I count 10 sprint stages. TEN. Including to places like Liège and Pau. Pathetic.
A flat stage to Pau could only really be justified if they used a lap of the
Circuit de Pau-Ville motor racing urban circuit, which would give a little uncategorized or cat.4 côte and then a quick descent that finishes before a nice finishing straight, to give a chance for a few frenetic late moves and a sprint that favours different riders, like the Toledo or Soria repechos in the Vuelta.
The overall summary:
1 - good. I like this. Opening ITTs (not TTTs) have been seemingly out of vogue in recent years, this is long enough to create some decent gaps but not so long it is absurd for an opener (I know some people like the idea of a 40km ITT on stage 1, personally I prefer to keep the riders close at this stage)
2 - it's Liège. You might have heard of a race called Liège-Bastogne-Liège. It isn't flat. There are dozens of climbs in that area that Liège-Bastogne-Liège doesn't use. The Tour uses none of them. I can only imagine that they're hoping it takes Sagan until stage 3 to pick up the maillot vert this year so they can say that competition for it is improving.
3 - Returning to France, we get a small finishing climb which ought to be decent for the puncheurs but time gaps are likely to be limited with the average gradient just 5,8%. The flat loop around Luxembourg is again disappointing, as is not using the Col de l'Europe and the Côte de Saint-Charles in the run-in.
4 - generic flat stage, could have been a bit more rolling but otherwise not too problematic
5 - good to have something to break up the field this early on, which is a plus point, and PDBF is certainly steep enough to manufacture some time gaps, but would have liked Ballon or Chevrères to make it less of a war of placement before the climb. I expect to see at least one crash in the 10km leading up to the base of the climb.
6 - 4/6 stages are sprints. Have you ever seen a Paris-Troyes profile? What would have been wrong with that? With the pro péloton still likely to be a sprint, but with a bit of tension as to who of the main sprinters wins it.
7 - 5/7 stages are sprints. Again, looks like they've actively sought out a boring option, though in fairness in my world if they'd had a proper hilly stage to Liège and cloned the Paris-Troyes run-in they might be due one.
8 - this is OK as a stand-alone stage for sure, but with stage 9 following it is surely unlikely to provoke any meaningful action.
9 - this is going to be all about Mont du Chat, which we know, but hopefully the steepness of the other climbs does mean there's something of effect. I actually prefer the other side of Mont du Chat, but the fact it's even being used at all is a borderline miracle. Probably the best stage of the race.
10 - A rest day after a rest day.
11 - A second rest day after a second rest day. 7th flat stage out of 11. I know the Tour has been about shortening its stages recently, but surely the riders are capable of some level of endurance?
12 - A reasonable stage in a vacuum, but rather uninspiring. Would have liked to see Peyragudes from the other side just to add something we haven't already seen twice recently, but hey,
that would probably come at the price of including the dreaded Tourmalet. At least the stage is a decent length.
13 - 100km stage. In a way I hope I'm wrong, but in a way I'm hope I'm right about this: should be dull really. I hope I'm wrong because then I might get some entertaining races, but if I'm right it becomes a possibility that this trend for assuming shorter = better will end.
14 - At least it's a bit more interesting than the traditional ASO penultimate weekend flat stage and even includes an uncategorized ramp or two. But still, all the mountains on weekdays and this at a weekend.
15 - Tailor-made for a breakaway, just about the only stage that is.
16 - At least the sprinters have to rumble over some less flat stuff before they get their umpteenth chance to compete.
17 - Can't really complain about this in a vacuum, other than that I really would like a bit more innovation in the choice of climbs, rather than just the same climbs everybody knows like the back of their hand. And the pacing, because...
18 - An anæmic mountain stage that ends with a mythical pass being used as an MTF for no apparent reason, but also because it's a HC MTF it might tame the racing in the far superior stage before it. And don't get me started on the 66km Unipuerto version of La Course, although I'd rather watch that than this anyway.
19 - Having done an almighty, unprecedented TWO stages where they need to be attentive in a row, the GC men need a rest, so let's have another sprint!
20 - Should be at least double the length.
21 - I'll give them a pass on this one.
It might justify a 2 because of stage 1, stage 5 being the all-important stage to eliminate a few outsiders early on and stop there being so many teams trying to protect their GC until halfway through, and stage 9 including some climbs that we either haven't seen before or haven't seen in years, but those are the only plus points.