2022 Tour de France

(Redirected from Tour de France 2022)

The 2022 Tour de France was the 109th edition of the Tour de France. It started in Copenhagen, Denmark on 1 July 2022 and ended with the final stage on the Champs-Élysées, Paris on 24 July 2022. Denmark's Jonas Vingegaard (Team Jumbo–Visma) won the general classification for the first time. Two-time defending champion Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) finished in second place, and former winner Geraint Thomas (Ineos Grenadiers) finished third. This was the first Tour since 1989 in which each of the three podium finishers had made the podium on a previous occasion.

2022 Tour de France
2022 UCI World Tour, race 23 of 32
Route of the 2022 Tour de France
Route of the 2022 Tour de France
Race details
Dates1–24 July 2022
Stages21
Distance3,349.8[1] km (2,081 mi)
Winning time79h 33' 20"
Results
Winner  Jonas Vingegaard (DEN) (Team Jumbo–Visma)
  Second  Tadej Pogačar (SLO) (UAE Team Emirates)
  Third  Geraint Thomas (GBR) (Ineos Grenadiers)

Points  Wout van Aert (BEL) (Team Jumbo–Visma)
Mountains  Jonas Vingegaard (DEN) (Team Jumbo–Visma)
Youth  Tadej Pogačar (SLO) (UAE Team Emirates)
Combativity  Wout van Aert (BEL) (Team Jumbo–Visma)
Team United Kingdom Ineos Grenadiers
← 2021
2023 →

The race began in Copenhagen before returning to France. Wout van Aert of Team Jumbo–Visma controlled the lead for much of the first week until Pogačar seized control of the race and won two consecutive stages. In the Alps, Team Jumbo–Visma attacked Pogačar, and Vingegaard became the first rider to take serious time from Pogačar. Vingegaard defended and increased his lead through the Pyrenees and the final individual time trial to secure the victory. He thereby became the first Dane to win the Tour since Bjarne Riis in 1996.

The race was affected by climate-change protests as well as a 40 °C (104 °F) heat wave. The race had the fewest number of finishers since 2000, with 17 riders forced to leave the race because of COVID-19, including stage winners Magnus Cort and Simon Clarke, as well as former Tour winner Chris Froome of Israel–Premier Tech.[2]

The points classification was won by Wout van Aert with 480 points, breaking Peter Sagan's modern-day record. Vingegaard also won the mountains classification, marking the first time since 1969 that riders from the same team won the yellow and green jerseys as well as the mountains classification. The young rider classification was won by GC runner-up Pogačar, and the team of Ineos Grenadiers won the team classification. Van Aert was chosen as the most combative rider.

The race was followed by the first edition of the Tour de France Femmes, which had its first stage on the final day of the men's Tour.

Teams

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22 teams participated in the race. All 18 UCI WorldTeams were automatically invited. They were joined by 4 UCI ProTeams - the two highest placed UCI ProTeams in 2021 (Alpecin–Deceuninck and Arkéa–Samsic), along with Team TotalEnergies and B&B Hotels–KTM who were selected by Amaury Sport Organisation (ASO), the organisers of the Tour.[3] The teams were announced on 11 February 2022.[3] 176 riders started the race, from 27 nationalities[a] – with the largest percentage being French (11% of the peloton).

UCI WorldTeams

UCI ProTeams

Route and stages

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In February 2019, it was announced that Denmark would host the Grand Départ of the Tour in 2021.[4] However, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, this was delayed to 2022.[5] In October 2021, the route was announced by Christian Prudhomme.[6][7] Three stages took place in Denmark, with an opening time trial in Copenhagen.[7] Other features of the Tour include 11 cobbled sectors on stage 5 (cobbles last featured in 2018), a gravel summit finish at La Super Planche des Belles Filles on stage 7, and a summit finish on Col du Granon on stage 11 (the Col du Granon was last used in 1986).[7] The queen stage took place on Bastille Day, with a replica of Stage 18 of the 1986 Tour to Alpe d'Huez.[7]

