of the breakaway.

13:48 , Mike Jones

13:44 , Mike Jones

87km to go: The Col d’Aspin is a category 1 mountain with a 12km climb at an average gradient of 6.5%. The final six-four kilometres are by far the worst part of this one for the riders.

The front of the breakaway hits the base of the climb with a lead of three minutes 22 seconds over the peloton. If the stage winner is to come from the breakaway today they need to increase that time gap by the end of this mountain.

13:41 , Mike Jones

89 km to go: Here’s the tntermediate sprint result in full:

1. Bryan Coquard, 20 pts

2. Wout van Aert, 17 pts

3. Mathieu van der Poel, 15 pts

4. Jonas Gregaard, 13 pts

5. Anthony Perez, 11 pts

6. Oliver Naesen, 10 pts

7. Matteo Trentin, 9 pts

8. Neilson Powless, 8 pts

9. Nikias Arndt, 7 pts

10. Michal Kwiatkowski, 6 pts

11. Matîs Louvel, 5 pts

12. James Shaw, 4 pts

13. Gorka Izagirre, 3 pts

14. Chris Juul Jensen, 2 pts

15. Krists Neilands, 1 pt

13:37 , Mike Jones

92km to go: Bryan Coquard takes the maximum 20 points in the sprint classification (green jersey) for Cofidis. With two big mountains to come in the stage that’s his work for the day done and dusted.

He won’t be in contention to win the stage so don’t be surprised if he drops back to the peloton at some stage.

13:33 , Mike Jones

96km to go: Those in the breakaway are positioning themselves ahead of the intermediate sprint. Wou van Aert is never the front but has previously said he isn’t interested in the green jersey.

Bryan Coquard is let through by Van Aert who takes to his back wheel and follows him over the line. Coquard takes the points for the sprint.

13:28 , Mike Jones

100km to go: Bora-Hansgrohe have upped the tempo at the front of the peloton and are holding the gap between them and the breakaway at three minutes.

That will be cut sharply once the leading riders reach the next mountain climb.

⏱️The gap between the breakaway and the peloton is just over 3 minutes, with 106 km remaining. ⏱️L'écart entre l'échappée et le peloton est d'un peu plus de 3 minutes, à 106 km de l'arrivée. #TDF2023 pic.twitter.com/SCuAMbr7QT — Tour de France™ (@LeTour) July 6, 2023

13:24 , Mike Jones

104km to go: A radio message from team TotalEnergies is very revealing. They are not happy. None of their riders went with the breakaway and the team officials are not impressed.

13:17 , Mike Jones

106km to go: The time gap between the breakaway and the pelation atop Cote de Capvern-les-Bains is three minutes 15 seconds. Which is a decent lead but nothing too worrisome for the GC riders in the main pack.

The next challege is the intermediate sprint at Sarrancolin.

13:13 , Mike Jones

111km to go: Today is the second time team Bora-Hansgrohe have the yellow jersey.

In 2018, Peter Sagan took it after winning stage 2 in La Roche-sur-Yon and wore it during the team time trial in Cholet. It was also the tenth Tour de France stage win for Bora-Hansgrohe yesterday.

The German team is taking part in the Tour de France for the tenth consecutive time.

Now they have all kind of individual stage victories: in bunch sprints, flat and uphill, with Peter Sagan (5), ITT with Maciej Bodnar in Marseille in 2017, from breakaways in medium difficulty stages with Lennard Kämna, Nils Politt and Patrick Konrad, and a mountain stage with Jai Hindley.

13:08 , Mike Jones

115 km to go: There’s 250 metres left until the top of the Cote de Capvern-les-Bains, Neilson Powless takes the the front as they reach the peak and he claims a couple of points in the King of the Mountains battle.

Kasper Asgreen takes one point.

13:00 , Mike Jones

118 km to go: The Cote de Capvern-les-Bains is the first of today’s climbs. It’s a 5.6km uphill category 3 with a gradient of 4.8%. Not the most difficult of the mountains today and one that the breakaway should handle without too much trouble.

12:58 , Mike Jones

120km to go: Five riders, Neilson Powless (EF-Education EasyPost), Kasper Asgreen (Soudal-Quick Step), Oliver Naesen (AG2R-Citröen), Anthony Perez (Cofidis) and Ruben Guerreiro (Movistar) have closed the gapt to the breakaway which now sits at 20 riders.

Meanwhile in the peloton Bora-Hansgrohe are at the front setting the pace. Yellow jersey holder Jai Hindley rides for this team.

12:50 , Mike Jones

125km to go: Most of the general classification riders, including Jonas Vingegaard, haven’t left the pelaton but they’ll still be favourites for the stage win.

The first of the climbs today arrives in 10km.

12:47 , Mike Jones

12:44 , Mike Jones

130km to go: The breakaway is now over two minutes ahead of the pelaton with a second group of chasers just 47 seconds behind the leaders.

Here’s the list of riders out front: Wout van Aert (Jumbo-Visma), Matteo Trentin (UAE Team Emirates), Michal Kwiatkowski (Ineos Grenadiers), James Shaw (EF Education-EasyPost), Julian Alaphilippe (Soudal-Quick Step), Nikias Arndt (Bahrain Victorious), Benoît Cosnefroy (Ag2r-Citröen), Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Deceuninck), Bryan Coquard (Cofidis), Gorka Izagirre (Movistar), Krists Neilands (Israel-PremierTech), Chris Juul-Jensen (Jayco-AlUla), Matîs Louvel (Arkéa-Samsic), Tobias Halland Johannessen and Jonas Gregaard (Uno-X).

12:38 , Mike Jones

135km to go: UAE Team Emirates have managed to grab a place in that leading group with Matteo Trentin joining them when the gap was cut to eight seconds.

Also up there are among them are Mathieu van de Poel and Christopher Juul-Jensen.

12:36 , Mike Jones

Have a watch of Wout van Aert’s blazing start. He was the main leader in getting the breakaway clear at the depart reel:

💥 The stage is underway, and 🇧🇪 @WoutvanAert and 🇫🇷 @alafpolak1 are on the attack! 💥 L'étape est lancée, 🇧🇪 @WoutvanAert et 🇫🇷 @alafpolak1 se ruent à l'attaque ! #TDF2023 pic.twitter.com/mqVOOI9cwQ — Tour de France™ (@LeTour) July 6, 2023

12:35 , Mike Jones

137km to go: The pace of the pelaton starts to increase and the gap between them and the breakaway cuts to eight seconds.

Alaphilippe moves to the front of the field and puts the pedal down in an effort to get the breakaway even clearer. His efforts pay off as they hit a slight decline and the gap starts opening up once again.

12:31 , Mike Jones

141 km to go: There are quite a few riders in the breakaway with Julian Alaphilippe (Soudal-Quick Step) among them. I can count nine of them in the leading pack with a line of three to four stragglers behind them.

The pelaton is already 14 seconds behind and that gap is increasing.

Depart reel

12:28 , Mike Jones

And they’re off!

Wout van Aert flies straight to the front of the field and leads a breakaway of about 10 or so riders. The Jumbo-Visma is an explosive rider and he’ll be close to the front for most of this early part of the day.

12:26 , Mike Jones

The crowds were out in Tarbes to watch the pelaton depart the city for the start of stage six. This will be an exciting day’s riding with more than a few tactics in play as they cross the mountains.

Tadej Pogacar on his Tour so far

12:22 , Mike Jones

The two-time Tour de France winner, Tadej Pogacar spoke to Eurosport about how his 2023 Tour has been developing so far. Asked where things have gone awry so far, he replied:

“Maybe small details – a little bit of everything. The shape is here but I think the next days I can be even better.

“Jonas [Vingegaard] was super strong yesterday. I think he would have made a gap anyway. We’ll see the next days if I can respond. I’m good.”

Jai Hindley leads the Tour

12:19 , Mike Jones

Jai Hindley is a Tour de France debutant and will wear the yellow jersey for the first time after his solo win at Laruns yesterday. He has an advantage of 47 seconds over defending champion Jonas Vingeagaard and 1’03’’ over Giulio Ciccone.

Former race leader Adam Yates is 1’34’’ down in fifth with double overall winner Tadej Pogacar 1’40’’ behind in sixth place.

12:14 , Mike Jones

The riders have set off towards the depart reel with an easy and casual ride through Tarbes. They’re 7km away from where the route officially begins and should take about 10 minutes or so to get there.

12:12 , Mike Jones

Tarbes hosts a start for the 13th time.

The last time was for stage 14 of 2019 tour. At the finish atop the Tourmalet, Thibaut Pinot won from Julian Alaphilippe and Steven Kruijswijk.

That was also the last win to date at the Tour for Pinot.

Weather outlook

12:09 , Mike Jones

At around 25 degrees celsius, it’s hot in Tarbes where the pelaton sets off for the day’s ride. Things should get cooler as the progress through the 145km route and there is a chance of rain later in the afternoon.

A risk of thunderstorms is a real possibility by the time they reach the Tourmalet.

General classification after stage five

12:06 , Mike Jones

1. Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe) 22hrs 15mins 12secs

2. Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) +47secs

3. Giulio Ciccone (Lidl-Trek) +1min 03secs

4. Emanuel Buchmann (Bora-Hansgrohe) +1min 11secs

5. Adam Yates (UAE Team Emirates) +1min 34secs

6. Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates) +1min 40secs

7. Simon Yates (Team Jayco-Alula) + 1min 40secs

8. Mattias Skjelmose (Lidl-Trek) +1min 56secs

9. Carlos Rodriguez Cano (Ineos Grenadiers) +1min 56secs

10. David Gaudu (Groupama-FDJ) +1 min 56secs

How Mark Cavendish became a Tour de France legend – according to his fierce rivals and loyal teammates

12:03 , Mike Jones

Mark Cavendish once gave me the look .

It was an interview in a hotel lobby in Yorkshire; he was slightly late and apologised profusely, then answered questions about the Tour de France with enthusiasm and detail.

For some reason, I thought 10 minutes of flowing conversation made me his trusted confidant, so I looked him in the eyes and asked: how much do you want to break Eddy Merckx’s Tour stage record? He shrugged it off. But what would it mean to you? He went quiet. Wouldn’t it crown your legacy?

The look was somewhere in the venn diagram of anger and disdain, and I half expected him to walk off. He stayed, but in that brief moment I felt the gentlest prod of his famous spikiness. Cavendish was once asked what he’d learned from a difficult day on the bike. “That journalists sometimes ask some stupid f***ing questions,” he replied.

How Mark Cavendish became a Tour de France legend – according to rivals and teammates

Cavendish ready for stage six

11:56 , Mike Jones

Mark Cavendish is looking forward to today’s stage but knows this isn’t one for him to excel. Cavendish is famously a sprinter and positions himself near the front when a stage sets up for a tight, racing finish.

Today’s route is the opposite. It’s all about mountains, climbing and timing your moves perfectly. Not ideal for the sprinters in the pelaton.

🌞 Love @MarkCavendish optimism. How can you not love him ? 🌞Comment ne pas aimer @MarkCavendish #TDF2023 pic.twitter.com/l75tk0mk1G — Tour de France™ (@LeTour) July 6, 2023

Jai Hindley wins Tour de France stage five to take yellow jersey

11:49 , Mike Jones

Jai Hindley won stage five of the Tour de France in Laruns to take the yellow jersey from Adam Yates and Jonas Vingegaard rode clear of rival Tadej Pogacar as an early trip to the Pyrenees ripped up the general classification.

Hindley, winner of last year’s Giro d’Italia, marked himself out as a major contender with a breakaway victory but surely more important was the sight of defending champion Vingegaard leaving behind two-time winner Pogacar on the final climb to make his case as the favourite to be in yellow come Paris.

Having gone clear from the last of his fellow escapees on the final climb of the Col de Marie Blanque, Hindley soloed into Laruns to take the win by 32 seconds, with Vingegaard coming home at the back of a four-strong group that was second on the road.

Stage 6 map and profile

11:44 , Mike Jones

A breakdown of today’s 145km route:

First comes a small category three climb before an intermediate sprint, which may well be contested by the riders interested in the green jersey - Jasper Philipsen is in a strong position in the points classification after winning back-to-back sprints.

Then comes the Col d’Aspin (12% at 6.5%) which so often precedes the Tourmalet (17.1km at 7.3%), the Tour’s most visited climb which will take the peloton over 2,000m high.

A long, fast descent follows before the climb to Cauterets (16km at 5.4%), a long drag that will be draining on the legs after such a tough first week.

Stage six start time and prediction

11:40 , Mike Jones

The stage is set to begin at around 12.20pm BST and is expected to finish at around 4.20pm.

Prediction: Jonas Vingegaard should put down the hammer on the climb to Cauterets and take the stage win.

Jersey standings ahead of stage six

11:37 , Mike Jones

There has been plenty of changes in the jersey standings following the conclusion of stage five with both the yellow and polka-dot jersey changing hands.

