Tour de France standings, results: Race outlook after Biniam Girmay wins Stage 8

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The 2024 Tour De France completes Stage 8 from Semur-En-Auxois to Colombey-les-Deux-Églises on wet terrain in gloomy, cloudy conditions on Saturday.

Sprinter Mads Pedersen was notably absence on the starting line in Stage 8 after leaving the race due to an injury he suffered in the fifth stage. The decision to abandon the race was supported by his team, UCI WorldTeam Lidl–Trek, as he struggled through Stages 6 and 7 with pain and swelling that did not improve with treatment. X-rays showed that there was no fracture and Pederson will now take time to rest before competing in the 2024 Paris Olympics.

Jonas Abrahamsen, also known as the king of the mountains, put in another impressive performance. Abrahamsen broke away early and maintained a comfortable lead for most of the race, despite the challenging weather conditions. However, after leading for 115 miles, the Norwegian was caught and dropped back in the field.

It was ultimately Biniam Girmay with Intermarche-Wanty who continued to make history, as he clinched his second win in Stage 8 after a fierce battle in the last half mile of the race.

2024 Tour de France Stage 8 results

  • Biniam Girmay (ERI) Intermarché - Wanty 4:04:50
  • Jasper Philipsen (BEL) Alpecin - Deceuninck
  • Arnaud De Lie (BEL) Lotto - Dstny
  • Pascal Ackermann (GER) Israel - Premier Tech
  • Marijn van den Berg (NED) EF Education - EasyPost
  • Ryan Gibbons (RSA) Lidl - Trek
  • Anthony Turgis (FRA) TotalEnergies
  • Fred Wright (GBR) Bahrain Victorious
  • Alex Aranburu (ESP) Movistar Team
  • Remco Evenepoel (BEL) Soudal - Quick-Step

Tour de France team standings

Tour de france jersey standings.

  • Yellow (general classification) : Tadej Pogacar
  • Green (points classification) : Biniam Girmay
  • Polka dot (mountains classification) : Jonas Abrahamsen
  • White (young rider classification) : Remco Evenepoel
  • Yellow numbers (teams classification) : Team UAE Team Emirates
  • Golden numbers (combativity award) : ---

Tour de France Stage 9: How to watch, schedule, and distance

  • Date: Sunday, July 9, 2024
  • Location: Troyes to Troyes (France)
  • Distance: 123 miles (199 kilometers)
  • Type: Hilly stage
  • Streaming: Peacock | Fubo (free trial)

How to watch: Catch the 2024 Tour de France FREE on Fubo

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Mads Pedersen wins Tour de France stage 8 in sprint to finish

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LIMOGES, France -- With Mark Cavendish out of the picture , former world champion Mads Pedersen claimed a second career stage win at the Tour de France on Saturday with a big burst of power to win a mass sprint.

Defending champion Jonas Vingegaard kept the yellow jersey after the 201-kilometer (125-mile) eighth stage from Libourne to Limoges in central France.

Pedersen proved the strongest in the long final stretch of road leading to the finish line and the Danish rider held off a late challenge from Jasper Philipsen, who had won all three previous sprints this year.

Wout Van Aert completed the stage podium in third.

The stage was marred by several crashes, including the one that ruled Cavendish out of the race. The ace sprinter hit the ground with 64 kilometers (40 miles) left while riding at the back of the peloton.

The British rider had finished second in Friday's stage after Philipsen denied him an outright record 35th Tour stage win. Cavendish equaled Eddy Merckx's record of 34 wins on the 2021 Tour, 13 years after his first success. Cavendish, who has never won the Tour, unlike five-time champion Merckx, will retire at the end of the season.

Vingegaard spent the day well protected by his Jumbo-Visma teammates and kept his 25-second lead over two-time champion Tadej Pogacar in the general classification. Jai Hindley remained in third place, 1 minute, 34 seconds off the pace.

The duel between Pogacar and Vingegaard is expected to resume during Sunday's ninth stage, which finishes with a spectacular climb to Puy-de-Dome, a famed volcanic crater in the Massif Central region of south-central France which last hosted a stage 35 years ago.

The mountain is part of the Tour lore and all cycling fans cherish the memorable duel to the summit between French rivals Jacques Anquetil and Raymond Poulidor back in 1964. Anquetil went on that year to become the first five-time Tour winner.

The first rest day follows in Clermont-Ferrand on July 10.

