Tour de France Tour de France 2022: Stage 21 (Paris La Défense Arena – Paris Champs-Élysées, 115.6k)

Sep 20, 2017
12,663
23,816
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Champagne and a bunch sprint. No other ingredients shall ever be included in the final stage of the Tour. Well, unless they do end up not finishing in Paris in 2024.

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Route description
The stage starts from La Défense Arena, which will host the swimming events at the 2024 Olympics. It’s unusually close to the Champs-Élysees – had this been twenty stages earlier, they could have had a prologue between the two. Instead, we head for the usual route through the suburbs, passing the palace of Versailles and the obligatory final KOM at Côte du Pavé des Gardes.
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From here, the route heads directly into Paris, skipping the Eiffel Tower but passing through the Louvre. Immediately after this, we reach the traditional final circuit, which is used for eight-and-a-bit laps. Of course, the Champs-Élysées is an absolutely brutal ascent, handing out KOM points in the first stage of the women’s race, the men are really being done dirty by there only being an intermediate sprint here (on lap 3, don’t expect the production team to pay attention to it because they never do).

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After that, all eyes on the sprint. Just a little longer.

Final kilometres
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Keep in mind that they moved the finish away from the final curve last year, bumping up the final straight to 700 metres. They’ve kept that arrangement for this year.

I was actually about to write something about Paris here before I realised there’s not much point. No picture of a cycling bridge for me to add for this capital city, maybe sometime in the future considering the progress Paris is making…

And no, I won’t be repeating the bridge picture for every stage gimmick next year. Assuming I even have the time for these writeups by then. We’ll cross that bridge (pun intended) when we get there, though.

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Pont Neuf, the final bridge of the Tour.
 
Sep 1, 2010
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Using the shortest route, from start to finish would take about six kilometres (entrance from the another side of Arc de Triomphe). Now it's about 60.
 
Feb 9, 2013
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A largely ceremonial stage with very predictable scenery, but I'll still watch because that's just what you do when you watch le Tour...

Thanks Devil's Elbow for doing all the write-ups! (Especially that one time when you had to travel to Germany where they apparently have no internet. :p)
 

KZD

Feb 21, 2019
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A) Van Aert wins from a small break
B)Van Aert wins from the bunch sprint
C)Van Aert wins solo
D)Van Aert doesn't win/Vino option

I actaully think Van Aert would have a chance to win the stage with a solo attack lol
 
Jun 20, 2015
15,561
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I expect BEX to line out their whole team for the last 5kms as they did in the last stage of Hungary - This is the only way to get Groenewegen to follow the wheel.
 
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May 9, 2010
11,113
2,587
28,180
This has been a very special Tour whether you're a Dane, a Jumbo Visma fan - or simply just a fan of cycling. Chapeau to all the riders who made this year's edition an incredible and unforgettable one!