Here’s who will wear the jersey this afternoon:

Yellow: Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe)

White: Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates)

Green: Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck)

Polka Dot: Felix Gall (Ag2r-Citroën)

Tour de France 2023 stage 6 preview: Route map and profile of 145km from Tarbes to Cauterets via the Tourmalet

11:32 , Mike Jones

The 2023 Tour de France ignited on Tuesday’s stage five as Australia’s Jai Hindley stormed into the yellow jersey and reigning champion Jonas Vingegaard dominated his main rival Tadej Pogacar . Hindley escaped in the breakaway and both Vingegaard’s Jumbo-Visma and Pogacar’s UAE Team Emirates took too long to close the gap, allowing the Bora-Hansgrohe rider to push on alone and claim a brilliant solo win.

With it, Hindley jumped to the top of the general classification and took the yellow jersey from Adam Yates, who caught up to the struggling two-time champion and UAE team leader Pogacar, and they finished together more than a minute and a half behind Hindley and a minute down on the ominously strong Vingegaard.

Stage six goes deeper into the high Pyrenees, and the peloton will climb the iconic Col du Tourmalet en route to the first summit finish of the Tour in Cauterets.

Tour de France stage 6 preview: Iconic Tourmalet sets up yellow jersey fight

As it happened: Pogačar wins Tour de France stage 6, Vingegaard takes yellow

Hindley wears yellow, Vingegaard carries momentum, Pogačar looks to respond

Tour de France 2023 – Analysing the contenders

Tour de France 2023 - the definitive guide

Tour de France: Jai Hindley wins stage 5 as Vingegaard drops Pogačar in Pyrenees

How to watch stages 5, 6 and 7 of the Tour de France

Hello and welcome to Cyclingnews' live coverage of stage 6 of the 2023 Tour de France, 144.9km from Tarbes to Cauterets-Cambasque.

We had a brutal baptism of fire in the Pyrenees yesterday and today is set to be much of the same for the riders. The general classification saw a dramatic switch up with Jai Hindley (Bora-hansgrohe) winning the stage into Laruns and taking the yellow jersey. Defending Tour de France champion, Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma), also delivered a heavy blow to his key rival and two-time Tour winner, Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates), who he now holds an advantage of 53 seconds over. Will the Dane smell blood and try and build an even bigger advantage today?

We're just under an hour away from the neutralised start in Tarbes at 13:10 CEST, before the waving of the flag and official start at 13:25 CEST.

There's no respite after the pain endured yesterday with an even more difficult stage on the cards. 4000m of elevation over four categorised climbs and the first summit finish of the 2023 race. It's only stage 6. All of the 172 riders that started yesterday finished well within the time limit so we should get the same number setting off today barring any late incidents. 

Here's Mark Cavendish (Astana Qazaqstan) bringing the good vibes at the start in Tarbes. He'll be back in the groupetto today waiting for his next chance to sprint on tomorrow's stage into Bordeaux. 

🌞 Love @MarkCavendish optimism. How can you not love him ?🌞Comment ne pas aimer @MarkCavendish #TDF2023 pic.twitter.com/l75tk0mk1G July 6, 2023

The riders are completing sign ons and the team presentation before we get underway with a neutralised start. 

It's all smiles for Hindley at the start location in his new yellow jersey.

Jai Hindley at the start of stage 6 of the Tour de France

We're underway from the neutralised start in Tarbres. There's just under 8km of riding before the flag is waved and racing gets started on stage 6 of the Tour de France. 

Today's first 20km will be the flattest of the day before we get into the first and easiest of our four categorised climbs. 

Early mechanical issues for Alexander Kristoff (Uno-X), who required a wheel change in the neutral zone. He'll be making his way back in now. 

One of Cyclingnews' team on the ground at the Tour, Daniel Ostanek, has put together a great preview for today's action. Make sure to read it below. Tour de France: Tourmalet, summit finish the next GC skirmish on stage 6 - Preview

144.9KM TO GO

Here we go, stage 6 of the Tour de France is underway! It's the second day of Pyrenean pain. Who will look to get into today's break?

Wout Van Aert (Jumbo-Visma) is the first to try straight from the gun, with Julian Alaphilippe (Soudal-Quick Step) straight onto his wheel. They both played a role in the break yesterday and are showing no early signs of fatigue as they get straight to work. 

There's an early rise straight from the start as we leave Tarbes and there are already gaps starting to form. Around 11 riders have already created breathing room from themselves and the peloton. 

Jumbo-Visma aren't messing about at all with Van Aert getting into this early move. He and Alaphilippe are joined by a whole host of other strong riders: - James Shaw (EF Education-EasyPost) - Nikias Arndt (Bahrain-Victorious) - Benoît Cosnefroy (AG2R Citroën) - Bryan Coquard (Cofidis) - Gorka Izaguirre (Movistar) - Chris Juul-Jensen (Jayco-AlUla) - Tobias Halland Johhanessen (Uno-X) - Jonas Gregaard (Uno-X)

Multiple teams have missed out and are now trying to bridge the gap before it gets too late. Alaphilippe and Van Aert are doing their best to make sure the move sticks as they are joined by a rider each from Ineos Grenadiers, UAE Emirates and Arkéa-Samsic. 

Alexis Renard (Cofidis) has had an early bike change. 

Matteo Trentin (UAE Team Emirates), Michał Kwiatkowski (Ineos Grenadiers), Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Deceuninck), Matis Louvel (Arkéa-Samsic) and Krists Neilands (Israel-Premier Tech) were the five riders who joined the original ten that got away. It will be Neilands' second day in the break in succession if this move sticks. 

There's another counter move of riders in-between the peloton and the break trying not to miss out on what seems to be the break of the day as their gap approaches the minute mark. 

130KM TO GO

Composition of the chasing group of riders: - Ruben Guerreiro (Movistar) - Anthony Perez (Cofidis) - Neilson Powless (EF Education-EasyPost) - Kasper Asgreen (Soudal-Quick Step) - Oliver Naesen (AG2R Citroën)

The break of the day has formed. Bora-hansgrohe have assumed their position at the front of the peloton as they now hold the yellow jersey and must control. The gap is already at 2:35 with the five pursuers at 34 seconds. 

Here's an early look at Van Aert, one of the instigators of today's breakaway, which is now 20 riders deep as contact has been made by the extra five riders.

Wout Van Aert leads the breakaway on stage 6 of the 2023 Tour de France

ON TODAY'S TOUR DE FRANCE MENU

KM 0: Start - Tarbes KM 29.9: Climb - Côte de Capvern-les-Bains (5.6km at 4.8%) KM 49.2: Intermediate Sprint - Sarrancolin KM 68.1: Climb - Col d’Aspin (12km at 6.5%) KM 97.9: Climb - Col du Tourmalet (17.1km at 7.3%) KM 144.9: Finish - Cauterets-Cambasque (16km at 5.4%)

Powless sets off in pursuit of the two KOM points atop the Côte de Capvern-les-Bains (5.6km at 4.8%). He's moved up to 20 points now after losing the polka-dot jersey to Felix Gall (AG2R-Citroën) yesterday who still remains eight points ahead of him. 

The peloton are on a long straight road, fully strung out in single-file order. Gap to the break has now gone out to 3:08. 

100KM TO GO

Bora-hansgrohe are controlling things nicely for the moment with their flat specialists taking the front positions. Nils Politt, Marco Haller, Danny van Popped and Jordi Meeus will share the workload before Bob Jungels, Patrick Konrad and Emanuel Buchmann take over once the road begins to rise. 

Coquard takes the full haul of 20 points in the green jersey classification for the second straight day. This is his second successive day in the break and second intermediate sprint which he has won, nicely done by Le Coq. He started the day 66 points behind the jersey holder, Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuinck) and has reduced that to 46. 

The leading group of 20 is close to turning onto the Col d’Aspin (12km at 6.5%), one of the very famous climbs that the Tour often tackles in the Pyrenees. 

Asgreen is working on the front, clearly in aid of Alaphilippe's chances. He's the closest on GC in the break at 7:10 from Hindley, but the break has barely been given any room to breathe the gap only at 3:21 to the break with under 90km left to race.

Jumbo-Visma have come to the front for now and overtaken the head of the peloton from Bora-hansgrohe. Are we going to see an early assault from the Dutch squad on the Col d’Aspin (12km at 6.5%)? 

Cosnefroy is getting dropped from the break which is quite surprising. Perhaps his efforts to be one of the only two riders in the break on stage 4 have left him fatigued. 

Mechanical issue for Maxim Van Gils at the back of the bunch. The young Belgian hasn't had the best luck in the opening six stages of his first Tour de France. 

The last two thirds of the Col d’Aspin (12km at 6.5%) are the hardest with a relatively easy start. Fabio Jakobsen (Soudal-Quick Step) is struggling to hold on at the back of the peloton and has began to drop back with some of his sprint lead-out. They will be hoping to ride in within the time limit with the groupetto as they did yesterday. 

Cavendish is the next sprinter to drop out the back with two teammates, but he won't be panicking having battled to beat the time-cut on multiple occasions throughout his illustrious career. 

The break has just under 4km until the top of the Col d’Aspin and the peloton is still being driven on by Bora-hansgrohe with the gap at 3:38.

Here's a look at the break of the day being led by Asgreen. 

The breakaway on stage 6 of the 2023 Tour de France

Jumbo-Visma have hit the front of both the peloton and the breakaway as Laporte has started to take control for Vingegaard and co. while Van Aert has decided it is time to up the pace in the breakaway. Coquard has dropped from the break after his successful pursuit of green jersey points. 

Van Aert is beginning to thin this group down significantly. Slightly curious tactics from Jumbo, but they are clearly cooking up something. Most of the sprinters are now falling away as the pace increases through Laporte. 

Powless shoots out of Van Aert's wheel in the final 80m of the climb and takes the full haul of points with Guerrero coming over in second. He's now gone back into the virtual lead of the king of the mountains classification with 30 points, two ahead of Gall. 

We're 1000km into this year's Tour de France. So much has already happened, but we've got lots more to come as we still have over two weeks of racing left to tackle. 

Cyclocross season has come early as Van der Poel and Van Aert lead the break in their descent off the Col d'Aspin. Next on the menu, the Col du Tourmalet. 

Vingegaard was on a different planet yesterday compared to his competitors on the Col de Marie Blanque, will he go again on today's even harder stage? The crest of the Tourmalet arrives with around 47km remaining in the day. If the break is given more leeway and Van Aert makes it over the top before the peloton, he could be the perfect satellite rider to guide Vingegaard to the final climb into Cauterets-Cambasque (16km at 5.4%). 

CAUTERETSCAMBASQUE FRANCE JULY 06 Jonas Vingegaard of Denmark and Team JumboVisma competes during the stage six of the 110th Tour de France 2023 a 1449km stage from Tarbes to CauteretsCambasque 1355m UCIWT on July 06 2023 in CauteretsCambasque France Photo by Tim de WaeleGetty Images

We're onto the lower slopes of the legendary Col du Tourmalet (17.1km at 7.3%) now as Hindley and Haller have a slightly uncoordinated drop of a bison while handing it over. Thankfully it didn't go wrong for the yellow jersey wearer. 

We're seeing images of the famous battle between Alberto Contador and Andy Schleck atop the Tourmalet in the 2010 Tour de France. It was an incredible battle won by the rider from Luxembourg and is one of the conflicts written into the tremendous history of this climb that has appeared in the Tour more than any other. Whether it's Coppi and Bartali, Merckx going solo or indeed Pinot who was victorious last time a stage of the Tour finished on the Tourmalet, this climb is a true legend. 

Alaphilippe has decided to make a surge off the front with 11.2km remaining in the climb. Shaw has got onto his wheel for now with Van Aert setting tempo in the break behind. 

Van der Poel is suffering under the pressure of Van Aert and dropping out of the break. He'll likely be back in action for Philipsen's lead-out tomorrow on a much flatter test into Bordeaux. 

Neilands is the next to crack under Van Aert's pressure, unsurprising after his two days in the break in succession. 

Matteo Jorgenson (Movistar) and Pierre Latour (TotalEnergies) are two surprising early exits from the peloton with over 7km left to climb on the Tourmalet. Latour was the last winner of the Souvenir Jacques Goddet, awarded to the first rider over the Tourmalet in honour of the former TDF race director from 1936-1986. 

Hindley is suddenly down to just one teammate in Buchmann with Jumbo-Visma continuing to take control through Nathan Van Hooydonck.

Here's a look at some of the beautiful terrain we've covered on stage 6 today. 

CAUTERETSCAMBASQUE FRANCE JULY 06 A general view of the peloton climbing to the Col dAspin 1490m while fans cheer during the stage six of the 110th Tour de France 2023 a 1449km stage from Tarbes to CauteretsCambasque 1355m UCIWT on July 06 2023 in CauteretsCambasque France Photo by Tim de WaeleGetty Images

Michael Woods (Israel-Premier Tech) is the first of the GC riders to drop under Jumbo-Visma's unrelenting tempo, the Canadian dropped out of the overall top 10 yesterday and will be leaking even more time today. 