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Tour de france stage 8: mads pedersen wins as mark cavendish abandons, the dane beats jasper philipsen on a tough uphill drag to the line..

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Mads Pedersen rewarded the hard work of his Lidl-Trek team to notch up his first victory of the 2023 Tour de France on Saturday.

The former world champion beat three-time stage winner Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck) to the line in Limoges, going early in the uphill sprint and holding off the green jersey wearer.

Missing from the gallop was Mark Cavendish (Astana-Qazaqstan), who abandoned the race with a broken collarbone after crashing with just over 60km to go.

The hard terrain saw off several of the big-name sprinters and played into Pedersen’s hands. He jumped early from behind Wout van Aert (Jumbo-Visma), who had to put on the brakes when his leadout man Christophe Laporte was unable to peel off with Pedersen on his right and Mathieu van der Poel leading Philipsen on his left.

Philipsen tried desperately to pass Pedersen but the Dane had enough left to fend him off. Van Aert came back strongly before running out of road, netting third.

“When we passed [the line] I knew I won, but oh man it was a long sprint,” Pedersen said. “This uphill kick was really painful. I was this close [holds two fingers close together] to sitting down with 50 meters to go, but I think Jasper had to do a pretty good sprint to come from behind and make it that close as well. A tough one, but it doesn’t matter if you win with two meters or one centimeter.”

He was aggressive at the start of the stage but ended up reining it in and trying to save his energy for later.

“We didn’t know this morning if it would be breakaway or sprint. But it really looked like the sprinters’ teams didn’t want it to be a breakaway day. So we stayed calm and man, the boys did a perfect leadout today. Even with the long sprint I still had the legs to finish it off. It is really nice to win a stage faster [sooner] than stage 13.”

There was little change to the general classification, with many of the riders in the top ten staying as they were. However, Simon Yates (Jayco-AlUla) crashed with 5.9 kilometers remaining, as did Mikel Landa (Bahrain-Victorious). They trailed in 47 seconds back. Yates dropped from fourth to sixth, being passed by Carlos Rodríguez (Ineos Grenadiers) and his brother Adam Yates (UAE Team Emirates).

Landa slipped three places to 14th overall. Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) continues to lead overall, 25 seconds ahead of Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) and 1’34 up on Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe).

They will have a big clash on Sunday’s stage to the top of the Puy de Dome, which returns to the race for the first time in 35 years.

  • The dream is over: Mark Cavendish crashes out of final Tour de France

How it played out:

Stage 8 of the Tour de France was one which could have gone to either the sprinters or the rouleurs or, indeed, to the breakaway riders. The course from Libourne to Limoges was 200.7km in length and featured mainly flat roads early on, then much more rolling terrain in the final 75 kilometers.

This included a third-category climb and two fourth-category ascents, as well as a number of hills which weren’t allocated classification but which would drain already sore legs.

Given the potential for a break to succeed, there were a stream of attacks after the drop of the flag. Those trying early on included former world champions Rui Costa (Intermarché-Circus-Wanty) and Rui Costa (Intermarché-Circus-Wanty), Kasper Asgreen (Soudal-Quick Step) and Edvald Boasson-Hagen (TotalEnergies). Andrey Amador and Magnus Cort (EF Education-EasyPost) were also very active.

However, the trio to succeed were Tim Declercq (Soudal Quick-Step) Anthony Delaplace (Arkéa-Samsic) and Anthony Turgis (TotalEnergies), who moved clear after approximately 21km. They had five minutes heading into the day’s intermediate sprint, where Delaplace beat Turgis and Declercq.

Back in the peloton, Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck) reinforced his green jersey with fourth place, just ahead of Jordi Meeus and Danny van Poppel (both Bora-Hansgrohe), Mark Cavendish (Astana Qazaqstan) and Bryan Coquard (Cofidis).

The break moved onto the day’s category three climb, the Côte de Champs-Romain (km 130.4), where Turgis was first ahead of Declercq. There was big news with 61.2 kilometres left on the clock for the break, with Cavendish going down hard in the peloton and ending up out of the race.

He appeared to have damaged his shoulder, with formal medical diagnosis later confirming a fractured collarbone.

🇫🇷 RACE: @LeTour @MarkCavendish broke his right collarbone. Moreover because of the fracture an ostesynthesis screw in the acromioclavicular joint (being there since his crash in 2017 Tour de France) is loose. #TDF2023     #AstanaQazaqstanTeam — Astana Qazaqstan Team (@AstanaQazTeam) July 8, 2023

Lidl-Trek was leading the chase behind to try to help Pedersen. Kasper Asgreen (Soudal Quick-Step) attacked from the peloton with 37km to go and chased hard, but was hauled back 15km later. The gap at that point was down to 1’12, and dipped below a minute with 20km to go.