Stage characteristics[1][8]
Stage Date Course Distance Type Winner
1 1 July Copenhagen (Denmark) 13.2 km (8.2 mi)   Individual time trial   Yves Lampaert (BEL)
2 2 July Roskilde to Nyborg (Denmark) 202.5 km (125.8 mi)   Flat stage   Fabio Jakobsen (NED)
3 3 July Vejle to Sønderborg (Denmark) 182 km (113 mi)   Flat stage   Dylan Groenewegen (NED)
4 July Sønderborg (Denmark) to Dunkirk Transfer
4 5 July Dunkirk to Calais 171.5 km (106.6 mi)   Hilly stage   Wout van Aert (BEL)
5 6 July Lille to Arenberg 157 km (98 mi)   Hilly stage   Simon Clarke (AUS)
6 7 July Binche (Belgium) to Longwy 220 km (140 mi)   Hilly stage   Tadej Pogačar (SLO)
7 8 July Tomblaine to La Super Planche des Belles Filles 176.5 km (109.7 mi)   Medium-mountain stage   Tadej Pogačar (SLO)
8 9 July Dole to Lausanne (Switzerland) 186.5 km (115.9 mi)   Hilly stage   Wout van Aert (BEL)
9 10 July Aigle (Switzerland) to Châtel 193 km (120 mi)   Mountain stage   Bob Jungels (LUX)
11 July Morzine Rest day
10 12 July Morzine to Megève 148.5 km (92.3 mi)   Medium-mountain stage   Magnus Cort (DEN)
11 13 July Albertville to Col du Granon 152 km (94 mi)   Mountain stage   Jonas Vingegaard (DEN)
12 14 July Briançon to Alpe d'Huez 165.5 km (102.8 mi)   Mountain stage   Tom Pidcock (GBR)
13 15 July Le Bourg-d'Oisans to Saint-Étienne 193 km (120 mi)   Flat stage   Mads Pedersen (DEN)
14 16 July Saint-Étienne to Mende 192.5 km (119.6 mi)   Medium-mountain stage   Michael Matthews (AUS)
15 17 July Rodez to Carcassonne 202.5 km (125.8 mi)   Flat stage   Jasper Philipsen (BEL)
18 July Carcassonne Rest day
16 19 July Carcassonne to Foix 178.5 km (110.9 mi)   Mountain stage   Hugo Houle (CAN)
17 20 July Saint-Gaudens to Peyragudes 130 km (81 mi)   Mountain stage   Tadej Pogačar (SLO)
18 21 July Lourdes to Hautacam 143.5 km (89.2 mi)   Mountain stage   Jonas Vingegaard (DEN)
19 22 July Castelnau-Magnoac to Cahors 188.5 km (117.1 mi)   Flat stage   Christophe Laporte (FRA)
20 23 July Lacapelle-Marival to Rocamadour 40.7 km (25.3 mi)   Individual time trial   Wout van Aert (BEL)
21 24 July Paris La Défense Arena to Paris (Champs-Élysées) 116 km (72 mi)   Flat stage   Jasper Philipsen (BEL)
Total 3,349.8 km (2,081.5 mi)

Pre-race favourites

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In the lead up to the event, the top pre-race favourites were Tadej Pogačar of UAE Team Emirates, and Jonas Vingegaard and Primož Roglič of Team Jumbo–Visma. The 2nd tier general classification (GC) favourites were thought to be Aleksandr Vlasov of Bora–Hansgrohe, and Geraint Thomas and Dani Martínez of Ineos Grenadiers, with longshot favourites including Ben O'Connor, Adam Yates, Enric Mas and Romain Bardet.[9]

Race overview

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Magnus Cort wearing the polka dot jersey as leader of the Mountains classification, on stage 3 in Denmark