Game over for Alaphilippe as he is the next rider to feel the wrath of Van Aert. The Belgian superstar has been on the front for what seems an age now, perhaps he has found the climbing legs of previous year's that saw him perform so strongly on Mont Ventoux and Hautacam at the Tour. 

Jumbo-Visma are blowing the race to pieces on the Tourmalet through Kelderman, gaps are forming already in the peloton. Only Pogačar and Hindley can hang onto the Jumbo trio of Kelderman, Kuss and Vingegaard. 

Hindley has dropped! Only Pogačar can live with Jumbo-Visma. 

Kelderman pulls off and it's time for Kuss to get to work. He's clearly the finest mountain domestique in the world and he's showing it again. Pogačar is still there, but Vingegaard will likely launch off the front and try to reach Van Aert. What a stage we're set up for now. 

CURRENT SITUATION

Head of the race: Van Aert group + 2:10: Kuss, Vingegaard and Pogačar + 2:51: Hindley group that also contains the remainder of GC contenders

Here we go! Kuss pulls off and Vingegaard attacks. Unlike yesterday, Pogačar is glued to the Dane's wheel for now. They are absolutely flying up the Tourmalet!

The duo are closing in incredibly quickly on the leaders, now only 1:07 from the group containing Van Aert. He will be crucial for the descent and the run into the final climb for the defending champion, Vingegaard. Hindley's time in yellow is likely over as he is now 1:43 down on Pogačar and Vingegaard. 

Vingegaard is pushing on as Van Aert closes in on the summit of the Tourmalet and parts the brilliant crowds. Guerreiro tried his hardest to deviate into Johannessen at the sprint atop the climb, but the Norwegian takes the full 20 KOM points and the 5000 Euros for the Souvenir Jacques Goddet. 

Van Aert has played this perfectly for his leader and will be easing off as he waits for the catch to be made before the first summit finish of this year's Tour. 

Belgian Wout Van Aert of JumboVisma pictured in action during stage 6 of the Tour de France cycling race a 1449 km race from Tarbes to CauteretsCambasque France Thursday 06 July 2023 This years Tour de France takes place from 01 to 23 July 2023 BELGA PHOTO DIRK WAEM Photo by DIRK WAEM BELGA MAG Belga via AFP Photo by DIRK WAEMBELGA MAGAFP via Getty Images

Van Aert and Vingegaard have now linked up and are settling in for the finale. Pogačar appears to be shaking out and stretching that wrist he broke in April. 

The four breakaway companions that Van Aert left as he waited for Vingegaard are close to being caught by our group of favourites behind with only a 10 second advantage for now. Hindley now has a 2:18 deficit on the leaders, it seems his time in yellow is only going to be one day. 

Pogačar is clearly bothered by his wrist injury and is continuing to work on it as he sits in the wheel of the Jumbo-Visma duo. The group containing Hindley are making some group and have reduced the deficit to under two minutes. The Australian will be aided by multiple other GC riders being left in the wake of Vingegaard and Pogačar. 

The catch has been made up with now eight riders at the head of the race: Van Aert, Vingegaard, Pogačar, Kwiatkowski, Powless, Shaw, Guerreiro and Johannessen. Van Aert is highlighting exactly why he needed to be over the Tourmalet before Vingegaard as this leading group shouldn't pull with the defending champion and should save their legs for the final climb. He'll do the majority of work in the final run in before his leader goes after the stage victory and yellow jersey. 

Here's a look back at Pogačar and Vingegaard on the Tourmalet, putting on a show. 

CAUTERETSCAMBASQUE FRANCE JULY 06 LR Tadej Pogacar of Slovenia and UAE Team Emirates White Best Young Rider Jersey and Jonas Vingegaard of Denmark and Team JumboVisma attack climbing the Col du Tourmalet 2115m during the stage six of the 110th Tour de France 2023 a 1449km stage from Tarbes to CauteretsCambasque 1355m UCIWT on July 06 2023 in CauteretsCambasque France Photo by Tim de WaeleGetty Images

Buchmann is trying his best to work for Hindley, but the German national champion simply cannot match the power of Van Aert on the flatter terrain, even after the Belgian's full day in the break. Gap to the leaders is back out to 2:24. 

EF Education-EasyPost directeur sportif, Tom Southam is calming his duo of riders in the breakaway, Powless and Shaw, before they begin the ascent to the first summit finish of the 2023 Tour de France with the best in the world. 

The final climb into Cauterets-Cambasque is posted as 16km at 5.4% gradient, but that doesn't paint the full picture. Once they have completed the easiest slopes into Catuerets, they will turn off onto a section containing some hellish hairpins as they battle the brutal final 5km, three of which average over 10% in gradient. 

Pogačar's maximum speed for the stage has just been shown on a graphic to have been 103.5km/h. 

How long can Van Aert pull on the front for Vingegaard? He was one of the instigators of the breakaway over 130km ago just outside Tarbes, he led the group on the Col d'Aspin and the Col du Tourmalet, how much could he possibly have left?

Powless probably won't play a big role in the finish having been dropped on the Tourmalet, but his haul of 18 KOM points across the stage has confirmed a second stint in the polka-dot jersey as there are only 10 points available on the final climb and the solitary rider within 10 points of his lead is Gall, who is a long way behind in the yellow jersey group. A solid day out for the American. 

CAUTERETSCAMBASQUE FRANCE JULY 06 Neilson Powless of The United States and Team EF EducationEasyPost competes in the chase group climbing the Col du Tourmalet 2115m during the stage six of the 110th Tour de France 2023 a 1449km stage from Tarbes to CauteretsCambasque 1355m UCIWT on July 06 2023 in CauteretsCambasque France Photo by Tim de WaeleGetty Images

Take a look at the profile for the final climb of the day below.

For the fifth time in the history of #TDF2023, Cauterets welcomes the race, and it's going to be the GC favourites who will fight for the win today. pic.twitter.com/6AYXiqhsbG July 6, 2023

As expected, Powless is the first to start struggling at the back of the leading group. Van Aert still powers on. 

Ineos are leading the second group on the road for their GC hopefuls, Rodríguez and Pidcock. They are 2:30 down on the leaders. 

Van Aert has been named as the most aggressive rider for the second day running at the 2023 Tour de France. He won the super-combativity prize in 2022 and will line up on the start tomorrow in Mont-de-Marsan with the gold race number again.

The leading group are now in Cauterets with the hardest inclines awaiting them in the approach to the finish. 

We're hopefully about to see a battle for the ages between Vingegaard and Pogačar, who will come out on top?

CAUTERETSCAMBASQUE FRANCE JULY 06 LR Tadej Pogacar of Slovenia and UAE Team Emirates White Best Young Rider Jersey and Jonas Vingegaard of Denmark and Team JumboVisma attack during the stage six of the 110th Tour de France 2023 a 1449km stage from Tarbes to CauteretsCambasque 1355m UCIWT on July 06 2023 in CauteretsCambasque France Photo by Tim de WaeleGetty Images

Powless has been fully dropped and we're now down to seven riders at the front of the race. 

Gradients are about to get much harder as we hit the hairpins. Shaw is dropping, Guerreiro is cracking, Van Aert is putting in his final effort. 

Vingegaard takes over and here we go! Only Pogačar is with the Dane for now and Tour de France is in full flight on stage 6. 

Van Aert has to be held up by fans for a moment as he comes to an almost complete stand-still after his tremendous 140km effort. Kwiatkowski has made is back to the two leaders and is sitting in nicely for now. When can he make a tactical strike for glory, and does he have the legs for it? You're reminded why the Polish rider is a former World Champion and a fantastic domestique as he is able to follow for now. 

Pogačar is at times overlapping wheels with his rival as Kwiatkowski finally drops under the pressure. Vingegaard gets out of the saddle again and pushes on. 

Has Pogačar got enough to counter? There are hints of a gap at times but the Dane doesn't appear to have put in his biggest dig for now. The fans are incredible on this final climb. 

Egan Bernal (Ineos Grenadiers) almost comes to a halt as he appears to have finished his work on the front for Rodríguez and Pidcock in the main group behind. 

Pogačar goes! He's turned the tables on the Dane on stage 6. The Slovenian strikes back on the final climb. 

What an acceleration from the two-time Tour winner. Vingegaard hasn't cracked by any means but he has to chase his rival down now before the final. In the group behind, Rodríguez has attacked with Hindley and Kuss in his wheel. 

Pogačar only has a gap of six seconds for now, but he's clearly not feeling as bad as he did yesterday. He's pushing on as French President, Emmanuel Macron flies by him. 

The gap is finally starting to go out and is now at 13 seconds. What a response after yesterday's stage. Pogačar is flying in the final kilometre. Incredible. 

STAGE FINISH

Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) wins stage 6 of the Tour de France. He was well beaten yesterday, but has struck back on the first summit finish of the race, with an incredible acceleration to drop Jonas Vingegaard (jumbo-Visma). What a finale to stage 6 and 2023 Tour de France is well and truly alive. It's the Slovenian's tenth Tour de France stage victory. 

Vingegaard crosses the line in second and will take the yellow jersey from Hindley on an incredible second Pyrenean stage. 

Hindley finishes his day in yellow 2:39 down on Pogačar in a group containing Rodríguez and Simon Yates (Jayco AlUla).

Here's a look at Pogačar as he crossed the line on an incredible bounce-back at the Tour de France and won stage 6. 

TOPSHOT UAE Team Emirates Slovenian rider Tadej Pogacar cycles to the finish line to win the 6th stage of the 110th edition of the Tour de France cycling race 145 km between Tarbes and CauteretsCambasque in the Pyrenees mountains in southwestern France on July 6 2023 Photo by Marco BERTORELLO AFP Photo by MARCO BERTORELLOAFP via Getty Images

Here's what Hindley had to say after losing his yellow jersey: "What can I say, was just an epic day riding round in the yellow jersey doing some mythical climbs and to be honest I got my arse handed to me, but really enjoyed it." "I knew I just wanted to ride my own race and if I could hand onto the two big favourites then I would do my best and I did and I just got spat like at the top the climb, 4k to go or something and that was it." "It was pretty much lights out from then on. Gave it a red hot crack so that's all I can do, ay."   Here's what he had to say on Jumbo-Visma's tactics: "Jumbo rode super hard tempo the whole Tourmalet and the final few kilometres at the top they went really hard and I knew they were going to do something crazy. I just put myself in the right position and there ready to go, but like I said I was hanging on for dear life and did my best, but yeah." 

Pogačar closed the deficit to Vingegaard to just 25 seconds overall, here's what he had to say after his victory: "I would not say revenge but it's good to win today and take back some time. I feel a little bit of relief and feel much better now." "The display Jonas showed yesterday was incredible and I was thinking when they started pulling on the Tourmalet - 'shit, if it's going to happen like yesterday we can pack our bags and go home'. Luckily I had good legs today and could follow on the Tourmalet quite comfortably." "Then, when I felt it was the right moment in the end I attacked - it was a big relief.It's 10 stage victory - I'm coming for you Mark!" "I would say it's almost perfect the gap and it's going to be a big big battle until the last stage I think." He dedicated his victory to his fiancée after she crashed in the Giro Donne yesterday: "Of course Urska, today she was already at home not racing. She gave me all the power. This one was for her."

CAUTERETSCAMBASQUE FRANCE JULY 06 Tadej Pogacar of Slovenia and UAE Team Emirates White Best Young Rider Jersey celebrates at finish line as stage winner during the stage six of the 110th Tour de France 2023 a 1449km stage from Tarbes to CauteretsCambasque 1355m UCIWT on July 06 2023 in CauteretsCambasque France Photo by David RamosGetty Images

Final results from stage 6, courtesy of FirstCycling.

It was only to be one day in yellow for Hindley, but he is sitting comfortably in third overall behind Vingegaard and Pogačar at 1:34 from the Dane. He was the favourite to finish in third before the Tour and is looking good after the two Pyrenean tests with Simon Yates in fourth a further 1:40 behind him. 

CAUTERETSCAMBASQUE FRANCE JULY 06 Jai Hindley of Australia and Team BORAHansgrohe Yellow Leader Jersey crosses the finish line during the stage six of the 110th Tour de France 2023 a 1449km stage from Tarbes to CauteretsCambasque 1355m UCIWT on July 06 2023 in CauteretsCambasque France Photo by David RamosGetty Images

All 172 riders that started stage 6 of the Tour de France have successfully finished our second and final stage in the Pyrenees. Jakobsen was the last to cross, 37:27 down on Pogačar, but well within the 42:12 time cut for today. He rode home in front of the broom wagon alongside three members of his lead-out train that will be back in action on tomorrow's flat stage to Bordeaux: Deckercq, Mørkøv and Devenyns. 

