Tour de France 2015 route

We list the stages of the official route of the Tour de France 2015, as well as taking a look at some of the key points of the race

  • Sign up to our newsletter Newsletter

tour de france 2015 pcs

The peloton on stage nineteen of the 2014 Tour de France

The official route of the Tour de France 2015

The 102nd Tour de France began for the 21st time outside of France, in the city of Utrecht in the Netherlands.

>>> Your guide to the 2015 Tour de France in Utrecht (video)

Stage one was a short 13.7km individual time trial within Utrecht, which was won by BMC's Rohan Dennis in a record-breaking time .

The first week of 2015 Tour had a very classics feel to it, with stage three finishing for the first time ever on the climb that culminates  La Fleche Wallonne , the Mur de Huy. Cobbles featured for the second year in succession, although drier weather this year meant less mayhem for the front-runners than in 2014. Meanwhile, the Mûr-de-Bretagne provided a tough uphill finish to stage eight.

An unusually late team time trial on stage nine led into the first race day. After that, serious GC racing will begin after on stage 10, with the 2015 Tour's first summit finish atop La Pierre Saint-Martin, which features for the first time in the race's history.

Three days in the Pyrenees (July 14-16) were followed by a series of transition days across the southern edge of the Massif Central (July 17-19) which included a finish on the fast and punchy ‘Montee Laurent Jalabert’ above Mende.

After Alpine summit finishes at Pra Loup and La Toussuire (where Chris Froome fatefully attacked Bradley Wiggins in 2012), the penultimate day of the race was a short stage of 110km ending on Alpe d’Huez.

Get The Leadout Newsletter

The latest race content, interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, direct to your inbox!

As ever, the Tour finished on the Champs-Élysées in Paris for the sprinters' showdown which was won, almost inevitably, by Andre Greipel (Lotto-Soudal) as the German claimed his fourth victory of this year's race.

Tour de France 2015 stages

Stage 1: Saturday July 4, Utrecht – Utrecht (Ned) (ITT) 13.7km

Tour de France profile stage 1_2

Tour de France profile stage 1_2

This flat 13.7km individual time trial is the only one to feature in this year's Tour. It was won in an eye-wateringly fast time by BMC's Rohan Dennis , who claimed the race leader's yellow jersey to continue an impressive start to 2015 .

Stage one highlights:

 Stage 2: Sunday July 5, Utrecht – Neeltje Jans (Ned) 166km

Tour de France profile stage 2

Tour de France profile stage 2

This flat stage was earmarked from the start as one that could be difficult in strong winds — and the weather gave the fans ( if not the riders ) exactly what they wanted. Andre Greipel sprinted to the stage win , but the big winners were Fabian Cancellara, whose time bonus for finishing third was enough to hand him the yellow jersey, and Chris Froome and Alberto Contador , who opened up more than a minute's advantage over Nairo Quintana and Vincenzo Nibali.

Stage two highlights:

Stage 3: Monday July 6, Antwerp – Huy (Bel) 154km

Tour de France profile stage 3

Tour de France 2015 profile stage 3

Stage three's finish on the Mur de Huy climb, the climax to the course of Spring Classic La Flèche Wallonne, was always likely to be a significant moment in the early portion of the race. Chris Froome produced a memorable surge to finish second on the stage and take the overall yellow jersey.

Stage three highlights:

Stage 4: Tuesday July 7, Seraing – Cambrai (Fra) 221km

Tour de France profile stage 4

Tour de France profile stage 4

The Classics-style fourth stage featured seven secteurs of cobbles across an epic 223.5km route that's the longest of this year's Tour. It didn't quite live up to the mayhem of last year's brutal cobbled stage, but the image of Tony Martin breaking free to finally claim the yellow jersey of 2015's race put a smile on the faces of cycling fans everywhere.

Stage four highlights:

 Stage 5: Wednesday July 8, Cambrai – Amiens 189km

Tour de France profile stage 5

Tour de France profile stage 5

André Greipel (Lotto-Soudal) took his second stage win of the Tour on the flat stage to Amiens, beating the likes of Peter Sagan (Tinkoff-Saxo) and Mark Cavendish (Etixx - Quick-Step). It was another stressful day of the Tour for the riders, blighted by wind, rain and crashes.