Grand Départ and Week One

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The race began in Copenhagen, Denmark for the first time, with three stages in Denmark. After finishing second in the opening time trial, behind Yves Lampaert of Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl Team,[10] Wout van Aert of Jumbo–Visma took the yellow jersey in stage 2 by virtue of bonus seconds.[11] Danish rider Magnus Cort of EF Education–EasyPost took all King of the Mountains (KoM) points available in Denmark, collecting enough for him to wear the polka dot jersey until stage 9. During this run he claimed the record of most consecutive summits won, from former Tour champion and multi-time mountains classification winner Federico Bahamontes.[12] Sprinter Dylan Groenewegen of Team Jayco–AlUla won the final stage in Denmark, before a transfer day and return to France.[13]

On stage 4, van Aert extended his lead with a solo attack into Calais.[14] Stage 5 involved cobbles for the first time since 2018, with Pogačar gaining time in the general classification over every GC contender including Vingegaard, who had mechanical issues, and Roglič who crashed and dislocated his shoulder.[15] Stage 6 was the longest of the race, with van Aert taking part in the breakaway to extend his lead in the points classification, before eventually being caught and falling off the back losing the overall lead. In the final uphill sprint, Pogačar out sprinted everyone to win the stage and take the maillot jaune by virtue of the bonus seconds.[16]

Stage 7 was the first summit finish of the race at Super Planche des Belles Filles. A group of GC contenders made their way up the majority of the climb together, before Vingegaard attacked and only Pogačar could follow.[17] In a sprint on the final slope, Pogačar overtook Vingegaard to get the stage win and extend his lead to over 30 seconds. Other GC contenders lost between 20 seconds and over a minute to the leading two.[17] After stage 8, a hilly stage that finished in Lausanne, Switzerland where van Aert extended his points classification lead further,[18] and stage 9 in the Swiss Alps where Bob Jungels won the day and Simon Geschke gained enough KoM points to take the polka dot jersey, the first rest day took place in Morzine.[19]

 
Mikkel Bjerg, Wout van Aert (in green jersey), Jonas Vingegaard (in yellow jersey) and Tadej Pogačar behind (in white jersey)

Week Two

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During the second week, stages 10 and 18 were disrupted by Climate Change protesters, which forced stages to be halted for a short period.[20][21][22] Media discussed the legitimacy of the protest[23] and the effect that climate change was having on the Tour,[24][25] while other coverage expressed annoyance at the disruption to the race.[26][27] The second week of the race was affected by an intense heat wave, with several stages having temperatures of around 40 °C (104 °F).[25][28] Some riders suffered heat stroke including Alexis Vuillermoz on stage 9.[29]

No major attacks by GC contenders occurred on stage 10, the first in the French Alps, however Lennard Kämna who was in the breakaway that finished close to ten minutes ahead of the peloton, came within eleven seconds of taking the yellow jersey from Pogačar.[30] The stage was won by Magnus Cort, in a photo finish ahead of Nick Schultz.[31] Stage 11 was a summit finish at the Col du Granon – which was included in the Tour for the first time since 1986.[7] After constant attacks by Roglič and Vingegaard on the flat before the Col du Galibier, a gap opened up between Pogačar and Vingegaard on the final ascent to Col du Granon.[32] Vingegaard gained nearly three minutes on Pogačar, winning the stage and taking the yellow jersey.[33] At the end of the day only six riders were within five minutes of Vingegaard in the overall situation: Bardet, Pogačar, Thomas, Quintana, Yates and Gaudu.[34]

Stage 12 to Alpe d'Huez was the queen stage of the Tour, taking place on Bastille Day.[7] Neilson Powless of Team EF Education–EasyPost attacked at kilometre zero and stayed at the front of the race until near the very end. Tom Pidcock of Ineos Grenadiers and former Tour winner Chris Froome, attacked about halfway through the stage and bridged up to the leading breakaway riders. On the final ascent of Alpe d'Huez, Pidcock attacked from the group including Powless, Froome, Ciccone and Meintjes and rode on to a convincing solo victory.[35] In the GC race, Pogačar attacked Vingegaard twice, with both riders dropping the other contenders on the climb, however the Slovenian rider was unable to shake off the Dane.[35]

