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TOUR DE FRANCE 2014

VIDEO: 2014 Tour de France route unveiled

The 2014 Tour de France will pass through the scene of some of the worst fighting of World War One next year, organisers revealed on Wednesday, as they unveiled a route, which will start in Yorkshire, northern England, that is likely to challenge champion Chris Froome.

VIDEO: 2014 Tour de France route unveiled
The 2014 Tour de France will take in the battlefields of World War One. Photo: AFP

One hundred years after the start of the Great War, cycling's most famous race will pay tribute to the millions killed in one of history's bloodiest conflicts, visiting towns and countryside devastated by four years of fighting.

Stage five starts in Ypres, in the Flanders region of western Belgium, which was the scene of sustained and intensive fighting between German and Allied forces.

Stages six and seven visit Arras, the Chemin des Dames, Verdun and Douaumont – all sites of key battles and home to memorials to the fallen – and a finish in Reims, in Champagne country, where French kings were once crowned.

The cycling tribute comes amid commemorations across France, Europe and the rest of the world to the conflict that helped shape the violent history of the 20th century.

(Photo: www.LeTour.fr)

The 101st edition of the Tour de France overall includes six mountain stages with five summit finishes and a stage tackling the cobblestones that are the hallmark of the Paris-Roubaix classic.

There is also just one time-trial for the first time since the 1950s, all of which will provide defending champion Chris Froome with a tough test in a race likely to favour climbers.

Kenya-born Briton Froome, who rides for Team Sky, revealed recently that he was not looking forward to reports of a cobbled stage and was hoping for a maximum amount of time-trials to favour him over more adept, smaller, lighter climbers.

Froome retained the title for Britain in the Tour's 100th edition last year after compatriot Bradley Wiggins became the country's first-ever winner in 2012.

British cycling fans will be hoping for a third, straight win for the nation, particularly as the race starts on July 5 in the northern English city of Leeds and includes two opening stages in the county of Yorkshire.

The peloton will head to mainland Europe on July 8 after a third stage from the historic university city of Cambridge in eastern England with a finish outside Queen Elizabeth II's London residence Buckingham Palace.

★ OFFICIAL 2014 TOUR DE FRANCE ROUTE ★ RT if you like it. #TDF pic.twitter.com/syScG5qYgP

— Le Tour De France (@letour) October 23, 2013

Froome's potential challengers next year are likely to be 2013 King of the Mountains Nairo Quintana, Giro D'Italia winner Vincenzo Nibali and two-time Tour champion Alberto Contador.

The penultimate stage, a 54-kilometre (33.5-mile) test against the clock between Bergerac and Perigueux in the southwestern Dordogne region, could provide Froome with his last chance to overhaul the climbers before they arrive in Paris.

"Time-trials provide greater time gaps than the mountains, sometimes insurmountable ones," explained Tour director Christian Prudhomme.

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"Having the time-trial at the end is so the climbers don't have to chase but can ride in front and not become demoralised."

Froome and the rest of the peloton will get an early indication of the hard work ahead in the final 30km of the second stage from York to Sheffield, which organisers described as a "British version of Liege-Bastogne-Liege".

Across the Channel, there will be little time to relax before the 156km fifth stage from Ypres to Arenberg Porte du Hainaut and more than 15km of cobblestones spread over nine different sections.

Stage seven, from Epernay to Nancy, is the longest, covering a gruelling 233km.

The first summit finishes come in the Vosges region with the 161km stage eight from Tomblaine to Gerardmer and then the return of La Planche des Belles Filles at the end of stage 10.

It was there on the final 20km ramp that Froome earnt his first stage victory in 2012 and the 161km stage, with a final 5.9km climb averaging a punishing 8.5 percent gradient, could shake up the race and suit the likes of punchy finisher Joaquim Rodriguez.

The first Alpine summit finish arrives on Stage 13 at Chamrousse at the end of 200km with an 18.2km climb averaging 7.3 percent.

The high Alps beckon the following day with a 177km stage that crests the Cols du Lautaret and D'Izoard before finishing on the Risoul.

Stages 17 and 18 are relatively short at 125km and 145km but have Pyreneen summit finishes at Saint-Lary-Soulan and Hautacam.

The time-trial comes a day before the survivors roll onto the Champs Elysees in Paris on July 26.