Yessssss!!!With five minutes to spare, @FabioJakobsen and the rest of the Soudal Quick-Step boys conclude this #TDF2023 stage!Photo: @BeelWout pic.twitter.com/XB8ZJAdPsY July 6, 2023

Here's new yellow jersey holder, Jonas Vingagaard (Jumbo-Visma) receiving a Presidential welcome to the podium after stage 6 from Emmanuel Macron. He holds a 25 second lead over Pogačar and the duo should have two days off from their battle with two flatter stages arriving tomorrow and on stage 8 as they prepare for the explosive duel atop the Puy de Dôme in it's first appearance at the Tour since 1998.

CAUTERETSCAMBASQUE FRANCE JULY 06 LR Jonas Vingegaard of Denmark and Team JumboVisma Yellow Leader Jersey congratulated by Emmanuel Macron of France President of France on the podium ceremony after the stage six of the 110th Tour de France 2023 a 1449km stage from Tarbes to CauteretsCambasque 1355m UCIWT on July 06 2023 in CauteretsCambasque France Photo by David RamosGetty Images

What's next? Tomorrow's stage will be a welcome return to flatter roads on a 169.9km route from Mont-de-Marsan to Bordeaux. The last time a stage finished in the port city was in 2010 and the winner that day was none other than Mark Cavendish (Astana Qazaqstan). The Manx Missile put in his best performance of the Giro to win the final stage after three weeks of arduous racing, will tomorrow finally be the day he breaks the Tour de France stage win record? Green jersey wearer, Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck) has won both of the bunch sprints so far and will be looking for that hat trick to prevent Cavendish from winning that magical 35th stage. 

CAUTERETSCAMBASQUE FRANCE JULY 06 Jasper Philipsen of Belgium and Team AlpecinDeceuninck Green Points Jersey celebrates at podium during the stage six of the 110th Tour de France 2023 a 1449km stage from Tarbes to CauteretsCambasque 1355m UCIWT on July 06 2023 in CauteretsCambasque France Photo by David RamosGetty Images

That wraps things up for Cyclingnews' live coverage of Stage 6 of the Tour de France with the GC race nicely poised for a battle on the Puy de Dôme come Sunday. Before then make sure to check out Barry Ryan's full stage report linked below, alongside our growing gallery, and all of Cyclingnews' other news and content being produced on the ground at the race. Tour de France: Tadej Pogacar claws back time with victory at Cauterets-Cambasque

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Sprint | Sarrancolin (49.2 km)

Points at finish, kom sprint (3) côte de capvern-les-bains (29.9 km), kom sprint (1) col d'aspin (68.1 km), kom sprint (hc) col du tourmalet (97.9 km), kom sprint (1) cauterets-cambrasque (144.9 km), youth day classification, team day classification, race information.

6 etap tour de france 2023

  • Date: 06 July 2023
  • Start time: 13:25
  • Avg. speed winner: 37.083 km/h
  • Race category: ME - Men Elite
  • Distance: 144.9 km
  • Points scale: GT.A.Stage
  • UCI scale: UCI.WR.GT.A.Stage
  • Parcours type:
  • ProfileScore: 310
  • Vert. meters: 3894
  • Departure: Tarbes
  • Arrival: Cauterets-Cambasque
  • Race ranking: 1
  • Startlist quality score: 1584
  • Won how: 2.7 km solo
  • Avg. temperature: 21 °C

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6 etap tour de france 2023

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Tour de France 2023 : revivez la 6e étape de la Grande Boucle, marquée par la réponse de Tadej Pogacar à Jonas Vingegaard

Ce qu'il faut savoir

Cette première arrivée au sommet était particulièrement attendue. Tadej Pogacar a remporté, jeudi 6 juillet, la 6e étape du Tour de France et étape reine des Pyrénées, au sommet de Cauterets-Cambasque. Pogacar a pris une revanche éclatante sur son rival Jonas Vingegaard, qui s'est consolé en prenant le maillot jaune à l'Australien Jai Hindley.  Au classement général, le Danois ne devance plus le Slovène que de 25 secondes. Jai Hindley, qui n'a porté le maillot jaune qu'une journée, complète le podium mais compte désormais un retard de 1 min 34 sec sur le nouveau leader du Tour. 

Une première étape clé. Les coureurs ont fait face à quatre cols pyrénéens en haute altitude, dont l'Aspin (1 490 m), le mythique Tourmalet (2 115 m) et la montée finale vers Cauterets-Cambasque (1 355 m). C'est la première arrivée au sommet de ce Tour de France 2023.

Un maillot jaune en difficulté. Vainqueur d'étape à Laruns mercredi, Jai Hindley a fait coup double en s'emparant du maillot jaune. Mais la journée de jeudi a été une autre histoire pour l'Australien de l'équipe Bora-Hansgrohe. Lâché rapidement au moment d'attaquer les principales difficultés, il n'a rien pu faire face au rythme imprimé par le duo Pogacar-Vingegaard.

Emmanuel Macron présent sur place. Le chef de l'Etat a rencontré les élus de Pau, dont le maire, François Bayrou, avant de suivre la sixième étape dans la voiture du directeur de la course , Christian Prudhomme. Il devait saluer "les coureurs, les organisateurs et l'ensemble des services publics mobilisés pour permettre le déroulement de cet événement majeur de notre patrimoine sportif et culturel" , a fait savoir l'Elysée.

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Tour de France Stage 6 Preview: The Col du Tourmalet Awaits

A second day in the Pyrenees for the peloton after Jonas Vingegaard blew up the race during Stage 5. Can Pogačar respond?

110th tour de france 2023 stage 5

Stage 6 - Tarbes to Cauterets-Cambasque (144.9km) - Thursday, July 6

The stage begins in Tarbes, which hosts the Tour for the fifteenth time. If Stage 5 is any indicator, there will be an intense race to join the breakaway with stage hunters, polka dot jersey hopefuls, and perhaps a few domestiques from the GC contenders’ teams all hoping to get up the road and gain as big of an advantage as possible. And they’ll need it with a heavy dose of Pyrenean summits crammed into the second two-thirds of the stage.

The climbing starts quickly, with the Category 3 Côte de Capvern-les-Bains, followed about 20km later by the intermediate sprint in Sarrancolin. The riders should cover these in the first hour, before settling in for the three ascents that define the stage: the Category 1 Col d’Aspin, the Hors Categorie Col du Tourmalet, and the Category 1 climb to the finish in Cauterets.

stage 6 profile tour de france 2023

Of these, the Tourmalet is the most challenging. Starting about 80km into the stage, the riders will climb it from the east, which means they face 17.1km of climbing with an average gradient of 7.3%. The second half of the ascent is the toughest, with several kilometers of pitches hovering between 9 and 10%. As a bit of added incentive, the Souvenir Jacques Goddet prize will be awarded to the first rider over the Tourmalet’s 2,115m summit, which sits 47km from the end of the stage.

A long descent takes the racers from the top of the Tourmalet back down to the valley floor, where they’ll have a few minutes to catch their breath, grab bottle, and scarf down a gel or two before the day’s final obstacle: the 16km Category 1 climb to Cauterets-Cambasque.

This is the only second time that a Tour stage has finished beyond the village of Cauterets, taking the riders another 10km up to the Plateau du Cambasque. This turns the traditional “uphill finish” in Cauterets into a true Category 1 climb. The climb’s average gradient is just 5.4%, but with pitches near the top approaching an 11% gradient, it’s going to do some damage.

Australia’s Jai Hindley (BORA-hansgrohe) enters the day in the yellow jersey after winning Stage 5. The 27-year-old and his team will immediately be put to the test, as Denmark’s Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) wants to put more time into Slovenia’s Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates), who cracked on the Col du Marie Blanque at the end of Stage 5 and lost over a minute to his Danish rival. How well Hindley handles the attacks from Vingegaard and his team will go a long way toward determining whether or not he’s a true podium contender. (Hint: We think he is.) And as we saw last year, Pogačar won’t go down without a fight. If he feels he’s recovered from Stage 5, he’ll launch an assault of his own.

Riders to watch

After an intense day of racing on Stage 5, the Tour’s GC contenders might be happy to let another breakaway head up the road–albeit with fewer GC threats. Look for four teams to try and jam at least one but probably two riders in the move to maximize their chances of taking the stage: INEOS-Grenadiers, Lidl-Trek, Israel-PremierTech, and EF Education-EasyPost. These teams each have several talented climbers who are far enough down the Tour’s General Classification that they’ll be allowed to go hunt for a stage win.

When to Watch

We’ll start watching at about 9:30 a.m. EDT, as the riders hit the base of the Tourmalet. But it’s work week, and you might have other plans. In that case, tune-in around 10:35 a.m. EDT to see the action on the final climb to the finish above Cauterets.

Since getting hooked on pro cycling while watching Lance Armstrong win the 1993 U.S. Pro Championship in Philadelphia, longtime Bicycling contributor Whit Yost has raced on Belgian cobbles, helped build a European pro team, and piloted that team from Malaysia to Mont Ventoux as an assistant director sportif. These days, he lives with his wife and son in Pennsylvania, spending his days serving as an assistant middle school principal and his nights playing Dungeons & Dragons.

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Tadej Pogacar strikes back on Stage 6 as Jonas Vingegaard sneaks into yellow at Tour de France

Felix Lowe

Updated 07/07/2023 at 08:25 GMT

The 2023 Tour de France is already shaping up to be a classic. Tadej Pogacar dismissed concerns he was already finished in the race for yellow with a superb victory on Stage 6, putting time into the new yellow jersey of Jonas Vingegaard. Jai Hindley's first outing in the leader's jersey could well be his last after he cracked on the Col du Tourmalet as the two big hitters went head-to-head uphill.

'The Tour de France is on' – Pogacar blasts to Stage 6 win

Froome: Another Tour stage win would be an amazing way to end my career

10/04/2024 at 10:20

picture

'Here he goes!' - Pogacar flies up final climb as Vingegaard drops back

  • Stage 6 as it happened: Vingegaard in yellow after Pogacar takes win

picture

'It's a crazy one!' – Van Aert and Alaphilippe attack from the start on Stage 6

Van Aert sets tone with attack from the gun

picture

'Bang!' – Jumbo and Vingegaard light up Tourmalet as Hindley distanced

picture

'I got my a*** handed to me!' – Hindley on his one day in yellow

Vingegaard 'a little bit better every day,' says Visma boss, also issues Van Aert update

07/04/2024 at 12:49

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Pogacar ‘could pay the price’ for his early season feats ahead of Giro-Tour double - Indurain

29/03/2024 at 18:27

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Tour de France 2023, étape 6 : Profil et parcours détaillés

Tour de France 2023 étape 6 profil et parcours détaillés

Jeudi, place au second volet de montagne Pyrénéen du Tour de France 2023 avec la 6e étape qui mène les coureurs de Tarbes à Cauterets-Cambasque, avec la toute première arrivée au sommet de cette 110e édition de la Grande Boucle. Au programme de l’étape du jour, les coureurs toujours en course vont avoir quelque 144,9 kilomètres à parcourir avec un profil de 3.894 mètres de dénivelé positif avec notamment à grimper la Côte de Capvern-les-Bains, le Col d’Aspin, le Col du Tourmalet et enfin la montée finale de Cauterets-Cambasque. Logiquement, les favoris ont rendez-vous pour se disputer la victoire d’étape et le maillot jaune.

Le peloton va s’élancer de Tarbes (Hautes-Pyrénées) à 13h10 pour le départ fictif. Après un court défilé neutralisé les coureurs vont atteindre le kilomètre zéro et le départ réel sera alors donné à 13h25 direction Cauterets-Cambasque. Les premiers coureurs sont attendus sur la ligne d’arrivée aux alentours de 17h20 (37 km/h de moyenne)

La liste des participants (startlist) : cliquer ici Les abandons de la course : cliquer ici Les favoris et outsiders : cliquer ici Les réactions des coureurs à l’arrivée de chaque étape : cliquer ici Vidéo résumé de chacune des étapes : cliquer ici

Les dernières actualités du Tour de France 2023 : cliquer ici Consulter les archives du Tour de France : cliquer ici

Tadej Pogacar et Jonas Vingegaard côte à côte dans la montée finale

Si Jonas Vingegaard et Tadej Pogacar vont se marquer dans la montée finale, cela pourrait profiter à des coureurs du type de Giulio Ciccone ou autres favoris et outsiders. Cette longue dernière ascension du jour dont les pourcentages n’atteignent pas de passage supérieur à 10%, la difficulté ne sera pas suffisante sur le papier et à priori pour séparer les deux meilleurs grimpeurs de la planète cyclisme. Si ce n’est pas un des membres de l’échappée qui l’emporte au sommet, pourquoi ne pas se mettre à rêver de voir un Egan Bernal renaître de ses cendres, par exemple. On pourrait aussi envisager une victoire française avec David Gaudu, Romain Bardet, Guillaume Martin, Thibaut Pinot et pourquoi pas le champion de France en titre, Valentin Madouas.

