So the finish line is in the traditonal location.
wait....maybe not ....dammit
looks to be
So the finish line is in the traditonal location.
wait....maybe not ....dammit
AI at work. The stage can be incredible or a farce. Think of the jam of riders that allowed Remco freedom in the Olympic race where only a few chasers could get clear. Think of how butt hurt every GC guy will be if they don't make it past that choke point and flush 20 stages of effort down the drain.That picture looks unbelievably bad
Almost any viewpoint from Montmartre will be fleeting. Not enough high spots to view from watching the Oly RR. It'll also be jam packed of very excited and alcohol reinforced Belgians if Remco and Wout are still riding it. MvP would be a serious contender if he targets it. I love the idea and might have enjoyed racing it but not after 20 previous stages.Has anyone been to watch the final stage before? I'm going this year (not just the final stage, some of the others too). Someone told me the Tuileries is a good place to watch, but now I don't know whether to try for a spot on Montmartre. Looks like it would be jam packed though.
I only attended the Tour final stage outside Paris, so I can't comment on the Tuileries situation.Has anyone been to watch the final stage before? I'm going this year (not just the final stage, some of the others too). Someone told me the Tuileries is a good place to watch, but now I don't know whether to try for a spot on Montmartre. Looks like it would be jam packed though.
I was in 2017, I was in the area where I was able to see riders going in two directions. Standing in the area where Avenue George V meets Champs-Elysées. Also a view to the intermediate sprint but there wasn't true sprint that year.Has anyone been to watch the final stage before? I'm going this year (not just the final stage, some of the others too). Someone told me the Tuileries is a good place to watch, but now I don't know whether to try for a spot on Montmartre. Looks like it would be jam packed though.
If you can get an elevated hotel view near the Joan of Arc statue you have a nice place to chill and watch the straightaways. And get a drink but alot of those places are booked by tour groups. TV is the best.I was in 2017, I was in the area where I was able to see riders going in two directions. Standing in the area where Avenue George V meets Champs-Elysées. Also a view to the intermediate sprint but there wasn't true sprint that year.
I've seen two final stages.Has anyone been to watch the final stage before? I'm going this year (not just the final stage, some of the others too). Someone told me the Tuileries is a good place to watch, but now I don't know whether to try for a spot on Montmartre. Looks like it would be jam packed though.
I am absolutely certain this is true. However, we've never been before and really wanted to go at least once, as we're such big fans. Our actual focus is seeing stages 12, 13 and 14, but it's sort of worked out that we'll be in Paris on the final stage, so we thought why not. We'll either love it and end up going every year, or decide it's not worth the fuss and better to watch on TV, but we won't know if we don't go at least once.If you can get an elevated hotel view near the Joan of Arc statue you have a nice place to chill and watch the straightaways. And get a drink but alot of those places are booked by tour groups. TV is the best.
Which explains why Jonas '10 race days in the first half of the season' Vingegaard is opposed.Sorry to say but who is against Montmartre, is not a fan of cycling.
Get up above the Champs and you'll see more! Congratulations on the trip and enjoy those stages.I am absolutely certain this is true. However, we've never been before and really wanted to go at least once, as we're such big fans. Our actual focus is seeing stages 12, 13 and 14, but it's sort of worked out that we'll be in Paris on the final stage, so we thought why not. We'll either love it and end up going every year, or decide it's not worth the fuss and better to watch on TV, but we won't know if we don't go at least once.
He's normally capable but the Oly RR was a logjam that allowed Remco some space. Any team that has a potential GC or stage candidate will start the hammering 10km from the first slight climb. It'll be risky and if Pogi is sitting on a big lead and his UAE train doesn't get him there it'd be doubtful he'd risk crashing and losing a ton of time. I can't see a large group getting away but there will be a fat/middle of the field gutter to gutter after the contenders get a gap.Pogi will win on the Champs-Élysées solo in the yellow jersey in front of a charging peloton. It's the last stage, so he doesn't have to save energy, and we all know he won't be able to resist. Could also be exciting if he is 20 seconds down on Vingegaard and he can plausibly take this time back, it would be a very exciting finish