The transitional stage 13 out of the Alps was won by the sprinter Mads Pedersen of Lidl–Trek,[36] and stage 14 was won by Michael Matthews of Team Jayco–AlUla from the breakaway, who was just able to drop Alberto Bettiol prior to reaching the summit of the final intermediate climb. Behind Matthews, Pogačar and Vingegaard attacked the peloton on this same climb and extended their lead over the other GC contenders.[37] Stage 15, before the second rest day, took the Tour to Carcassonne where the final breakaway rider in Benjamin Thomas was caught in the final few hundred meters to set up a sprint finish, which was won by Jasper Philipsen.[38] Jumbo–Visma lost two riders on stage 15: team leader Roglič abandoned the race following his injuries on stage 5, and domestique Steven Kruijswijk left the race in an ambulance after dislocating his shoulder in a crash.[39]

 
Jonas Vingegaard in the yellow jersey

Week Three

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After a rest day in Carcassonne, the race entered the Pyrenees.[7] Stage 16 was won by Hugo Houle of Israel–Premier Tech, after a solo attack from the breakaway with around 40 kilometres (25 mi) to go.[40] Rafał Majka, a "key lieutenant" of Pogačar did not start stage 17, due to an injury suffered after he threw his chain near the end of stage 16.[41] Brandon McNulty of UAE Team Emirates pulled his teammate Pogačar and Vingegaard up to the final steep slopes of Peyragudes, increasing the gap to the rest of the peloton.[42][43] Inside the final 500m of steep climbing Pogačar attacked, but Vingegaard responded and followed with a counter attack of his own. Just before the line, Pogačar was able to come around him to win his third stage of the Tour and reduce Vingegaard's lead in the GC by four seconds thanks to bonus seconds, to 2 minutes 18 seconds.[43]

On stage 18 – the final day in the Pyrenees – Pogačar attacked Vingegaard multiple times on the Col de Spandelles, with Vingegaard able to keep up every time.[44] On the descent, both riders pushed hard: Vingegaard almost crashed, while Pogačar did crash after slipping on gravel. Pogačar was able to continue with minor cuts to his leg; in a moment of sportsmanship, Vingegaard slowed down and waited for Pogačar.[45][44]

Before the ascent of the Hautacam, both riders were caught by a larger group including Thomas and two of Vingegaard's teammates (Sepp Kuss and Tiesj Benoot). On the final climb, a furious pace was set by Kuss, leaving all other contenders behind. Meeting up with van Aert ahead (who had been in a breakaway), the high tempo continued, until van Aert and Vingegaard attacked Pogačar with around 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) to go to the top.[44] Pogačar was unable to keep up, so Vingegaard extended his GC lead to almost three and a half minutes.[44] By taking maximum KoM points at the top of Hautacam, Vingegaard gained an unassailable lead of that classification, taking the jersey from Simon Geschke of Team Cofidis, who had set a record for most days by a German rider leading the mountains classification.[46]

After the transitional stage 19 was won by Christophe Laporte of Jumbo-Visma,[47] the final time trial to Rocamadour was won by van Aert, followed by Vingegaard, Pogačar and Thomas.[48] The traditional final stage on the Champs-Élysées in Paris completed the Tour, with sprinter Jasper Philipsen winning his second stage of the Tour.[49]

In the general classification, Vingegaard became the first Dane to win the Tour since 1996, with Pogačar in second 2 minutes 43 seconds behind. Thomas was third, over seven minutes behind. The points classification was won by Wout van Aert with 480 points, breaking Peter Sagan's modern record.[50] Vingegaard also won the mountains classification, marking the first time since the Faema team of Eddy Merckx in 1969, that riders from the same team won the yellow and green jerseys as well as the mountains classification. The young rider classification was won by runner-up Pogačar, who led the classification from start to finish and tied Jan Ullrich and Andy Schleck with his third win of this classification. The team of third place Thomas, Ineos Grenadiers, won the team classification. Van Aert was chosen as the most combative rider.[49] Caleb Ewan was the Lanterne rouge - normally competitive with the elite sprinters, his top 10 result on stage 21 was his highest stage finish of the Tour.[51][52]