The fourth category Côte de Masmont saw Turgis push ahead of his breakaway companions and try to hold off the fast-closing peloton. He stayed clear until after the top of the fourth category Côte de Condat-sur-Vienne, but was caught with 8.2km to go.

The lumpy terrain had seen off sprinters such as Meeus, Alexander Kristoff (Uno-X Pro Cycling Team), Fabio Jakobsen (Soudal-QuickStep), Phil Bauhaus (Bahrain-Victorious), and Sam Welsford (Team DSM-Firmenich) and encouraged the attacking riders. Victor Campenaerts (Lotto Dstny) tried a move with 7.5km remaining and was chased by Fred Wright (Bahrain-Victorious), but neither got far before being hauled back.

Lidl-Trek led into the final kilometer, working for Pedersen. Jumbo-Visma swept through for Van Aert, then Matthieu Van der Poel launched to try to set up Philipsen. However Pedersen had too much oomph and held on for the win.

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Sprint | Montrond (46.9 km)

Points at finish, kom sprint (4) côte du maréchet (75.4 km), kom sprint (3) côte des rousses (101.3 km), kom sprint (4) col de pétra félix (136.9 km), kom sprint (3) côte du stade olympique (186.3 km), youth day classification, team day classification, race information.

tour de france 8

  • Date: 09 July 2022
  • Start time: 13:20
  • Avg. speed winner: 44.164 km/h
  • Classification: 2.UWT
  • Race category: ME - Men Elite
  • Distance: 186.3 km
  • Points scale: GT.A.Stage
  • UCI scale: UCI.WR.GT.A.Stage - TM2022
  • Parcours type:
  • ProfileScore: 87
  • Vertical meters: 2556
  • Departure: Dole
  • Arrival: Lausanne
  • Race ranking: 1
  • Startlist quality score: 1551
  • Won how: Sprint of small group
  • Avg. temperature: 23 °C

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Tour de France stage eight preview

All you need to know about the route, timings, and what to expect from stage eight

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Tour de France

Stage eight of the Tour de France 2022 starts in Dole and finishes in Lausanne.

Even though the stage passes through the heart of the Jura massif to reach the Swiss city of Lausanne, the peloton’s yellow jersey contenders and climbers will have to wait another 24 hours before a major mountain test. Instead, it appears this is another opportunity for the break to take a stage win.

When is stage eight of the Tour de France taking place?

The Tour de France stage eight takes place on Saturday, July 9, starting at 12:20 BST with an anticipated finish time of 16:40 BST. 

How long is stage eight of the Tour de France?

The Tour de France stage eight will be 186.3km long.

Tour de France stage eight: expected timings

Tour de france stage eight route.

Tour de France stage eight

From the Jura foothills the route climbs to the resort of Les Rousses, where Frenchman Lilian Calmejane was the stage victor in 2017, then travels along a plateau into neighbouring Switzerland. 

There’s a steady drop to the shore of Lake Geneva in Lausanne, then an intriguing climb to the finish next to the Olympic stadium. Extending to almost 5km, the most challenging section is the penultimate kilometre, which averages 9.5%. Beyond it, the last 800 metres keep dragging up to the line.

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Tour de France stage eight: what to expect 

This looks like another good opportunity for a breakaway to go the distance, although there are sure to be some teams that will want to keep the escapees within reach in order to set up their puncheurs for the challenging finale. It will be interesting to see how the GC teams respond in this contest. Some may be keen to assist the peloton’s pursuit if they sense there’s a chance to grab a stage win and some useful bonus seconds.

Tour de France stage eight: riders to watch

This is another enticing stage for riders who thrive in the hilly Classics, and particularly those who can deliver a sharp turn of finishing speed after a short but intense climb. Veteran Philippe Gilbert might like the look of this, while Bahrain’s Dylan Teuns has this season established himself as a force to be reckoned with on uphill finishes. Michael Matthews could be a threat if the peloton makes it to the finish en masse.