Du côté du parcours et du profil de l’étape du jour , plus les kilomètres vont défiler, et plus la difficulté va s’accentuer. Pour commencer, au kilomètre 29,9, les coureurs arpenteront en guise de mise en jambe la Côte de Capvern-les-Bains (5,6km à 4,8% – 3e catégorie) ce qui leur permettra d’atteindre les 600 mètres d’altitude et de rester 25 kilomètres sur un plateau avant d’entamer de grimper par Arreau le Col d’Aspin (12km à 6,5%) à 1.490 mètres d’altitude et classé en 1ère catégorie . Puis, à peine descendus, les coureurs entameront la plat du jour avec, en hors-catégorie, la montée du Col du Tourmalet (17,1km à 7,3%) perché à 2.115 mètres d’altitude . Après une longue descente menant le peloton à Pierrefitte-Nestalas, tout ce petit monde grimpera la montée finale de Cauterets-Cambasque (16km à 5,4%) perchée à 1.355 mètres. A l’issue de ces deux journées passées dans les Pyrénées, le classement général profitera déjà d’un premier dessin .

6 etap tour de france 2023

Le seul sprint intermédiaire du jour sera à disputer au kilomètre 49,2 à Sarrancolin, situé entre la Côte de Capvern-les-Bians et le Col d’Aspin.

Le programme TV du jeudi 6 juillet

Ce jeudi 6 juillet et à l’occasion de la 6e étape du Tour de France 2023 vous allez avoir rendez-vous avec soit Alexandre Pasteur, Yoann Offredo, Laurent Jalabert, Marion Rousse et Thomas Vockler sur France 3 à partir de 12h55 puis France 2 à partir de 15h . Du côté de la chaine payante par abonnement, les images seront diffusées en direct à partir de 13h25 et jusqu’à 17h30 sur Eurosport 1 . Et dans ce cas les commentaires seront assurés par Guillaume di Grazia assisté de ses consultants TV que sont Jacky Durand et Steve Chainel. L’émission « Les Rois de la Pédale » précèdera et succèdera l’étape du jour. Sur la même chaine, une rediffusion du résumé est proposée à partir de 21h (120 minutes).

Les favoris de la 6e du Tour de France 2023

*** Giulio Ciccone, Egan Bernal, Romain Bardet ** Tadej Pogacar, Jonas Vingegaard, Pello Bilbao, Michael Woods, Simon Yates, Jai Hindley * Tom Pidcock, Adam Yates, Emanuel Buchmann, Jack Haig, Mikel Landa, Carlos Rodriguez, Egan Bernal, Mattias Skjelmose, Alberto Bettiol, David Gaudu, Thibault Pinot

Carte du parcours de la 6e étape (Tarbes / Cauterets-Cambasque)

6 etap tour de france 2023

Classement général du Tour de France 2023 au départ de la 6e étape

1 – HINDLEY Jai (BORA – hansgrohe) en 22:15:12 2 – VINGEGAARD Jonas (Jumbo-Visma) + 0:47 3 – CICCONE Giulio (Lidl – Trek) + 1:03 4 – BUCHMANN Emanuel (BORA – hansgrohe) + 1:11 5 – YATES Adam (UAE Team Emirates) + 1:34 6 – POGAČAR Tadej (UAE Team Emirates) + 1:40 7 – YATES Simon (Team Jayco AlUla 8 – SKJELMOSE Mattias (Lidl – Trek) + 1:56 9 – RODRÍGUEZ Carlos (INEOS Grenadiers) m.t 10 – GAUDU David (Groupama – FDJ) m.t

Lire aussi : Les abandons du Tour de France 2023

11 – WOODS Michael (Israel – Premier Tech) + 2:15 12 – BARDET Romain (Team dsm – firmenich) + 2:36 13 – PIDCOCK Thomas (INEOS Grenadiers) m.t 14 – LANDA Mikel (Bahrain – Victorious) + 3:13 15 – KELDERMAN Wilco (Jumbo-Visma) m.t 16 – KUSS Sepp (Jumbo-Visma) + 3:15 17 – O’CONNOR Ben (AG2R Citroën Team) + 3:34 18 – BILBAO Pello (Bahrain – Victorious) m.t 19 – CRAS Steff (TotalEnergies) m.t 20 – BERNAL Egan (INEOS Grenadiers) + 4:00

21 – MARTIN Guillaume (Cofidis) + 4:32 22 – MEINTJES Louis (Intermarché – Circus – Wanty) m.t 23 – PINOT Thibaut (Groupama – FDJ) + 4:40 24 – MADOUAS Valentin (Groupama – FDJ) + 4:42 25 – BENOOT Tiesj (Jumbo-Visma) + 5:16 26 – BERTHET Clément (AG2R Citroën Team) + 5:42 27 – LÓPEZ Juan Pedro (Lidl – Trek) + 5:57 28 – HAIG Jack (Bahrain – Victorious) + 6:01 29 – GALL Felix (AG2R Citroën Team) + 6:02 30 – ALAPHILIPPE Julian (Soudal – Quick Step) + 7:10 31 – CASTROVIEJO Jonathan (INEOS Grenadiers) + 7:11 32 – TEUNS Dylan (Israel – Premier Tech) + 7:28 33 – VAN AERT Wout (Jumbo-Visma) + 8:26 34 – TEJADA Harold (Astana Qazaqstan Team) + 9:51 35 – HARPER Chris (Team Jayco AlUla) + 10:00 36 – MAJKA Rafał (UAE Team Emirates) + 14:57 37 – MARTÍNEZ Daniel Felipe (INEOS Grenadiers) + 16:18 38 – JUNGELS Bob (BORA – hansgrohe) + 16:57 39 – HAMILTON Chris (Team dsm – firmenich) + 17:06 40 – DINHAM Matthew (Team dsm – firmenich) + 18:26

41 – GUERREIRO Ruben (Movistar Team) + 19:02 42 – BURGAUDEAU Mathieu (TotalEnergies) + 20:52 43 – GALLOPIN Tony (Lidl – Trek) + 21:13 44 – JOHANNESSEN Tobias Halland (Uno-X Pro Cycling Team) + 21:28 45 – BETTIOL Alberto (EF Education-EasyPost) + 23:11 46 – JORGENSON Matteo (Movistar Team) + 23:12 47 – SCHULTZ Nick (Israel – Premier Tech) + 24:55 48 – CAMPENAERTS Victor (Lotto Dstny) + 25:22 49 – FRAILE Omar (INEOS Grenadiers) + 26:18 50 – VAN BAARLE Dylan (Jumbo-Visma) + 26:22 51 – PARET-PEINTRE Aurélien (AG2R Citroën Team) + 26:29 52 – GROßSCHARTNER Felix (UAE Team Emirates) m.t 53 – BARGUIL Warren (Team Arkéa Samsic) + 27:22 54 – LAFAY Victor (Cofidis) + 27:27 55 – IZAGIRRE Gorka (Movistar Team) + 27:46 56 – ARANBURU Alex (Movistar Team) + 28:22 57 – VAN GILS Maxim (Lotto Dstny) + 28:27 58 – CALMEJANE Lilian (Intermarché – Circus – Wanty) + 28:43 59 – HOULE Hugo (Israel – Premier Tech) + 29:58 60 – GENIETS Kevin (Groupama – FDJ) + 30:16

61 – PEDRERO Antonio (Movistar Team) + 30:44 62 – CHAVES Esteban (EF Education-EasyPost) + 31:04 63 – NEILANDS Krists (Israel – Premier Tech) + 31:09 64 – KÜNG Stefan (Groupama – FDJ) + 31:19 65 – MÜHLBERGER Gregor (Movistar Team) + 31:38 66 – IZAGIRRE Ion (Cofidis) + 31:44 67 – ZIMMERMANN Georg (Intermarché – Circus – Wanty) + 32:09 68 – URÁN Rigoberto (EF Education-EasyPost) + 32:27 69 – STRONG Corbin (Israel – Premier Tech) + 32:58 70 – KWIATKOWSKI Michał (INEOS Grenadiers) + 33:45 71 – OLIVEIRA Nelson (Movistar Team) + 34:02 72 – GESCHKE Simon (Cofidis) + 34:25 73 – PACHER Quentin (Groupama – FDJ) + 34:40 74 – DE LA CRUZ David (Astana Qazaqstan Team) + 35:28 75 – LOUVEL Matis (Team Arkéa Samsic) + 35:29 76 – COSTA Rui (Intermarché – Circus – Wanty) + 35:33 77 – PEREZ Anthony (Cofidis) + 36:01 78 – LUTSENKO Alexey (Astana Qazaqstan Team) m.t 79 – CHAMPOUSSIN Clément (Team Arkéa Samsic) + 36:13 80 – POWLESS Neilson (EF Education-EasyPost) + 36:20

81 – DELAPLACE Anthony (Team Arkéa Samsic) + 37:32 82 – VAN HOOYDONCK Nathan (Jumbo-Visma) + 37:51 83 – HERMANS Quinten (Alpecin-Deceuninck) + 38:54 84 – CRADDOCK Lawson (Team Jayco AlUla) + 39:17 85 – POELS Wout (Bahrain – Victorious) + 40:23 86 – VAN DEN BERG Lar (Groupama – FDJ) + 40:34 87 – KONRAD Patrick (BORA – hansgrohe) + 40:56 88 – MOHORIČ Matej (Bahrain – Victorious) + 41:01 89 – BOASSON HAGEN Edvald (TotalEnergies) + 41:13 90 – VAN DER POEL Mathieu (Alpecin-Deceuninck) + 42:08 91 – VERMAERKE Kevin (Team dsm – firmenich) + 43:32 92 – CHARMIG Anthon (Uno-X Pro Cycling Team) + 44:07 93 – EENKHOORN Pascal (Lotto Dstny) + 44:52 94 – HALLER Marco (BORA – hansgrohe) + 45:01 95 – CLARKE Simon (Israel – Premier Tech) + 45:07 96 – SOLER Marc (UAE Team Emirates) + 45:09 97 – DEWULF Stan (AG2R Citroën Team) + 45:24 98 – SHAW James (EF Education-EasyPost) + 45:34 99 – PHILIPSEN Jasper (Alpecin-Deceuninck) + 45:58 100 – PETERS Nans (AG2R Citroën Team) + 46:26

101 – PEDERSEN Mads (Lidl – Trek) + 46:41 102 – ASGREEN Kasper (Soudal – Quick Step) + 47:11 103 – TURNER Ben (INEOS Grenadiers) + 47:37 104 – GREGAARD Jonas (Uno-X Pro Cycling Team) + 47:55 105 – POLITT Nils (BORA – hansgrohe) + 48:36 106 – GIRMAY Biniam (Intermarché – Circus – Wanty) + 48:38 107 – ABRAHAMSEN Jonas (Uno-X Pro Cycling Team) + 49:29 108 – DEVENYNS Dries (Soudal – Quick Step) + 49:34 109 – TURGIS Anthony (TotalEnergies) + 50:19 110 – OSS Daniel (TotalEnergies) + 50:22 111 – GOGL Michael (Alpecin-Deceuninck) + 50:24 112 – ARNDT Nikias (Bahrain – Victorious) + 50:33 113 – FERRON Valentin (TotalEnergies) + 51:00 114 – WRIGHT Fred (Bahrain – Victorious) + 51:12 115 – LAPORTE Christophe (Jumbo-Visma) + 51:35 116 – GUGLIELMI Simon (Team Arkéa Samsic) + 52:17 117 – TEUNISSEN Mike (Intermarché – Circus – Wanty) + 52:39 118 – CORT Magnus (EF Education-EasyPost) + 52:48 119 – COQUARD Bryan (Cofidis) + 53:00 120 – KIRSCH Alex (Lidl – Trek) m.t

121 – BIERMANS Jenthe (Team Arkéa Samsic) m.t 122 – LATOUR Pierre (TotalEnergies) + 53:40 123 – TRÆEN Torstein (Uno-X Pro Cycling Team) + 54:23 124 – STUYVEN Jasper (Lidl – Trek) + 54:29 125 – JUUL-JENSEN Christopher (Team Jayco AlUla) + 55:26 126 – NAESEN Oliver (AG2R Citroën Team) + 55:28 127 – RICKAERT Jonas (Alpecin-Deceuninck) m.t 128 – KRAGH ANDERSEN Søren (Alpecin-Deceuninck) m.t 129 – BOIVIN Guillaume (Israel – Premier Techv 130 – AMADOR Andrey (EF Education-EasyPost) + 55:38 131 – VAN POPPEL Danny (BORA – hansgrohe) + 55:41 132 – LAENGEN Vegard Stake (UAE Team Emirates) m.t 133 – DILLIER Silvan (Alpecin-Deceuninck) + 55:42 134 – VERMEERSCH Florian (Lotto Dstny) + 55:46 135 – TILLER Rasmus (Uno-X Pro Cycling Team ) + 55:50 136 – SAGAN Peter (TotalEnergies) + 56:49 137 – MEZGEC Luka (Team Jayco AlUla) + 57:15 138 – SMITH Dion (Intermarché – Circus – Wanty) + 57:31 139 – COSNEFROY Benoît (AG2R Citroën Team) + 57:40 140 – CAVAGNA Rémi (Soudal – Quick Step) + 59:29