Stage five highlights:

Stage 6: Thursday July 9, Amiens – Le Havre 191km

Tour de France profile stage 6

Tour de France profile stage 6

Zdenek Stybar (Etixx-Quick-Step) took the win on the small climb to the finish of stage six, but the headlines went to teammate and race leader Tony Martin, who fell in the final kilometre and suffered a suspected broken collarbone.

Stage six highlights:

 Stage 7: Friday July 10, Livarot – Fougères 190km

Tour de France profile stage 7

Tour de France profile stage 7

Mark Cavendish (Etixx - Quick-Step) took his first victory at the Tour de France since 2013, after coming from behind to sprint past his rivals André Greipel and Peter Sagan to the line, on the final flat stage of the Tour before Paris.

Stage seven highlights:

Stage 8: Saturday July 11, Rennes - Mûr-de-Bretagne 179km

Tour de France profile stage 8

Tour de France profile stage 8

The tough category three climb at Mûr-de-Bretagne was always likely to test the GC contenders, and it was inevitable that someone would lose time on the leaders. In the event, Vincenzo Nibali (Astana) lost 10 seconds to Froome in yellow as Alexis Vouillermoz took the stage win.

Stage eight highlights:

Stage 9: Sunday July 12, Vannes – Plumelec 28km

Tour de France profile stage 9_2

Tour de France profile stage 9

Such a late team trial was inevitably tricky for teams with riders already out of the race , and it was world champions BMC Racing who lived up to their billing as favourites with the stage win. Team Sky, however, were only a second behind, allowing Froome to hold onto the yellow jersey as the race prepares to head into the mountains for the first time.

Stage nine highlights:

Rest day: Monday July 13, Pau

Stage 10:  Tuesday July 14, Tarbes – La Pierre Saint-Martin 167km

Tour de France profile stage 10

Tour de France profile stage 10

Chris Froome stretched out a commanding lead on the first summit finish of the Tour on the new climb of La Pierre Saint-Martin on stage 10, putting minutes into all his rivals. The Sky leader attacked with 6.3km on the final climb with teammate Richie Porte coming in second behind the victorious Froome. Tejay van Garderen (BMC) remained second in GC, but his 12 second gap had become almost three minutes.

Stage ten highlights:

Stage 11: Wednesday July 15, Pau – Cauterets 188km

Tour de France profile stage 11

Tour de France profile stage 11

Rafal Majka (Tinkoff-Saxo) took victory on the mammoth stage 11 taking in the climbs of Aspin, Tourmalet and Cauterets. The Pole made his move from the day's main break up the breakaway, and comfortably soloed home on the 188k route to take his third ever stage win in the Tour. Chris Froome (Team Sky) retained the yellow jersey once again, while Vincenzo Nibali (Astana) lost even more time in what's turning into a disastrous Tour for the Italian champion .

Stage 11 highlights:

Stage 12: Thursday July 16, Lannemazen – Plateau de Beille 195km

Tour de France profile stage 12

Tour de France profile stage 12

On what was widely regarded as the Queen Stage of this year's race, stage 12 was not the explosive GC battle it may have been. Joaquim Rodriguez took a solo stage victory on Plateau de Beille, a 15.8km climb that has almost 1800m of ascent, as the overall contenders all arrived together 6-47 later. Thanks in no small part to the work of Sky teammate Geraint Thomas, Chris Froome retained the yellow jersey by the same margin over his nearest rivals.

Stage 12 highlights:

Stage 13: Friday July 17, Muret – Rodez 200km

Tour de France profile stage 13

Tour de France profile stage 13

Peter Sagan finished second for the fourth time this Tour as he missed out on the stage victory to Greg Van Avermaet . The breakaway was caught with less than 1km to go, and a large peloton containing most of the main sprinters hit the last climb up to the finish at Rodez.