The race had the fewest finishers since 2000, with just 135 of the 176 starters reaching the finish line in Paris.[53] The teams of the first two podium finishers were severely depleted by the end of the race, with Team UAE Emirates losing half its start list due to injury and illness,[41] and Team Jumbo-Visma losing several key members along the route.[39][18] Several riders were forced to leave the race due to contracting Covid, including stage winners Magnus Cort and Simon Clarke,[54] and former Tour winner Chris Froome of Israel–Premier Tech.[55]

In August 2022, Colombian rider Nairo Quintana of Arkéa–Samsic was disqualified from 6th place overall, after blood samples tested positive for tramadol, a painkiller.[56]

Classification leadership

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Classification leadership by stage
Stage Winner General classification
 
Points classification
 
Mountains classification
 
Young rider classification
 
Team classification
 
Combativity award[57]
 
1 Yves Lampaert Yves Lampaert Yves Lampaert[a] no award Tadej Pogačar[b] Team Jumbo–Visma no award
2 Fabio Jakobsen Wout van Aert Wout van Aert[c] Magnus Cort Sven Erik Bystrøm
3 Dylan Groenewegen Magnus Cort
4 Wout van Aert Anthony Perez
5 Simon Clarke Ineos Grenadiers Magnus Cort
6 Tadej Pogačar Tadej Pogačar Wout van Aert
7 Tadej Pogačar Simon Geschke
8 Wout van Aert Mattia Cattaneo
9 Bob Jungels Simon Geschke Thibaut Pinot
10 Magnus Cort Alberto Bettiol
11 Jonas Vingegaard Jonas Vingegaard Warren Barguil
12 Tom Pidcock Tom Pidcock
13 Mads Pedersen Mads Pedersen
14 Michael Matthews Michael Matthews
15 Jasper Philipsen Nils Politt
16 Hugo Houle Hugo Houle
17 Tadej Pogačar Brandon McNulty
18 Jonas Vingegaard Jonas Vingegaard[d] Wout van Aert
19 Christophe Laporte Quinn Simmons
20 Wout van Aert no award
21 Jasper Philipsen
Final Jonas Vingegaard Wout van Aert Jonas Vingegaard Tadej Pogačar Ineos Grenadiers Wout van Aert[58]
  1. ^ On stage 2, Wout van Aert, who was second in the points classification, wore the green jersey, because first placed Yves Lampaert wore the yellow jersey as the leader of the general classification.
  2. ^ On stages 7–11, Tom Pidcock, who was second in the young rider classification, wore the white jersey, because first placed Tadej Pogačar wore the yellow jersey as the leader of the general classification.
  3. ^ On stages 3–6, Fabio Jakobsen, who was second in the points classification, wore the green jersey, because first placed Wout van Aert wore the yellow jersey as the leader of the general classification.
  4. ^ On stages 19–21, Simon Geschke, who was second in the mountains classification, wore the polka dot jersey, because first placed Jonas Vingegaard wore the yellow jersey as the leader of the general classification.

Final classification standings

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Legend
  Denotes the leader of the general classification   Denotes the leader of the mountains classification
  Denotes the leader of the points classification   Denotes the leader of the young rider classification
  Denotes the leader of the team classification   Denotes the winner of the combativity award

General classification

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Final general classification (1–10)[59][60]
Rank Rider Team Time
1   Jonas Vingegaard (DEN)     Team Jumbo–Visma 79h 33' 20"
2   Tadej Pogačar (SLO)   UAE Team Emirates + 2' 43"
3   Geraint Thomas (GBR)   Ineos Grenadiers + 7' 22"
4   David Gaudu (FRA) Groupama–FDJ + 13' 39"
5   Aleksandr Vlasov[a] Bora–Hansgrohe + 15' 46"
DSQ   Nairo Quintana (COL)[56] Arkéa–Samsic + 16' 33"
6   Romain Bardet (FRA) Team DSM + 18' 11"
7   Louis Meintjes (RSA) Intermarché–Wanty–Gobert Matériaux + 18' 44"
8   Alexey Lutsenko (KAZ) Astana Qazaqstan Team + 22' 56"
9   Adam Yates (GBR)   Ineos Grenadiers + 24' 52"
10   Valentin Madouas (FRA) Groupama–FDJ + 35' 49"