141 – ZINGLE Axel (Cofidis) + 59:33 142 – EEKHOFF Nils (Team dsm – firmenich) + 1:00:10 143 – PETIT Adrien (Intermarché – Circus – Wanty) + 1:00:21 144 – SIMMONS Quinn (Lidl – Trek) + 1:01:22 145 – TRENTIN Matteo (UAE Team Emirates) + 1:01:24 146 – BJERG Mikkel (UAE Team Emirates) + 1:01:28 147 – KRISTOFF Alexander (Uno-X Pro Cycling Team) + 1:02:31 148 – WELSFORD Sam (Team dsm – firmenich) m.t 149 – GROENEWEGEN Dylan (Team Jayco AlUla) + 1:02:41 150 – REINDERS Elmar (Team Jayco AlUla) m.t 151 – MEEUS Jordi (BORA – hansgrohe) + 1:02:57 152 – MOZZATO Luca (Team Arkéa Samsic) + 1:03:06 153 – EWAN Caleb (Lotto Dstny) + 1:03:10 154 – WÆRENSKJOLD Søren (Uno-X Pro Cycling Team) + 1:03:11 155 – EDMONDSON Alex (Team dsm – firmenich) + 1:04:22 156 – DURBRIDGE Luke (Team Jayco AlUla) + 1:04:32 157 – DECLERCQ Tim (Soudal – Quick Step) + 1:05:43 158 – DEGENKOLB John (Team dsm – firmenich) + 1:05:45 159 – LE GAC Olivier (Groupama – FDJ) + 1:05:54 160 – FRISON Frederik (Lotto Dstny) + 1:05:58

161 – SINKELDAM Ramon (Alpecin-Deceuninck) + 1:06:04 162 – PICHON Laurent (Team Arkéa Samsic) + 1:06:52 163 – MØRKØV Michael (Soudal – Quick Step) + 1:07:25 164 – JAKOBSEN Fabio (Soudal – Quick Step) m.t 165 – LAMPAERT Yves (Soudal – Quick Step) + 1:07:30 166 – RENARD Alexis (Cofidis) + 1:08:22 167 – BAUHAUS Phil (Bahrain – Victorious) + 1:13:53 168 – CAVENDISH Mark (Astana Qazaqstan Team) + 1:15:24 169 – BOL Cees (Astana Qazaqstan Team) m.t 170 – DE BUYST Jasper (Lotto Dstny) + 1:16:52 171 – MOSCON Gianni (Astana Qazaqstan Team) + 1:16:56 172 – FEDOROV Yevgeniy (Astana Qazaqstan Team) + 1:18:20

Classement par points – Top 10

1 – PHILIPSEN Jasper (Alpecin-Deceuninck) 150 points 2 – COQUARD Bryan (Cofidis) 84 points 3 – LAFAY Victor (Cofidis) 80 points 4 – PEDERSEN Mads (Lidl – Trek) 76 points 5 – VAN AERT Wout (Jumbo-Visma) 75 points 6 – EWAN Caleb (Lotto Dstny) 73 points 7 – CAVENDISH Mark (Astana Qazaqstan Team) 62 points 8 – POGAČAR Tadej (UAE Team Emirates) 50 points 9 – MEEUS Jordi (BORA – hansgrohe) 44 points 10 – HINDLEY Jai (BORA – hansgrohe) 41 points

Classement de meilleur grimpeur – Top 10

1 – GALL Felix (AG2R Citroën Team) 28 points 2 – CICCONE Giulio (Lidl – Trek) 19 points 3 – HINDLEY Jai (BORA – hansgrohe) 18 points 4 – POWLESS Neilson (EF Education-EasyPost) 18 points 5 – MARTÍNEZ Daniel Felipe (INEOS Grenadiers) 15 points 6 – BUCHMANN Emanuel (BORA – hansgrohe) 14 points 7 – NEILANDS Krists (Israel – Premier Tech) 8 points 8 – POGAČAR Tadej (UAE Team Emirates) 7 points 9 – VINGEGAARD Jonas (Jumbo-Visma) 6 points 10 – HAIG Jack (Bahrain – Victorious) 5 points

Classement de meilleur jeune – Top 10

1 – POGAČAR Tadej (UAE Team Emirates) en 22:16:52 2 – SKJELMOSE Mattias (Lidl – Trek) + 0:16 3 – RODRÍGUEZ Carlos (INEOS Grenadiers) m.t 4 – PIDCOCK Thomas (INEOS Grenadiers) + 0:56 5 – GALL Felix (AG2R Citroën Team) + 4:22 6 – DINHAM Matthew (Team dsm – firmenich) + 16:46 7 – BURGAUDEAU Mathieu (TotalEnergies) + 19:12 8 – JOHANNESSEN Tobias Halland (Uno-X Pro Cycling Team) + 19:48 9 – JORGENSON Matteo (Movistar Team) + 21:32 10 – VAN GILS Maxim (Lotto Dstny) + 26:47

Classement par équipes – Top 10

1 – Jumbo-Visma en 66:50:39 2 – INEOS Grenadiers + 1:46 3 – Lidl – Trek + 3:24 4 – Bahrain – Victorious + 4:01 5 – Groupama – FDJ + 6:15 6 – AG2R Citroën Team + 10:24 7 – UAE Team Emirates + 11:22 8 – BORA – hansgrohe + 13:23 9 – Israel – Premier Tech + 17:08 10 – Team dsm – firmenich + 25:22

Lire aussi :  Toute l’actualité du cyclisme sur route 2023

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Stage 5 Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne > Saint-Vulbas

Length 177 km

Stage 6 Mâcon > Dijon

Length 163 km

Stage 7 Nuits-Saint-Georges > Gevrey-Chambertin

Length 25 km

Type Individual time-trial

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Tour de France 2024 Route stage 6: Mâcon - Dijon

The altitude gain between Mâcon and Dijon is less 900 hoogtemeters, so the fast men will be looking forward to the finale in Dijon. Which is an added attraction for the sprinters, as the road is dead straight in the last 800 metres.

Starting venue Mâcon is located on the River Saône and it hosts Le Tour for the seventh time. The last time was in 2019 and Thomas De Gendt took the win that day. The breakaway specialist crossed the line in Saint-Étienne 7 seconds ahead of Thibaut Pinot and Julian Alaphilippe.

The last Tour de France stage finish in Dijon happened in 1997. Bart Voskamp outgunned Jan Heppner in a two-up sprint, but both were relegated and the winner of the peloton sprint, Mario Traversoni, was declared stage victor. It was the biggest win in his career.

Ride the route yourself? Download GPX 6th stage 2024 Tour de France.

Tour de France 2024 stage 6: route, profile, videos

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Tour de France 2024, stage 6: video - source:dailymotion.com

Résumé étape 6 Tour de France 2023, comment revoir la course de l'étape entre Tarbes et Cauterets-Cambasque ?

Cette 110e édition du Tour de France débute le 1er juillet 2023 à Bilbao en Espagne pour terminer 21 étapes plus tard, le 23 juillet 2023 sur les Champs-Élysées à Paris . Les quelque 176 coureurs parcoureront pas moins de 3400 km durant ces trois semaines de compétition. Dans cet article, nous vous indiquons comment revoir le résumé de l'étape 6 du Tour de France 2023.

À lire aussi

6 etap tour de france 2023

Comment voir le résumé de l'étape 6 entre Tarbes et Cauterets-Cambasque du Tour de France 2023 ?

L'étape 6 du Tour de France 2023 démarre ce jeudi 6 juillet 2023 et reliera Tarbes à Cauterets-Cambasque . Si vous n'avez pas la possibilité de voir la course en direct, sachez qu'il vous sera possible de revoir le résumé de la course.

>>> Voir le résumé de l'étape 6 du Tour de France 2023  <<<

6 etap tour de france 2023

Vous pouvez retrouver le tracé complet de cette 6e étape ci-dessous ( source ) :

parcours-etape-6-tdf2023

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Endnu en bjergetape venter rytterne, der blandt andet skal over Tourmalet.

6 etap tour de france 2023

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6 etap tour de france 2023

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Jonas Vingegaard

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Tadej Pogacar

⭐️⭐️⭐️ Mattias Skjelmose

⭐️⭐️ Jai Hindley, Carlos Rodriguez

⭐️ Simon Yates, Romain Bardet, Giulio Ciccone, David Gaudu

Opdateret onsdag klokken 23.14

Nøglepunktet

Col du Tourmalet. Det er et ikonisk Tour de France-bjerg og ikke uden grund. Over 17 kilometer langt, 7,3 procent i gennemsnitlig stigning og med top i 2115 meters højde.

Jeg tror og håber (ligesom på 5. etape), at Jumbo-Visma vil gå til stålet på Tourmalet og lave en stor udskilning allerede her. Det er er den eneste måde, hvorpå de kan teste Tadej Pogacar af og se, om de kan tage tid på ham tidligt i løbet, hvor han måske ikke har ramt sit topniveau endnu.

6 etap tour de france 2023

Dagens dansker

Jonas Vingegaard . Det kan ikke være anderledes med Tourmalet som næstsidste stigning og dernæst målstreg på toppen af den 16 kilometer lange stigning op til Cauterets-Cambasque.

Betydning for Vingegaard

Det er en yderst vigtig dag for Jonas. Han skal ud at vise, hvem der er den stærkeste mand i løbet og tage tid i klassementet til alle de andre favoritter – især Pogacar. Og hvis de så nogle svaghedstegn fra ham på den foregående etape, er denne etape en endnu bedre mulighed.

6 etap tour de france 2023

Der kan køre et stærkt udbrud af sted, som kan holde hele vejen. Men jeg tror, det bliver en hård klassementskamp og én af de få dage, hvor det giver mening at lave en hård forcering tidligt på etapen, da Tourmalet er et bæst af en stigning, hvor du ikke kan gemme dig som kaptajn.

I min optik skal Jumbo-Visma forsøge at få en eller to ryttere med i morgenudbruddet, og resten skal lave en virkelig hård forcering på Tourmalet for at ryste de andre klassementsryttere og deres hold.

Dagens sidste stigning er ikke helt nok til at lave den store udskilning, så den skal primært ske på Tourmalet. Jeg spår, at det godt kunne blive en etape, der på nogle punkter kommer til at ligne Col du Granon-etapen fra sidste år. Lad os håbe, at resultatet bliver lige sådan: En stor triumf for Vingegaard med den gule trøje til følge.

Hvis der ikke sker den store udskilning på Tourmalet, er finalebjerget skræddersyet til Pogacar. Forholdsvis nem første halvdel, men med en hård og stejl finale op til målstregen.

Col du Tourmalet er ren Tour-mytologi og en gigant. Det er også det bjerg, der fleste gange er blevet brugt i Tourens historie. Jeg husker selv tydeligt etapen, som Andy Schleck vandt foran Alberto Contador i gult i 2010. På en våd og tåget dag. Jeg har også selv kørt bjerget og den efterfølgende nedkørsel, som er meget hurtig – og på våde veje en næsten lige så stor udfordring som selve opkørslen.

< 5. etape | 7. etape >

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6 etap tour de france 2023

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Etape du Tour 2023 route reveal

6 etap tour de france 2023

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The 31st edition of the Étape du Tour will take place on 9 July 2023.

The course follows the same route as stage 14 of the 2023 Tour de France, starting in Annemasse and finishing in Morzine. Entries will open on Wednesday 8 November.

The 152km route takes in more than 4,100 metres of elevation gain, including the climbs of col de Saxel, Col de Cou, Col de Feu, Col de la Ramaz and Col de Joux Plane.

Check out the profile of the 2023 Étape du Tour:

6 etap tour de france 2023

L'Etape 2023 - a case of déjà vu?

Etape veterans might notice the finish of the 2023 route looks familiar. That's because the final two climbs, Col de la Ramez and Col de Joux Plane, also featured in the 2016 Etape du Tour.

That's not a reason to skip the 2023 edition though, as the opening 100km take in a number of new climbs.

Col de la Ramez and Joux Plane are well worth a second visit too - with the latter rated as tougher than Alpe d'Huez by Sportive.com publisher Joe.

Here's what Joe had to say about the final two climbs back in 2016:

COL DE LA RAMAZ

The third climb of the day is the Col de la Ramaz which sees Etape riders climb 1,014 metres over 15.5km to the 1,619 metres summit. It has an average of 6.1% slope but that doesn't really tell the full story. The initial 6km goes at roughly 5%, followed by one kilometre of flat, before another kilometre at 8% and then two kilometres at a leg sapping 10.4%. After that you have a kilometre at 8.6%, then two kilometres at around 6.5%. The good news is that the final 500 metres of the climb is almost totally flat. For most Etape riders this will be a tough climb in the heat of the day - you will need to take this steadily and ensure that you are drinking plenty of water because if it is a hot day (and it very often is at this time of year) then the Ramaz will take a lot of energy out of you. For an average Etape rider the total climb is probably around 75 minutes and you should not think of this simply as the warm up to the Col de Joux Plane. The scenery is beautiful - plenty of hairpin bends at the start of the climb, followed by Alpine pastures and then the snow tunnels on the upper reaches. The surface will have been replaced for the Tour, removing one of the main complaints about the ride currently.