As Van Avermaet pushed on for the finish line, Sagan sat on his wheel and many would have expected him to round the Belgian and take the win, but the BMC man proved too strong.

Chris Froome finished in sixth and comfortably retained the leader's yellow jersey.

Stage 13 highlights:

Stage 14: Saturday July 18, Rodez – Mende-Montée Laurent Jalabert 175km

Tour de France profile stage 14

Tour de France profile stage 14

A brutal climb to the finish in Mende – 3km at 10.1 per cent – gave the anticipated fireworks on a wonderfully exciting stage. A twenty-man breakaway was allowed to escape fairly early, and just when it looked as if the finale would come down to a two-way battle between Thibaut Pinot (FDJ) and Romain Bardet (AG2R), in slipped Steve Cummings (MTN-Qhubeka) to deliver MTN's first ever Tour stage win … on Mandela Day to boot. Behind the breakaway, Chris Froome put yet another second into Nairo Quintana, even as the Colombian moved up into second place.

Stage 14 highlights:

Stage 15: Sunday July 19, Mende – Valence 182km

Tour de France profile stage 15

Tour de France profile stage 15

German sprinter André Greipel (Lotto-Soudal) took his third stage win of the 2015 race after the day's escape group were caught to set up a bunch sprint finish. Greipel won ahead of John Degenkolb (Giant-Alpecin) and Alexander Kristoff (Katusha) to claim his ninth Tour stage victory since 2011. Froome safely retained the race lead on a day where the overall contenders were happy for the sprinters to occupy the limelight.

Stage 15 highlights:

Stage 16: Monday July 20, Bourg-de-Péage – Gap 201km

Tour de France profile stage 16

Tour de France profile stage 16

Ruben Plaza (Lampre-Merida) took a first Tour de France stage victory after making a solo break on the Col de Manse on stage 16, as Peter Sagan (Tinkoff-Saxo) recorded a fifth second-place result of the race.

Chris Froome (Team Sky) retained the overall lead after his rivals pushed the pace on the descent of the final categry two climb, with Vincenzo Nibali (Astana) claiming back a handful of seconds as he tries to restore some pride in what has been a dismal Tour campaign for the Italian.

The biggest drama came as Geraint Thomas (Team Sky) crashed off the road on the descent , with Warren Barguil (Giant-Alpecin) running into the side of the Thomas as the Frenchman tried to overtake on a right hand bend.

Rest day: Tuesday July 21, Gap/Digne-les-Bains

Stage 17: Wednesday July 22, Digne-les-Bains – Pra-Loup (via the Col des Champs) 161km

Tour de France profile stage 17

Tour de France profile stage 17

A very mountainous day for the riders, that ended on the climb where Eddy Merckx effectively lost the 1975 Tour de France to Pra Loup. Chris Froome (Team Sky) successfully defended his 3-10 lead over Nairo Quintana (Movistar) as Giant-Alpecin's Simon Geschke soloed to victory from the day's breakaway.

The stage saw third place Tejay van Garderen (BMC) abandon the Tour after struggling with illness, while Alberto Contador (Tinkoff-Saxo) lost a further two minutes on his rivals after crashing on the descent of the Col d'Allos.

Stage 18: Thursday July 23, Gap – Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne 185km

Tour de France profile stage 18

Tour de France profile stage 18

The breakaway stuck it out to the end for the sixth time in the Tour's last eight stages, as Romain Bardet (Ag2r-La Mondiale) soloed away from his fellow escapees 40km from home atop the Col du Glandon to glory.

The Frenchman held out over the aesthetically pleasing Lacets de Montvernier climb to take a famous victory ahead of compatriot Pierre Rolland (Europcar).

Meanwhile Chris Froome (Team Sky) wasn't called on too much by his GC rivals, holding on to his yellow jersey lead as he crossed the line with the likes of Nario Quintana and Alejandro Valverde of Movistar.