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Peter Cossins has been writing about professional cycling since 1993, with his reporting appearing in numerous publications and websites including Cycling Weekly ,  Cycle Sport  and  Procycling - which he edited from 2006 to 2009. Peter is the author of several books on cycling - The Monuments , his history of cycling's five greatest one-day Classic races, was published in 2014, followed in 2015 by  Alpe d’Huez , an appraisal of cycling’s greatest climb. Yellow Jersey - his celebration of the iconic Tour de France winner's jersey won the 2020 Telegraph Sports Book Awards Cycling Book of the Year Award.

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Tour de France Stage 8 Preview: Get Ready for a Technical Sprint Finish

The final hour or so will resemble a spring Classic during a stage that will no doubt end in another intense sprint finish.

110th tour de france 2023 stage 7

Stage 8 - Libourne to Limoges (200.7km) - Saturday, July 8

Stage 8 takes the 2023 Tour de France from Libourne to Limoges with a long stage with a jagged finale that looks like a perfect opportunity for the Tour’s breakaway specialists and Classics riders to win a stage.

The first two thirds of stage are rather gentle, with flat to rolling roads as the race heads northeast out of Libourne, who’s hosting the Tour for the fifth time this year. A breakaway should go early, but we won’t be surprised if the peloton keeps it in check as the final third of the stage is rather hilly, with three categorized climbs and several uncategorized ramps and hills.

So if the initial break is caught, expect another to go up the road–possibly on the Category 3 Côte de Champs-Romain, which the riders summit at about 70km from the finish line in Limoges. This climb marks the beginning of the hardest portion of the stage and if the initial break is caught, this is where a new, more powerful one, could pull away.

The final hour or so will resemble a spring Classic, with short, punchy climbs that could provide the perfect springboard for attacks from riders looking to win the stage. Two Category 4 climbs come in relatively quick succession inside the final 20km: the Côte de Masmont and the Côte de Condat-sur-Vienne at 16km and 9.3km to-go, respectively.

2023 tour de france stage 8 profile

The run-in to the finish line has some technical moments, with a few roundabouts and another tight loop-de-loop as the riders cross under and then over a bridge across the River Vienne at about 3km to-go. The final kilometer rises uphill all the way to the finish line, which means riders will need to time their final accelerations just right in the event of small group sprinting for the win together.

As far as the Tour’s GC battle is concerned , this isn’t expected to be a stage to produce any fireworks. But with a hilly finale and an uphill finish, don’t be surprised if Denmark’s Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) and Slovenia’s Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) take a few shots at one another on the road to Limoges.

Riders to watch

The finish of Stage 8 is perfect for the Tour’s Classics riders, men who can follow attacks on the climbs and hold their own in a small group sprint if no one’s able to get away. Slovenia’s Matej Mohorič (Bahrain Victorious) won a stage into Limoges in 2020, and the winner of last year’s Milan-Sanremo is the perfect type of rider for a stage like this one.

This could also be the day for Belgium’s Wout van Aert to finally snag a stage win (this year) after coming up short earlier in the week. He dropped off the back at the end of Stage 7, perhaps to keep himself fresh for a shot at Stage 8. And his nemesis, the Netherlands’ Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Deceuninck), will likely have a green light to play his own card after working so hard (and so well) for his teammate, Belgium’s Jasper Philipsen, during the Tour’s first few field sprints.

We’re also keeping on eye on Eritrea’s Biniam Girmay (Intermarché-Circus-Wanty)and Denmark’s Mad Pedersen (Lidl-Trek), who are strong enough to handle the climbs at the end of the stage and fast enough to win the sprint from a smaller group.

When to Watch

We’re expecting an exciting battle to win the stage, so we’ll be tuning in at about 10:30 a.m. EDT to watch it unfold. The race is expected to end around 11:20 a.m. EDT.

Since getting hooked on pro cycling while watching Lance Armstrong win the 1993 U.S. Pro Championship in Philadelphia, longtime Bicycling contributor Whit Yost has raced on Belgian cobbles, helped build a European pro team, and piloted that team from Malaysia to Mont Ventoux as an assistant director sportif. These days, he lives with his wife and son in Pennsylvania, spending his days serving as an assistant middle school principal and his nights playing Dungeons & Dragons.

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  1. As it happened: A challenging day ends in draggy bunch sprint on stage 8

    Hello and welcome to Cyclingnews live coverage of stage 8 of the 2024 Tour de France! 2024-07-06T09:48:05.520Z. It's all drama already at the Tour, as second-place green jersey contener Mads ...