Off the top of the Ramaz (we think there will be a feed station at the top but it is possible ASO will decide there is not enough space for anything other than a water station) there is a nice long descent of 16km with a vertical drop of 960 metres. At the top it is a quite narrow road and you will need to be careful if you are surrounded by other riders; fortunately by this stage of an Etape the groups have usually sorted themselves out and you should be riding with people roughly the same speed as you. Towards the bottom of the descent as you get nearer Taninges the road gets wider and it should be a rapid and enjoyable ride. The town itself is not unpretty - it has Roman origins - and we expect there to be a feed station somewhere on the outskirts of the 3,000 population location.

From Taninges there is then a 13km drag along to Samoëns. We imagine you will be routed along the D907, which is mildly uphill (just 78 metres ascent over 13km) but will probably feel like somewhat hard work in the midday sun. You will ideally want to get yourself into a group on this section.

Samoëns is a pretty town, famed for its stonemasonry which were supplied by the numerous limestone quarries in the area. The town is dominated by a pretty (traffic free) square with a huge lime tree and nearby is an Alpine botanical garden. If you want to get your family to come and support you then Samoëns would be an excellent base, especially as it has a reputation for excellent Savoyard food.

COL DE JOUX PLANE

To be totally honest, we were quite surprised to see this stage chosen because of the toughness of the Col de Joux Plane. At 11.6km long with an average slope of 8.5% it is unrelenting. And at the end of a long ride it will be challenging for even the most race fit rider. If you haven't trained enough this will be a climb that finds you out. It starts with about 750 metres at 8.5%, followed by a 12% ramp for 300 metres, followed by a short section at 5% and then two kilometres at 8.5%. A short 'break' of 500 metres at 5% allows a little recovery but then you have 2km at 7%, 600 metres at 10.8% and then follows the last 5km at an average of just over 9% along exposed slopes with absolutely no shelter. Most people who have ridden this will admit that while it is not one of the 'iconic' climbs, the Joux Plane is one of the toughest in the northern Alps. Pantani ascended this climb in 33 minutes - if you manage to do this in double that time then 'chapeau' to you! Personally I rate this as a harder climb than Alpe d'Huez.

From the Ranfolly down to Morzine it should be pure joy and relief but you do need to be wary. The 11km descent is at an average of 6.5% with a maximum slope of 11.1% and while it is steep and technical at the top it is also fun. However when you are tired after a long day riding it is something that will test your reflexes and you should not relax and think this is just the final run in to the finish line. There are plenty of tight hairpin bends with steep slopes to keep you occupied. There is a small ascent on the ride into the centre of Morzine to tackle in the final kilometre but if you have got this far the adrenaline will keep you going and the thought of a refreshing beer (or about 16 hours in bed) should take your mind off the pain.

How to enter L'Etape du Tour

Entries for L'Etape du Tour 2023 will open on Wednesday 2 November.

For those looking ahead to logistics, the nearest airport to Annemasse is Geneva located 28km away - about 30 minutes drive.

The finish in Morzine is roughly an hour from Annemasse by car via toll roads, or 1h 20 without tolls.

For more details and to register, visit the event website at www.letapedutourdefrance.com .

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L’Etape Greece by Tour de France Attracts 1,000 Cyclists to Ancient Olympia

6 etap tour de france 2023

L’Etape Greece by Tour de France presented by SKODA 2024. Photo © Sportograf

More than 1,000 cyclists participated in the L’Étape Greece by Tour de France presented by SKODA cycling race, which took place on April 6  in  Ancient Olympia  for the second year in a row.

Co-organized by Greek event management company EY ZHN Greece  and the  Western Greece Region , the event attracted some 3,000 athletes and visitors who came to observe the races. This year’s edition offered three routes : “The Race” (128 kilometers), “The Ride” (76 kilometers), and the easier cycling race of 17 kilometers, named “The Fun Ride.”

L’Étape Greece by Tour de France, an international version of France’s famed cycling race, is an organized mass participation cyclosportive event that allows amateur cyclists to have a Tour de France-like experience in Ancient Olympia, the home of the Olympic Games.

“Our goal at EY ZHN Greece is not just to organize events but to create emotions in the participants,” said EY ZHN Greece CEO Vassia Birliraki .

According to Birliraki, this year’s event saw participation surpass all previous records .

Winners of the second L’Étape Greece by Tour de France

6 etap tour de france 2023

The winner of the 128-kilometer race, Periclis Ilias. Photo © Aristotelis Bagdatoglou

The winner of the 128-kilometer race was Periclis Ilias with a time of 3:30:04, followed by Charalambos Kastrantas (3:31:10) and Martinos Moutsios (3:31:16). In the women’s category, Iro Miliaki came in first with a time of 3:42:35, followed by Varvara Fasoi (3:53:48) and Anna-Olga Mitsou (3:59:48).

At the second race of 76 kilometers, Konstantinos Rakintzis finished first with 2:11:30, Giannis Belibassakis was second with 2:12:34, and Minas Milatos was third with 02:13:28. In the women’s category, the winner was Elisavet Dimou , who clocked a time of 2:32:34, followed by Rania Nomikou (2:37:59) and Katerina Panagiotakopoulou (2:39:28).

Western Greece Region showcases tourism product

6 etap tour de france 2023

Cyclists at one of the races passing through Olympia’s roads. Photo © Sportograf

According to Western Greece Deputy Regional Governor Charalambos Bonanos , the event attracted the interest of people from all over the world, advertising the region as “a place of life, a place of beauty, a place of great events”.

Through the L’Étape Greece by Tour de France event, regional authorities had the opportunity to promote its tourism product  as the routes passed through spring landscapes and picturesque villages in Olympia.

On his part, Ancient Olympia Mayor Aris Papanagiotopoulos highlighted the importance of this year’s event that marks 2,800 years since the first ceremony of the Olympic Games.

6 etap tour de france 2023

Konstantinos Rakintzis winner of the second race of 76 kilometers. Photo © Aristotelis Bagdatoglou

After a draw among the first winners of all the races, Konstantinos Rakintzis, winner of “The Ride” race of 76 kilometers, was elected to participate in the Olympic Torch Relay for Paris 2024 , which will start on April 16, a position secured by the organization of L’Etape Greece.

The Greek Travel Pages (GTP) was a media sponsor of the L’Étape Greece by Tour de France event.

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Tour de France 2023: Pogačar sa vrátil do hry, Sagan so stratou

Peter Sagan dnes ide 6. etapu na Tour de France 2023.

Peter Sagan dnes išiel 6. etapu na Tour de France 2023. Sledovali ste ju LIVE cez online prenos.

TARBES. Peter Sagan   dnes išiel 6. etapu na   Tour de France 2023 . Trasa merala 145 km, mala hornatý profil a finišovalo sa v stúpaní Cauterets Cambasque.

Slovenský cyklista nemal ambície na popredné priečky a podobne ako v stredu bolo jeho cieľom bezpečne prísť do cieľa v časovom limite.

  • Profil 6. etapy na Tour de France 2023

Jeho ani ďalších cyklistov nečakalo nič jednoduché. Museli zdolať aj slávny Col du Tourmalet, ktorý má 17,1 km s priemerným sklonom 7,3 %.

V súboji favoritov tentokrát uspel Slovinec Tadej Pogačar, na Jonasa Vingegaarda získal 24 sekúnd a vrátil sa do hry o žltý dres.

Cyklistiku ste sledovali s nami naživo ako online prenos.

ONLINE PRENOS: Peter Sagan dnes na Tour de France 2023 - 6. etapa LIVE (cyklistika, naživo, štvrtok, výsledky)

Onto the last ascent... @JumboVismaRoad are showing their collective strength today ???? #TDFdata #TDF2023 pic.twitter.com/zoSISxLJtO — letourdata (@letourdata) July 6, 2023
When @JumboVismaRoad up the ante... Jonas Vingegaard shaves 2 minutes from @DavidGaudu 's @Strava KOM on the ascent of Col du Tourmalet ⛰️ #TDFdata #TDF2023 pic.twitter.com/COMHPWOijY — letourdata (@letourdata) July 6, 2023
50 kilometres to go and Jonas Vingegaard is already on the move, chasing Jai Hindley's @MaillotJauneLCL He opened a gap of almost 2 minutes on the Col du Tourmalet #TDFdata #TDF2023 pic.twitter.com/zZsPx02HbV — letourdata (@letourdata) July 6, 2023
THE hotspot of pro cycling this summer? Col du Tourmalet is visited today by @LeTour , later this month by @LeTourFemmes & in September by @lavuelta ???? Will @DavidGaudu 's @Strava KOM stand? Vingegaard's @JumboVismaRoad are pushing the pace... #TDFdata #TDF2023 pic.twitter.com/wVdQ120w8I — letourdata (@letourdata) July 6, 2023
. @NPowless is the virtual leader of the polka-dot standings after he tamed Col d'Aspin. He didn't have to go all out like @ThibautPinot in 2022 though – the @Strava KOM holds on for another day! #TDFdata #TDF2023 pic.twitter.com/ssf1Nxv3cS — letourdata (@letourdata) July 6, 2023

Tour de France 2023

  • Všetko o Tour de France
  • Výsledky a dresy
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Súvisiaci obsah

  • 1 . 1 Weiss pripustil koniec. Takto sa ďalej nedá. Nepomáha to mne, ani Slovanu, priznal
  • 2 . 2 Práca? Počká do utorka, teraz oslavujeme. Rozhodca musel ukončiť duel predčasne
  • 3 . 3 VIDEO: Jeho tvrdá hra sa nepáčila súperovi, Pospíšil v noci vyrovnal Tatara
  • 4 . 4 Žilina vstúpila do finále poriadnou kanonádou, s Prešovom nemala zľutovanie
  • 5 . 5 Boj o titul v Česku sa dramatizuje. Plzeň pripravila Slaviu o dôležité body
  • 6 . 6 Došlo jedlo, brankár si prial, aby už bol koniec. Bolí ma celé telo, vraví hrdina Třinca
  • 7 . 7 Košice razantne zamietli mečbal Spišiakov, napínavú sériu rozhodne siedmy zápas

Tour de France 2023

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Col de la Ramaz - Étape du Tour de France 2023

Measure yourself on the Col de la Ramaz segment and enter the legend of the Tour

  • 10,767 Participants
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  • 14.0 km Distance
  • 970 m Elevation Gain
  • 7 % Avg Grade

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Tour de Romandie 2024 : Parcours, profil des étapes et favoris

Du 23 au 28 avril 2024 prochain se déroulera la 77e édition du Tour de Romandie. L'épreuve constitue un passage important dans la préparation du Tour et offre un parcours aussi bien difficile qu'idéal pour la préparation des coureurs. Découvrez le parcours, le profil des étapes et les favoris du Tour de Romandie 2024.

Tour de Romandie 2024 : Parcours, profil des étapes et favoris

Date du Tour de Romandie 2024 : du mardi 23 au dimanche 28 avril

Retransmission TV : La Chaine L'Equipe et Eurosport

La liste des engagés du Tour de Romandie 2024 : Ici

Histoire du Tour de Romandie

Le Tour de Romandie est fondé en 1947 à l'initiative du journaliste Max Girardet afin de célébrer le 50e anniversaire de la fédération suisse de cyclisme. L'histoire récente de la course est marquée par une succession de sociétés organisatrices dans les années 90 et 2000. Depuis 2007, c'est une société dirigée par l'ancien cycliste Richard Chassot qui organise le Tour de Romandie. L'épreuve est inscrite au calendrier UCI World Tour.

L'épreuve se déroulant traditionnellement fin avril-début mai, elle attire davantage les favoris se préparant pour le Tour de France que le Giro. En effet, 8 des 10 derniers vainqueurs du Tour de Romandie privilégiaient cette année-là la Grande Boucle. Course par essence montagneuse, elle consacre un coureur spécialiste des courses par étapes. On retrouve au palmarès des coureurs tels que Cadel Evans, Froome, Roglic ou encore Geraint Thomas. Côté Français, le dernier vainqueur n'est autre que Laurent Jalabert; c'était en 1999 déjà...

De quoi favoriser ainsi un coureur complet. En 2023, c'est Adam Yates qui l’emportait devant Matteo Jorgenson et Damiano Caruso.

Recordman de victoires finales  : Stephen Roche x3 victoires

Record de victoires d'étapes  : Mario Cipollini x12 victoires

carte du Tour de Romandie 2024

Parcours et profil des étapes du Tour de Romandie 2024

Vous l'aurez compris, le Tour de Romandie conduira le peloton à travers la Suisse romande, partie francophone située à l'ouest du pays, à travers 6 jours de course. Le grand départ sera donné à Payerne. Les villes et communes de Château d’Oex, Fribourg, Leysin, Oron-la-Ville, Saillon, Salvan / Les Marécottes et Vernier suivront le prologue disputé à Payerne.