This video below is thanks to www.letour.fr


Parcours 2014 en 3D / The 2014 route in 3D par tourdefrance

2014 TOUR DE FRANCE STAGES

Stage 1: Saturday, July 5 – Leeds, England, to Harrogate, England, 191
kilometres (119 miles)
   Stage 2: Sunday, July 6 – York, England, to Sheffield, England, 198km
   Stage 3: Monday, July 7 – Cambridge, England, to London, 159km
   Stage 4: Tuesday, July 8 – Le Touquet-Paris-Plage to Lille, 164km
   Stage 5: Wednesday, July 9 – Ypres, Belgium – Arenberg Porte du Hainault,
156km
   Stage 6: Thursday, July 10 – Arras to Reims, 194km
   Stage 7: Friday, July 11 – Epernay to Nancy, 233km
   Stage 8: Saturday, July 12 – Tomblaine to Gerardmer, 161km
   Stage 9: Sunday, July 13 – Gerardmer to Mulhouse, 166km
   Stage 10: Monday, July 14 – Mulhouse to La Planche des Belles Filles, 161km
   Rest day: Tuesday, July 15
   Stage 11: Wednesday, July 16 – Besancon to Oyonnax, 186km
   Stage 12: Thursday, July 17 – Bourg-en-Bresse to Saint-Etienne, 183km
   Stage 13: Friday, July 18 – Saint-Etienne to Chamrousse, 200km
   Stage 14: Saturday, July 19 – Grenoble to Risoul, 177km
   Stage 15: Sunday, July 20 – Tallard to Nimes, 222km
   Rest day: Monday, July 21
   Stage 16: Tuesday, July 22 – Carcassonne to Bagneres-de-Luchon, 237km
   Stage 17: Wednesday, July 23 – Saint-Gaudens to Saint-Lary-Soulan, 125km
   Stage 18: Thursday, July 24 – Pau to Hautacam, 145km
   Stage 19: Friday, July 25 – Mauborguet Pays du Val d'Adour to Bergerac,
208km
   Stage 20: Saturday, July 26 – Bergerac to Perigueux, 54km individual
time-trial
   Stage 21: Sunday, July 27 – Evry to Paris Champs-Elysees, 13

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SPORT

‘I never imagined it could feel this good’: Nibali

Vincenzo Nibali fought back tears as he stood on the Tour de France winner's podium and described the moment as better than he ever expected.

'I never imagined it could feel this good': Nibali
Vincenzo Nibali drinks champagne on the Champs-Elysées avenue in Paris, at the end of the 137.5 km twenty-first and last stage of the 101st edition of the Tour de France. Photo: Jeff Pachoud/AFP

Nibali completed his victory at the 2014 Tour by finishing safely in the pack on Sunday's 21st and final stage from Evry to Paris, won by German Marcel Kittel.

"It's the most important and the best moment, I never imagined it could feel this good because when you find yourself on this podium on the Champs Elysées, it's unique," said Nibali, reading a prepared statement.

"Now that I'm here it's even better than I imagined. I fought for this every day, I started building from a long way out with a winter preparation with the team because we had decided this was our objective.

"Some people might think it's normal but I want to thank my (Astana) team because when you achieve an objective, you do so together, not just those here with me but also those back in Italy.

"It's a success that I want to dedicate to all the staff in the team and to my family, my wife Rachelle and my daughter Emma.

"If it hadn't been for my parents who have supported me since the beginning then I wouldn't have been here.

"I've never felt more emotional in my career."

After crossing the finish line, Nibali went straight up to his wife and baby to embrace both.

By winning the final stage, German sprint king Kittel matched Nibali's achievement of winning four stages on this Tour.

The Giant-Shimano sprinter thus equalled his feat from last year when he also won four stages — including both the first and last — and wore the yellow jersey for a day on stage two.

In the final sprint he initially looked to have been caught and passed by Alexander Kristoff before finding a second wind to power through and win.

Norwegian Kristoff, who won two previous stages, finished second with Lithuania's Ramunas Navardauskas, who also claimed a stage, coming third.

"It was actually my strategy for the sprint," said Kittel.

"I was meant to start not too early so when Kristoff passed me he had already had a little more time to accelerate and gain more speed.

"That was the reason why I was a bit behind him but then I could really start my sprint and accelerate and I noticed the moment when Kristoff couldn't go faster any more.

"That was the moment to pass him again. It was close, there was a moment I thought it really wasn't enough at the end but I'm super happy."

Kittel, 26, paid tribute to his lead out team who put him in the position to win with 300m left.

"It's incredible, I'm really proud of all the team. The guys worked really hard today, they put me in a perfect position," he added.

"It's been a great Tour in our team, and I don't forget my teammate (Ji Cheng) who fell, but we'll celebrate tonight."

The day's events started, as ever for the processional final stage, at a pedestrian pace as Nibali sipped champagne with his teammates and posed for photos with the other jersey winners.

Slovakian Peter Sagan won the green sprinters' points jersey for the third year in a row while young Pole Rafal Majka claimed the king of the mountains polkadot jersey.

Frenchman Thibaut Pinot won the young riders' white jersey and also finished third overall, behind compatriot Jean-Christophe Peraud.

While Ji, who crashed on the cobbles along the Champs Elysees and was even lapped as the peloton made eight circuits around the famous Parisian avenue, achieved more than just becoming the first Chinese rider to compete at and indeed finish a Tour.

He came 164th and last but also managed the largest gap between first and last since 1954, finishing 6hr 02min 24sec behind Nibali.

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