  2. Tour de France standings, results after Stage 8

    The 2024 Tour De France completes Stage 8 from Semur-En-Auxois to Colombey-les-Deux-Églises on wet terrain in gloomy, cloudy conditions on Saturday.. Sprinter Mads Pedersen was notably absence on ...

  3. As it happened: Pedersen wins Tour de France stage 8 as Cavendish

    Mads Pedersen (Lidl-Trek) wins stage 8 of the 2023 Tour de France. Van der Poel did a great job, but Philipsen couldn't quite kick out of Pedersen's slipstream before he reached the line.

  4. Extended Highlights

    Discover the Stage 8 highlights More information on :https://www.letour.frhttps://www.facebook.com/letourhttps://twitter.com/letourhttps://www.instagram.com/...

  5. Tour de France 2024, Stage 8

    Watch highlights from Stage 8 of the 2024 Tour de France, where riders took on a 183.5-kilometer flat route from Semur-en-Auxois to Colombey-les-Deux-Églises...

  6. Mads Pedersen wins Tour de France stage 8 in sprint to finish

    The British rider had finished second in Friday's stage after Philipsen denied him an outright record 35th Tour stage win. Cavendish equaled Eddy Merckx's record of 34 wins on the 2021 Tour, 13 ...

  7. Stage 8 of the Tour de France 2024

    Powered by. Stage 8 of the Tour de France 2024. - 07/06/2024. Flat - Semur-en-Auxois > Colombey-les-deux-Églises - 183.4 km. Experience the passion of the Tour! Join the Tour de France Club free of charge to tune in on Radio Tour, vote for the Century 21 Combativity Award, discover exclusive videos and more. Commentary.

  8. Pedersen wins Tour de France mass sprint after Cavendish crashes

    LIMOGES, France (AP) — With Mark Cavendish out of the picture, former world champion Mads Pedersen claimed a second career stage win at the Tour de France on Saturday with a big burst of power to win a mass sprint.. Defending champion Jonas Vingegaard kept the yellow jersey after the 201-kilometer (125-mile) eighth stage from Libourne to Limoges in central France.

  9. Tour de France: Mads Pedersen beats Jasper Philipsen to win crash

    Mads Pedersen gave Lidl-Trek a dramatic sprint win on stage 8 of the Tour de France in a charged finish which saw him overpower Jasper Philipsen and Wout van Aert into the uphill finish in Limoges.

  10. Pedersen wins Tour de France stage eight as Vingegaard retains overall

    LIMOGES, France, July 8 (Reuters) - Denmark's Mads Pedersen won the eighth stage of the Tour de France, a 200-km ride from Libourne on Saturday.

  11. Tour de France stage 8: Mads Pedersen wins as Mark Cavendish ...

    The dream is over: Mark Cavendish crashes out of final Tour de France; How it played out: Stage 8 of the Tour de France was one which could have gone to either the sprinters or the rouleurs or, indeed, to the breakaway riders. The course from Libourne to Limoges was 200.7km in length and featured mainly flat roads early on, then much more ...

  12. Uphill Finish Sees Strong Sprinters Battle It Out!

    Highlights from stage 8 of the Tour de France 2023. Starting in Libourne and finishing in Limoges, this is a stage of two parts. The first 125km of this 200....

  13. Tour de France 2024: Girmay wins Stage Eight

    Live text updates of stage eight of the 2024 Tour de France as the race travels 183.4km from Semur-en-Auxois to Colombey-les-Deux-Eglises

  14. Tour de France 2023 Stage 8 results

    Stage 8 » Libourne › Limoges (200.7km) The time won/lost column displays the gains in time in the GC. Click on the time of any rider to view the relative gains on this rider. Mads Pedersen is the winner of Tour de France 2023 Stage 8, before Jasper Philipsen and Wout van Aert. Jonas Vingegaard was leader in GC.

  15. Tour de France 2022 Stage 8 results

    Stage 8 » Dole › Lausanne (186.3km) The time won/lost column displays the gains in time in the GC. Click on the time of any rider to view the relative gains on this rider. Wout van Aert is the winner of Tour de France 2022 Stage 8, before Michael Matthews and Tadej Pogačar. Tadej Pogačar was leader in GC.

  16. Stage 8 Preview of the 2024 Tour de France: Semur-en-Auxois to Colombey

    How to Watch Stage 8 of the Tour de France. You can stream Stage 8 of the 2024 Tour de France on NBC's Peacock ($5.99/month or $59.99/year). If you're looking for ad-free coverage, you'll ...