Points classification

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Final points classification (1–10)[59][60]
Rank Rider Team Points
1   Wout van Aert (BEL)     Team Jumbo–Visma 480
2   Jasper Philipsen (BEL) Alpecin–Deceuninck 286
3   Tadej Pogačar (SLO)   UAE Team Emirates 250
4   Christophe Laporte (FRA) Team Jumbo–Visma 171
5   Fabio Jakobsen (NED) Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl Team 159
6   Mads Pedersen (DEN) Trek–Segafredo 158
7   Jonas Vingegaard (DEN)     Team Jumbo–Visma 157
8   Michael Matthews (AUS) Team BikeExchange–Jayco 133
9   Peter Sagan (SVK) Team TotalEnergies 120
10   Dylan Groenewegen (NED) Team BikeExchange–Jayco 116

Mountains classification

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Final mountains classification (1–10)[59][60]
Rank Rider Team Points
1   Jonas Vingegaard (DEN)     Team Jumbo–Visma 72
2   Simon Geschke (GER) Cofidis 65
3   Giulio Ciccone (ITA) Trek–Segafredo 61
4   Tadej Pogačar (SLO)   UAE Team Emirates 61
5   Wout van Aert (BEL)     Team Jumbo–Visma 59
6   Thibaut Pinot (FRA) Groupama–FDJ 52
7   Louis Meintjes (RSA) Intermarché–Wanty–Gobert Matériaux 39
8   Neilson Powless (USA) EF Education–EasyPost 37
9   Pierre Latour (FRA) Team TotalEnergies 35
10   Geraint Thomas (GBR)   Ineos Grenadiers 32

Young rider classification

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Final young rider classification (1–10)[59][60]
Rank Rider Team Time
1   Tadej Pogačar (SLO)   UAE Team Emirates 79h 36' 03"
2   Tom Pidcock (GBR)   Ineos Grenadiers + 58' 32"
3   Brandon McNulty (USA) UAE Team Emirates + 1h 28' 36"
4   Matteo Jorgenson (USA) Movistar Team + 1h 31' 14"
5   Andreas Leknessund (NOR) Team DSM + 1h 54' 48"
6   Michael Storer (AUS) Groupama–FDJ + 2h 20' 32"
7   Georg Zimmermann (GER) Intermarché–Wanty–Gobert Matériaux + 2h 36' 57"
8   Kevin Geniets (LUX) Groupama–FDJ + 2h 45' 25"
9   Fred Wright (GBR) Team Bahrain Victorious + 3h 01' 25"
10   Stan Dewulf (BEL) AG2R Citroën Team + 3h 26' 35"

Team classification

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Final team classification (1–10)[59][60]
Rank Team Time
1   Ineos Grenadiers   239h 03' 03"
2   Groupama–FDJ + 37' 33"
3   Team Jumbo–Visma + 44' 54"
4   Bora–Hansgrohe + 1h 48' 45"
5   Movistar Team + 2h 11' 22"
6   UAE Team Emirates + 2h 19' 54"
7   Team Bahrain Victorious + 2h 58' 32"
8   Team DSM + 3h 26' 08"
9   Arkéa–Samsic + 3h 56' 51"
10   Astana Qazaqstan Team + 3h 59' 00"

