Tour de France 2023 – LIVE: a nervous peloton before the massive sprint, the end of the 11th stage

Tour de France 2023 – LIVE a nervous peloton before

Flat! The 11th stage of the Tour de France promises to be “quiet” for the riders and a massive sprint seems inevitable in the streets of Moulins this Wednesday, July 12.

The essential

  • The 11th stage of the Tour de France which takes place between Clermont-Ferrand and Moulins does not present any difficulty and should favor a sprint finish.
  • Overall in this Tour de France, the Dane Jonas Vingegaard is still in the lead with 17 seconds ahead of his rival Tadej Pogacar.
  • Follow with us the latest information on the Tour de France 2023.

Live

17:07 – Another 20 kilometers

The end of this 11th stage and still in the rain! The peloton takes the full width of the road and there are always 25 seconds between Oss and the peloton.

17:03 – Oss elected combatant of the day

Unsurprisingly, the Italian was voted combative of the day. There are 24 kilometers left and still 35 seconds ahead.

16:56 – Heavy downpour on the Tour

It is raining very hard and all of a sudden on the Tour de France peloton when we are less than 30 kilometers away.

16:48 – The gap widens

We are talking about a few seconds of course, but the Italian is widening the gap a little, 47 seconds at 35 kilometers.

4:40 p.m. – 40 kilometers to go

There are only 40 kilometers left in this stage and the riders should arrive in Moulins in less than an hour.

16:35 – Oss speeds up

The 36-year-old Italian picks up the pace with a favorable wind and now has a lead of more than 30 seconds.

16:32 – Amador lets go in turn

The rider from the Education First team has also decided to drop Daniel Oss who finds himself alone at the front of the race.

16:29 – 20 seconds ahead

The duo now has a lead of around twenty seconds over the peloton, still led by the sprinter teams.

16:27 – Louvel gets up

Finished for the French who made the decision to get up from the breakaway with such a small gap.

16:23 – Edging?

The landscape and the wind caused nervousness in the peloton and the Ineos team rode hard. Maybe more a way to protect the leaders than to create an edge, but be careful…

16:17 – The coast of the White Cross

The leading men spent the last climb of the day with the Côte de la Croix Blanche. The small point was taken by the Italian Daniel Oss.

16:05 – 30 seconds

Always less. The gap between the breakaway and the peloton is still extremely small with barely 30 seconds between the two.

15:59 – The Tour de France in the storm

The Tour de France riders have just entered a storm. Rain and wind are on the program at the end of the stage.

15:52 – Watch out for the wind

The wind is blowing hard on the roads of the Tour and the nervousness of the peloton is felt, especially in the first positions.

15:42 – Less than a minute early

Andrey Amador (EF Education-Easypost), Matis Louvel (Arkea-Samsic) and Daniel Oss (TotalEnergies) are now less than a minute ahead of the peloton.

Learn more

Classification of the Tour de France

Results powered by FirstCycling.com. At the end of each stage, discover the up-to-date classification of this Tour de France 2023, with the gaps between the riders.

Route and map of the Tour de France 2023

Here is the official map and the route of the Tour de France 2023 whose start has been set in Bilbao, Spain. A course that is concentrated almost exclusively in the Center and East of France. Several recognized passes have been programmed, in the Pyrenees and the Alps. The Tourmalet and the Grand Colombier have notably been included in the programme. In detail, this Tour de France offers 3,404 kilometres, 30 passes (Out of category, 1st category or 2nd category), 4 summit finishes and 22 kilometers of time trial. The organization has declared 6 flat stages, 6 hilly ones, 8 mountain ones and one stopwatch.

Find the list of all the riders entered for the Tour de France 2023.

List of stages of the Tour de France 2023

  • Saturday 1 July – Stage 1: Bilbao – Bilbao, 182 km
  • Sunday July 2 – Stage 2: Vitoria-Gasteiz – San Sebastian, 209 km
  • Monday July 3 – Stage 3: Amorebieta-Etxano – Bayonne, 185 km
  • Tuesday July 4 – Stage 4: Dax – Nogaro, 182 km
  • Wednesday July 5 – Stage 5: Pau – Laruns, 165 km
  • Thursday July 6 – Stage 6: Tarbes – Cauterets, 145 km
  • Friday July 7 – Stage 7: Mont-de-Marsan – Bordeaux, 170 km
  • Saturday July 8 – Stage 8: Libourne – Limoges, 201 km
  • Sunday July 9 – Stage 9: Saint-Leonard-de-Noblat – Puy-de-Dôme, 184 km
  • Monday July 10 – 1st rest day in Clermont-Ferrand
  • Tuesday July 11 – Stage 10: Vulcania – Issoire, 167 km
  • Wednesday July 12 – Stage 11: Clermont-Ferrand – Moulins, 180 km
  • Thursday July 13 – Stage 12: Roanne – Belleville-en-Beaujolais, 169 km
  • Friday July 14 – Stage 13: Châtillon-sur-Chalaronne – Grand Colombier, 138 km
  • Saturday July 15 – Stage 14: Annemasse – Morzine, 152 km
  • Sunday July 16 – Stage 15: Morzine – Saint-Gervais-Mont Blanc, 180 km
  • Monday July 17 – 2nd rest day in Saint-Gervais-Mont Blanc
  • Tuesday July 18 – Stage 16: Passy – Combloux, individual time trial 22 km
  • Wednesday July 19 – Stage 17: Saint-Gervais-Mont Blanc – Courchevel, 166 km
  • Thursday July 20 – Stage 18: Moutiers – Bourg-en-Bresse, 186 km
  • Friday July 21 – Stage 19: Moirans-en-Montagne – Poligny, 173 km
  • Saturday July 22 – Stage 20: Belfort – Le Markstein, 133 km
  • Sunday July 23 – Stage 21: National Velodrome of Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines – Paris Champs-Elysées, 115 km

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