  17. Tour de France stage eight preview

    By Peter Cossins. published 8 July 2022. in News. Stage eight of the Tour de France 2022 starts in Dole and finishes in Lausanne. Even though the stage passes through the heart of the Jura massif ...

  18. Official website of Tour de France 2024

    Receive exclusive news about the Tour. Tour de France 2024 - Official site of the famed race from the Tour de France. Includes route, riders, teams, and coverage of past Tours.

  19. Watch Tour de France: Stage 8

    Tour de France: Stage 8. July 6 4h 35m Cycling. Cyclists embark on a 183.5km flat journey from Semur-en-Auxois to Colombey-les-Deux-Églises in Stage 8 of the 2024 Tour de France. Watch Replay. View All Sports. Stream new movies, hit shows, exclusive Originals, live sports, WWE, news, and more.

  20. Tour de France stage 8 Live

    Refresh. 2022-07-09T08:33:05.902Z. Hello and welcome to Cyclingnews' live coverage of stage 8 of the Tour de France. 2022-07-09T10:57:32.664Z. Today will take us 186km from Dole to Lausanne, you ...

  21. Tour de France 2023: Stage 8 Preview

    Stage 8 - Libourne to Limoges (200.7km) - Saturday, July 8. Stage 8 takes the 2023 Tour de France from Libourne to Limoges with a long stage with a jagged finale that looks like a perfect ...

  22. Tour de France 1989

    Le Tour de France 1989 est la 76 e édition du Tour de France, course cycliste qui s'est déroulée du 1 er juillet au 23 juillet 1989 sur 21 étapes pour 3 285 km.Le départ a lieu à Luxembourg ; l'arrivée se juge aux Champs-Élysées à Paris.C'est l'un des Tours les plus connus de l'histoire [1].Il a été remporté le dernier jour de course, à l'issue d'un contre-la-montre resté ...

  23. Resumen

    Tour de France - Site officiel de la célèbre course cycliste Le Tour de France. Contient les itinéraires, coureurs, équipes et les infos des Tours passés. Rendez-vous le 29 octobre pour la révélation des parcours du Tour de France et du Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift 2025.

  24. Tour de France 2022: Stage 8

    After the first climbing stage of the 2022 Tour de France, the riders race across the Jura mountains and along the coast of Lake Geneva for a hilly ride into...

  25. Tour de France

    O Tour de France (pronúncia em francês: [tuʁ də fʁɑ̃s]) (em português Volta à França em bicicleta (título em Portugal) ou Volta da França em ciclismo (título no Brasil)) ou simplesmente Tour, é uma competição anual de ciclismo de estrada realizada na França, disputada em etapas. [1] A corrida foi organizada pela primeira vez em 1903 para aumentar as vendas do jornal L' Auto ...

  26. Tour de Francia

    El Tour de Francia (oficialmente Tour de France), también conocido simplemente como el Tour, es una vuelta por etapas profesional de ciclismo en ruta disputada a lo largo de la geografía francesa —aunque suele transcurrir parcialmente por los países vecinos—.Tradicionalmente se celebra en julio [1] y pertenece al calendario UCI WorldTour, máxima categoría de las carreras profesionales.

  27. Tour de France stage 8

    Tour de France stage 8 - Live coverage | Cyclingnews. The World Centre of Cycling. All the action from the first mountain stage of the race.

  28. Band Apple Watch Hermès Single Tour 42 mm Attelage

    Single tour band in Etoupe Swift calfskin. ... Made in France. Band: Wrist size from 5.5" to 6.9" Product details. ... Oud Alezan Eau de parfum, $371 . Keep exploring. Band Apple Watch Hermès Double Tour 42 mm Hapi Attelage, Color: Orange , $659 .

  29. Foot amateur. Coupe de France : énorme test pour La ...

    Le VSF de La Ferté-Bernard (Régional 3) a une nouvelle fois hérité d'un gros morceau dès le 3e tour de la Coupe de la France avec la réception de l'US Changé 53 (Régional 1) ce ...

  30. Tour à épices bambou et 8 pots en verre

    Cette tour à épices est idéale si vous souhaitez faire du tri dans les placards de votre cuisine. Conservez vos épices dans ces 8 jolis pots en verre pour un effet visuel harmonieux. Pratique et esthétique, vous pourrez poser cette tour sur un plan de travail, une table ou une desserte et l'organiser comme bon vous semble pour toujours ...