Notes

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a As of 1 March 2022, the UCI announced that cyclists from Russia and Belarus would no longer compete under the name or flag of those respective countries due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[61]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Route 2022". 26 July 2022. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  2. ^ Staff, Native News Online (26 July 2022). "Neilson Powless, Nairo Quintana show Indigenous Strength at the 2022 Tour de France". Yahoo News via Native News Online. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  3. ^ a b "Tour de France 2022: Team Selection" (PDF). Tour de France. 11 February 2022. Retrieved 12 March 2023.
  4. ^ "Officielt: Danmark skal afholde Tour de France-start". TV 2 Denmark. 20 February 2019. Archived from the original on 21 February 2019. Retrieved 20 February 2019.
  5. ^ Frattini, Kirsten (10 August 2020). "2021 Tour de France Grand Départ officially moves from Copenhagen to Brittany". cyclingnews.com. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  6. ^ "2022 TOUR DE FRANCE – ROUTE ANNOUNCEMENT – Tour de France 2022". www.letour.fr. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Robinson, Joe (14 October 2021). "Full route for the 2022 Tour de France announced". Cyclist. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  8. ^ "Official route of Tour de France 2022". Tour de France. Retrieved 14 October 2021.
  9. ^ CBS Sports Staff (30 June 2022). "Tour de France 2022 odds, field, predictions: Proven cycling expert locks in surprising picks, best bets". Retrieved 10 July 2022.
  10. ^ Whittle, Jeremy (1 July 2022). "Tour de France: Lampaert in yellow as Thomas rallies after clothing error". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  11. ^ Whittle, Jeremy (2 July 2022). "Jakobsen wins Tour stage two after late crash as Van Aert takes yellow". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  12. ^ Weislo, Laura (5 July 2022). "Cort breaks Tour de France consecutive mountain win record". Cycling News. Retrieved 24 July 2022.
  13. ^ Whittle, Jeremy (3 July 2022). "Dylan Groenewegen enjoys redemption to win stage three of Tour de France". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  14. ^ Whittle, Jeremy (5 July 2022). "Wout van Aert claims thrilling solo stage win to extend Tour de France lead". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  15. ^ Whittle, Jeremy (6 July 2022). "Tadej Pogacar rides through cobbles and chaos to lay down Tour gauntlet". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  16. ^ Whittle, Jeremy (7 July 2022). "Tadej Pogacar storms into yellow jersey with Tour de France stage six triumph". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  17. ^ a b Whittle, Jeremy (8 July 2022). "Pogacar pounces to win stage seven to La Super Planche des Belles Filles". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  18. ^ a b Whittle, Jeremy (9 July 2022). "Laengen's Covid departure a blow to Tadej Pogacar's Tour de France hopes". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  19. ^ Whittle, Jeremy (10 July 2022). "Battling Bob Jungels wins Tour de France stage but Pogacar keeps lead". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  20. ^ Becket, Adam (12 July 2022). "'We can no longer remain spectators of the ongoing climate disaster': Protestors force Tour de France stage 10 to be stopped". cyclingweekly.com. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  21. ^ Whittle, Jeremy (12 July 2022). "Tour de France officials drag protesters off the road during chaotic stage 10". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 July 2022. The stage breakaway and peloton were both halted until the road was cleared.
  22. ^ Nicholson, Kit (22 July 2022). "Protesters bring the Tour de France to a stop again, but are given no screen time". CyclingTips. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  23. ^ ""They're protesting about a good thing": Tour de France riders, organisers and journalists react to climate protest". road.cc. 13 July 2022. Retrieved 25 July 2022. Boulting then .. [described the 2019] landslide on the Col d'Iseran as "a symptom of the growing abnormal weather patterns in Europe and a result of the climate emergency. So the point [the protesters] were making is reasonably valid." His co-commentator and former pro David Millar replied: "I don't think anybody argues that – it's extremely valid."
  24. ^ Orr, Madeleine (27 July 2022). "Tour de France: future heatwaves may make it untenable to hold the race in July". The Conversation. Retrieved 27 July 2022. But if climate trends continue apace, it's only a matter of time before larger structural changes will be needed to safely host this event.
  25. ^ a b "Climate change is making the Tour de France more extreme". Washington Post. 24 July 2022. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  26. ^ ""They're protesting about a good thing": Tour de France riders, organisers and journalists react to climate protest". road.cc. 13 July 2022. Retrieved 27 July 2022. 2012 Tour de France winner Bradley Wiggins, reporting on the race for Eurosport and GCN, divided opinion online after describing the protest as "probably over nothing" and the demonstrators as "imbeciles".
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