McLovin said:
Riders have on site a day off before heading back to the second mountain stage from Pau to Cauterets
barmaher said:I noticed that too, but thought that was an error.
I can't imagine them having a flight from Vannes to Biarritz or wherever, and then the cyclists tackling a HC finish the next day.
Netserk said:I think it's more likely to be:
Tarbes -> Soulor -> Aubisque -> Marie-Blanque -> Pierre Saint-Martin
Pau -> Aspin -> Tourmalet -> Cauterets
Lannemezan -> Menté/Ares -> Aspet -> Core -> Latrape -> Agnès -> Lers -> Plateau de Beille
Red Rick said:You're thinking they're gonna do a Vuelta amount of MTF's and hilltop finishes and a Giro quality of mountain stages![]()
So Port instead of Latrape/Agnès/Lers?barmaher said:I think those stages look likely, but I would think that the Plateau de Beille stage might be softened somewhat.
Netserk said:So Port instead of Latrape/Agnès/Lers?
Linkinito said:Some local newspapers talked about a TTT between Vannes and Plumelec after Mûr de Bretagne on July 12. However that's strictly impossible due to the UCI rules. So it might be turned into an ITT.
Also, a tweet by Stéphane Boury (stage finish manager for the Tour) says that a new route in Paris for the final stage was validated by the police authorities.
Tweet 1
Tweet 2
So it might either be the inclusion of the Butte Montmartre (maybe some people at ASO thought this april fools' joke was a good idea after all) or... It could be an ITT for the final stage in Paris. Because it's rumoured that there won't be any ITT between stage 9 and stage 20... Remember that the last ITT in Paris (which was also the first) was in 1989, with the ill-fated "8 seconds".
Dr. Juice said:A good GT should have 5-6 stages with 4000 - 5000 m altitude difference. Plus 80-100 km ITT. It just goes all in the wrong direction. At least the Giro has made a good route for next year ( in this age and time).
OlavEH said:I don't think there is more than one stage in next years Giro which has so many altitude meters. And I'm pretty sure that there won't more than perhaps one or two in Tour de France.
5 stages with 4000+ altitude meters would be overkill. That would be too tough and pretty much ruin all initiative and will to attack until the last 1-2 mountain stages.
But there should at least one stage in the Pyrenees and one stage in the Alps which were all-day mountain stages with MTF. And longer than 130-140 km. I don't like that all mountain stages seem to be maximum 2-3 climbs in the last half of the stage.
roundabout said:Almost sounds like the Tour as it was when Leblanc ran it
1996 as well.McLovin said:IS there a site where I can find older stage profiles? I think 98 is the most recent Tour with online profiles available, or at least that is what I found.
