The Tour de France is approaching with the announcement of Vingegaard’s participation, discover the details of the stages.
Good news for cycling fans and particularly the Tour de France, Jonas Vingegaard is announced for the 2024 Grande Boucle, a few weeks after his terrible fall and serious injury. His Visma Lease a Bike team has announced the team which will start on June 29. Wout van Aert will also be there, as will Christophe Laporte and the winner of the Tour of Spain, Sepp Kuss. “I can’t wait to start the Tour,” says the 27-year-old rider. “The last few months haven’t always been easy, but I thank my family and the Visma-Lease a Bike team for their unwavering support. We’ve worked together to get to this moment, and of course I’m very excited to see where I am. I feel good and very motivated.”
This year, for once (Barcelona has been designated for 2026), the departure will be abroad near Florence in Italy. 3 stages will take place in Italy, including an arrival near Turin on July 1st before returning to France the next day. Serious things will happen very quickly with the Col du Galibier which is planned from the 4th stage.
The Center in the spotlight before the Pyrenees
After the first day of rest, on July 8, the Tour will descend towards the Pyrenees crossing the Loiret, the Cher, the Creuse, the Cantal then the Lot-et-Garonne between the 10th and 12th stage. In detail, the 10th will link Orléans and Saint-Amand-Montrond, the 11th Evaux-les-Bains and Lioran, and the 12th Aurillac and Villeneuve-sur-Lot. The 13th stage will take place between Agen and Pau. The 14th stage will finally be mountainous, between Pau and Pla d’Adet in Saint-Lary-Soulan. The 15th stage, on the national holiday of July 14, will connect Loudenvielle in the Hautes-Pyrénées to the Beille plateau via the Peyresourde and Portillon passes in particular. July 15 will be the second and last day of rest.
The Southern Alps as a final bouquet
The runners will leave from Gruissan in Aude to arrive in Nîmes after a stage which could be windy along the coast. Serious things will resume the next day with an arrival at Super Dévoluy in the Hautes-Alpes. The 18th stage will connect Gap to Barcelonnette, before arriving at Isola2000 the next day.
Two new final stages
After 110 editions concluded in Paris with very often a fairly boring stage promised to sprinters, this Tour de France 2024 offers a breath of fresh air with a time trial on July 21 in Nice and a final mountain stage the day before. The 20th stage will resemble a Paris-Nice stage with the arrival at the top of the Col de la Couillole. In detail, the stage will start from Nice and will see a series of four climbs: the Col de Braus (10 km at 6.6%), the Col de Turini (20.7 km at 5.7%), the Col de la Colmiane (7.5 km at 7.1%) then the Col de la Couillole (15.7 km at 7.1%), all in “only” 132 km. Enough to shake up the general classification 24 hours from the finish. The next day, no stroll on the Promenade des Anglais. For the most nostalgic, it will be the first time that the Tour ends on a time trial since the outcome of 1989 when the Frenchman Laurent Fignon lost the yellow jersey by eight seconds, the smallest gap in history, against the American Greg Lemond. The stage will take place between Monaco and Nice, a 35 kilometer long route with several climbs such as the Turbie (8.1 km at 5.6%) then a portion of the Col d’Eze (1.6 km at 8.1 %) before the long descent towards the Promenade des Anglais in Nice.
What are the dates for the 2024 Tour de France?
The Tour de France 2024 will take place from Saturday June 29 to Sunday July 21, 2024.
Tour de France map
Here is the Tour de France map with a strong southern accent for this 2024 edition
The 21 steps profile
Here are the 21 stages of the Tour de France 2024 with all the cities which will host the start or finish of a stage.
- Saturday June 29 – Stage 1: Florence-Firenze / Rimini
- Sunday June 30 – Stage 2: Cesenatico / Bologna
- Monday July 1 – Stage 3: Piacenza / Turin
- Tuesday July 2 – Stage 4: Pinerolo / Valloire
- Wednesday July 3 – Stage 5: Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne / Saint Vulbas
- Thursday July 4 – Stage 6: Mâcon / Dijon
- Friday July 5 – Stage 7: Gevrey-Chambertin / Nuits-Saint-Georges (time trial)
- Saturday July 6 – Stage 8: Semur-en-Auxois / Colombey-les-Deux-Églises
- Sunday July 7 – Stage 9: Troyes / Troyes
- 1st day off – Monday July 8
- Tuesday July 9 – Stage 10: Orléans / Saint-Amand-Montrond
- Wednesday July 10 – Stage 11: Evaux-les-Bains / Le Lioran
- Thursday July 11 – Stage 12: Aurillac / Villeneuve-sur-Lot
- Friday July 12 – Stage 13: Agen / Pau
- Saturday July 13 – Stage 14: Pau / Saint-Lary-Soulan Pla d’Adet
- Sunday July 14 – Stage 15: Loudenvielle / Plateau de Beille
- 2nd day of rest – Monday July 15
- Tuesday July 16 – Stage 16: Gruissan / Nîmes
- Wednesday July 17 – Stage 17: Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux / SuperDévoluy
- Thursday July 18 – Stage 18: Gap / Barcelonnette
- Friday July 19 – Stage 19: Embrun / Isola2000
- Saturday July 20 – Stage 20: Nice / Col de la Couillole (132 km)
- Sunday July 21 – Stage 21: Monaco / Nice (35 km)