Cette 77e édition comprend un prologue, quatre étapes en ligne et un contre-la-montre individuel. De quoi profiter à tous les types coureurs en dehors des purs sprinteurs, qui seront au abonnés absent au départ de la course. Deux étapes de montagne viendront dessiner le classement général même si le contre-la-montre lors de la 3e étape, le 4e jour de course, aura lui aussi une incidence sur le résultat final.

Mardi 23 avril - Prologue : Payerne - Payerne (2,28km)

Ultra court et explosif, avec ces nombreux virages dans le final, ce prologue est atypique et taillé pour les sprinteurs et les rouleurs. Peu d'écart normalement entre les favoris même si certains pourrait perdre quelques secondes. Prono : Tarling

Mardi 23 avril - Prologue : Payerne - Payerne (2,28km)

Mercredi 24 avril - Étape 1 : Fribourg - Fribourg (167km)

Un "sprint" est attendu dans les rues de Fribourg, et son excellent gruyère. La course n'est q'un enchainement de montée et de descente qui favorisera les puncheurs. Un coureur comme Ethan Hayter a le profil parfaite pour ce genre d'étape. Prono : Hayter

Mercredi 24 avril - Étape 1 : Fribourg - Fribourg  (167km)

Jeudi 25 avril - Étape 2 : Fribourg - Salvan/Les Marécottes (171km)

Première des deux étapes de montagne avec cette arrivée à Salvan/ Les Marécottes. Une ascension courte de 9km à 7,2%. Un final explosif qui permettra de faire de petits écarts, d'autant qu'il y a 500m à 11% à 2km de l''arrivée. Un passage clé qui devrait profiter aux meilleurs grimpeurs. Prono : Juan Ayuso

Jeudi 25 avril - Étape 2 : Fribourg - Salvan/Les Marécottes (171km)

Vendredi 26 avril - Étape 3 : Oron - Oron (contre-la-montre de 16km)

Deuxième contre-la-montre, mais celui-ci est plus long, autour de Oron. Légèrement vallonné, cet effort solitaire de 16 km devrait quand même convenir aux rouleurs (Tarling) mais laisse une chance aux coureurs par étape comme Ayuso ou Arensman. Prono : Sheffield

Vendredi 26 avril - Étape 3 : Oron - Oron (contre-la-montre de 16km)

Samedi 27 avril - Étape 4 : Saillon - Leysin (152 km)

Dernière étape de montagne avec une ascension réputée dans la région Romandie. Elle sera décisif pour le classement général du Tour de Romandie 2024. La montée de Leysin est difficile et irrégulière sur 10 km à 6,7%. Son pied et son final sont les plus pentues. Les deux derniers kilomètres sont à plus de 9% de moyenne. Elle s'escalade en trois palier. Les leaders devraient attendre au mieux la deuxième partie. La pied de l'ascension va avant tout servir à faire l'écrémage dans le peloton. Prono : Ayuso

Samedi 27 avril - Étape 4 : Saillon - Leysin (152 km)

Dimanche 28 avril - Étape 5 : Vernier - Vernier (151 km)

La dernière étape de ce Tour de Romandie 2024 devrait à nouveau proposer un sprint massif entre les meilleurs puncheurs du peloton. L'étape est dessiné en circuit de quatre tours autour de Vernier. Les Bryan Coquard ou Ethan Hayter auront une nouvelle chance de lever les bras. Prono : Coquard.

Dimanche 28 avril - Étape 5 : Vernier - Vernier (151 km)

Les favoris du Tour de Romandie 2024

Avec deux chronos et une étape de montagne, il faudra être un coureur complet pour remporter le Tour de Romandie. Et il n'y en a qu'un, Juan Ayuso . L'Espagnol est donc notre favori, lui qui vient de remporter le Tour du Pays Basque. Adam Yates , son équipier, est lui enfin de retour à la compétition en ce mois d'avril. un Giro d'Abruzzo poussif pour se relancer avant de retrouver ses meilleurs jambes en Suisse Romande? Fort possible. A son top, il est sur le podium sans aucun doute. Il est d'ailleurs le tenant du titre même si il la concurrence n'était pas aussi forte en 2023. Derrière lui, Enric Mas est une valeur sûre tout comme Vlasov , qui apprécie cette course. On sera curieux de voir la progression de Bernal , de retour à un bon niveau en 2024. Il sera accompagné de son équipier Thymen Arensman qui pourrait tirer partie des chronos pour finir devant lui au classement général.

⭐⭐⭐⭐ Ayuso - Yates A

⭐⭐⭐ Mas - Vlasov - Arensman

⭐⭐ Bernal - Hindley - Martinez L - Plapp - Geoghegan Hart

⭐ McNulty - Van Wilder - Caruso - Brenner - Sheffield - Schachmann - Staune Mittet - Dunbar

La liste des engagés du Tour de Romandie 2024

Une liste des engagés assez riche mélangeant des coureurs qui préparent le Tour de France et le Giro 2024 . Deux approches différentes donc.

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Posts similaires

Giro d'Italia 2024 : Parcours détaillé et profil des étapes

Tour de France 2024 : Parcours détaillé et profil des étapes

Giro d'Italia 2024 : Les participants et principaux engagés

1 comentário

C'est cool d'avoir deux étapes de montagne ! Dommage de pas en avoir une en descente ! La les deux étapes se ressemble. Mais ca promet un beau tour de romandie 2024

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Tour de France 2021 - Etape 2 :Perros-Guirec > Mûr-de-Bretagne Guerlédan

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    Tour de France 2023 Route stage 6: Tarbes - Cauterets. Wednesday 6 July - At 144.9 kilometres, stage 6 of the Tour de France travels from Tarbes to Le Cambasque above Cauterets. The finish climb is 16 kilometres long and averaging 5.4%, while two giants - Col du Tourmalet and Col d'Aspin - account for the lion's share of the total elevation ...

  9. Tour de France 2023 Stage 6 results

    Tadej Pogačar is the winner of Tour de France 2023 Stage 6, before Jonas Vingegaard and Tobias Halland Johannessen. Jonas Vingegaard was leader in GC.

  10. Tour de France 2023 : revivez la 6e étape de la Grande Boucle, marquée

    C'est la première arrivée au sommet de ce Tour de France 2023. Un maillot jaune en difficulté. Vainqueur d'étape à Laruns mercredi, Jai Hindley a fait coup double en s'emparant du maillot jaune.

  11. Tour de France Stage 6 Preview: The Col du Tourmalet Awaits

    Stage 6 - Tarbes to Cauterets-Cambasque (144.9km) - Thursday, July 6. After Stage 5 blew apart the 2023 Tour de France, Stage 6 could produce similar fireworks with a short, intense stage through ...

  12. Tadej Pogacar strikes back on Stage 6 as Jonas Vingegaard ...

    The 2023 Tour de France is already shaping up to be a classic. Tadej Pogacar dismissed concerns he was already finished in the race for yellow with a superb victory on Stage 6, putting time into ...

  13. Tour de France 2023, étape 6 : Profil et parcours détaillés

    Profil de la 6e étape du Tour de France 2023 (Tarbes / Cauterets-Cambasque) avec quelque 144,9 kilomètres à parcourir. Image : @ASO_tdf. Jeudi, place au second volet de montagne Pyrénéen du Tour de France 2023 avec la 6e étape qui mène les coureurs de Tarbes à Cauterets-Cambasque, avec la toute première arrivée au sommet de cette 110e ...

  14. Stage 6

    TOUR DE FRANCE 2023 - VIDEO GAMES (PC, XBOX ONE, PS4 & PS5) Fantasy by Tissot Tour de France Cycling Legends (iOS, Android) ... Tour de France Cycling Legends (iOS, Android) Club. 2024 route. 2024 Teams. 2023 Edition. Grands départs. Tour Culture. 2023 Edition. Rankings; Stage winners ...

  15. Tour de France

    Tour de France - 6. etape. 6. jul 2023 kl. 08.26 Opd. 6. jul 2023 kl. 18.29. TOUR 23: Johannesen er første mand på Tourmalet. TOUR 23: Johannesen er første mand på Tourmalet.

  16. Tour de France 2024 Route stage 6: Mâcon

    Thursday 4 July - The 6th stage of the Tour de France takes the riders in 163 kilometres from Mâcon to Dijon. The route is virtually flat. The altitude gain between Mâcon and Dijon is less 900 hoogtemeters, so the fast men will be looking forward to the finale in Dijon. Which is an added attraction for the sprinters, as the road is dead ...

  17. Résumé étape 6 Tour de France 2023, comment revoir la course de l'étape

    L'étape 6 du Tour de France 2023 démarre ce jeudi 6 juillet 2023 et reliera Tarbes à Cauterets-Cambasque. Si vous n'avez pas la possibilité de voir la course en direct, sachez qu'il vous sera possible de revoir le résumé de la course.

  18. Tour de France 2023: Stage 6 finish

    Watch the final thrilling moments of Stage 6 during the 110th Tour de France. #NBCSports #Cycling #TourdeFrance» Subscribe to NBC Sports: https://www.youtube...

  19. L'Etape du Tour de France

    L'Étape du Tour de France - Teaser 2024. Videos gallery. Photos gallery.

  20. 6. etape

    Tour de France 2023: 6. etape. 14. mar 2023 kl. 11.10Opd. 5. jul 2023 kl. 09.58. Del artikel. af TV 2 Sport. Endnu en bjergetape venter rytterne, der blandt andet skal over Tourmalet. Se Tour de ...

  21. Tour de France 2023

    News about Le Tour de France 2023. A podium finish for Latour at the summit of the Puy-de-Dôme. ... The Tour de France is the most famous cycling event in the world. It takes place over three weeks of racing and crowns the yellow jersey of the Tour de France each year. ... Etape 6. Etape 7. Etape 8. Etape 9. Etape 10. Etape 11. Etape 12. Etape ...

  22. Etape du Tour 2023 route reveal

    Oisin Sands 2022-10-27 11:11:17. The 31st edition of the Étape du Tour will take place on 9 July 2023. The course follows the same route as stage 14 of the 2023 Tour de France, starting in Annemasse and finishing in Morzine. Entries will open on Wednesday 8 November. The 152km route takes in more than 4,100 metres of elevation gain, including ...

  23. L'Etape Greece by Tour de France Attracts 1,000 Cyclists to Ancient

    More than 1,000 cyclists participated in the L'Étape Greece by Tour de France presented by SKODA cycling race, which took place on April 6 in Ancient Olympia for the second year in a row. Co-organized by Greek event management company EY ZHN Greece and the Western Greece Region, the event attracted some 3,000 athletes and visitors who came ...

  24. 6. etapa na Tour de France 2023 LIVE

    Peter Sagan dnes išiel 6. etapu na Tour de France 2023. Trasa merala 145 km, mala hornatý profil a finišovalo sa v stúpaní Cauterets Cambasque. Slovenský cyklista nemal ambície na popredné priečky a podobne ako v stredu bolo jeho cieľom bezpečne prísť do cieľa v časovom limite. Profil 6. etapy na Tour de France 2023.

  25. Col de la Ramaz

    2. Join the Col de la Ramaz challenge. 3. Record your ride during the Étape du Tour de France using the Strava application or your connected device. 4. Head to the Strava Club L'Etape by Tour de France to share your experience with other Tour and cycling enthusiasts. Oh, and don't forget to join the Tour de France club to follow the race in July.

  26. Tour de Romandie 2024 : Parcours, profil des étapes et favoris

    Du 23 au 28 avril 2024 prochain se déroulera la 77e édition du Tour de Romandie. L'épreuve constitue un passage important dans la préparation du Tour et offre un parcours aussi bien difficile qu'idéal pour la préparation des coureurs. Découvrez le parcours, le profil des étapes et les favoris du Tour de Romandie 2024.

  27. Tour de France 2021

    Tour de France 2021 - Etape 2 :Perros-Guirec > Mûr-de-Bretagne Guerlédan Video Item Preview ... 2023-12-23 19:23:07 Color color Identifier tour-de-france-2021-etape-2-perros-guirec-mur-de-bretagne-guerledan_202312 Scanner Internet Archive HTML5 Uploader 1.7.0

  28. Tour de France 2025

    Parcours Révélations anticipées. Le journal quotidien régional Ouest-France annonce le 12 octobre 2023 que le grand départ de l'épreuve sera donné dans la région Hauts-de-France.Trois ou quatre étapes doivent être accueillies dans la région avec Lille comme ville-départ de la première étape [1], [2].. Le parcours doit ensuite prendre la direction de l'Ouest avec des arrivées en ...

  29. Tour des Alpes. Parcours, favoris, chaîne TV… Tout savoir de l'édition 2024

    Course de préparation au Giro, le Tour des Alpes se déroule du 15 au 19 avril. Cinq étapes très montagneuses sont au programme avec un plateau de qualité. Parcours, favoris, chaîne TV…