Stage 19: Friday July 24, Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne – La Toussuire 138km

Tour de France profile stage 19

Tour de France profile stage 19

The 19th stage of the 2015 Tour de France saw race leader Chris Froome (Team Sky) in real trouble for the first in the race, as he struggled to match the pace of Movistar's Nairo Quintana on the final climb to La Toussuire, with the Colombian taking 30 seconds out of the Brit's 3-10 lead going into the final mountain stage to Alpe d'Huez on Saturday.

No-one could catch 2014 Tour champion Vincenzo Nibali (Astana) on the third day in the Alps, as the Italian broke away on the Col de la Croix de Fer to solo up the final climb to stage victory .

Stage 19 highlights:

Stage 20: Saturday July 25, Modane – L’Alpe d’Huez 110km

TDF15_ETAP_20_PROFIL

An outstanding day's racing and a supreme display of climbing prowess saw Nairo Quintana push Chris Froome all the way - and even though the Colombian beat the Brit on the day, it was enough to seize the yellow jersey. Frenchman Thibaut Pinot won the stage and Quintana ate 1-20 minute out of Froome's overall lead - but Froome still has a 1-12 minute advantage with only the procession into Paris left in this year's race.

Stage 20 highlights:

Stage 21: Saturday July 26, Sèvres - Champs-Élysées, Paris 107km

Tour de France profile stage 21

Tour de France profile stage 21

Where else would the Tour finish? As Chris Froome enjoyed his ceremonial victory ride into Paris, the sprinters geared themselves up for one last daredevil finish — and it was Andre Greipel who claimed his fourth win of this year's Tour with a typically muscular finish.

Stage 21 highlights: 

Tour de France 2015 

Thank you for reading 20 articles this month* Join now for unlimited access

Enjoy your first month for just £1 / $1 / €1

*Read 5 free articles per month without a subscription

Join now for unlimited access

Try first month for just £1 / $1 / €1

Founded in 1891, Cycling Weekly and its team of expert journalists brings cyclists in-depth reviews, extensive coverage of both professional and domestic racing, as well as fitness advice and 'brew a cuppa and put your feet up' features. Cycling Weekly serves its audience across a range of platforms, from good old-fashioned print to online journalism, and video.

Kristen Faulkner at the Tour of Flanders, with social media posts overlaid

There's a lot of love for Kasia Niewiadoma, and it turns out Norwegians are good in bad weather

By Adam Becket Published 19 April 24

Juan Pedro López doing kick-ups with a football

'My coach said to do it for Betis,' says Spaniard of his boyhood football club

By Tom Davidson Published 19 April 24

Useful links

  • Tour de France
  • Giro d'Italia
  • Vuelta a España

Buyer's Guides

  • Best road bikes
  • Best gravel bikes
  • Best smart turbo trainers
  • Best cycling computers
  • Editor's Choice
  • Bike Reviews
  • Component Reviews
  • Clothing Reviews
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Advertise with us

Cycling Weekly is part of Future plc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site . © Future Publishing Limited Quay House, The Ambury, Bath BA1 1UA. All rights reserved. England and Wales company registration number 2008885.

tour de france 2015 pcs

  • Season Calendar 2015
  • Tour de France
  • General Classification

Search Rider

Search team, search race, tour de france 2015  |  general classification    .

102nd edition General classification 4 July 2015 - 26 July 2015
  • Race Stages
  • Tour de France History
  • Previous year

2015 Tour de France map

Full route of 102nd edition

tour de france 2015 pcs

no copy in legacy cms

tour de france 2015 pcs

Thank you for reading 5 articles in the past 30 days*

Join now for unlimited access

Enjoy your first month for just £1 / $1 / €1

*Read any 5 articles for free in each 30-day period, this automatically resets

After your trial you will be billed £4.99 $7.99 €5.99 per month, cancel anytime. Or sign up for one year for just £49 $79 €59

tour de france 2015 pcs

Try your first month for just £1 / $1 / €1

Get The Leadout Newsletter

The latest race content, interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, direct to your inbox!

Tour de Suisse Women 2024 route

Tour de Suisse 2024 route

Tadej Pogačar missing Evenepoel as he prepares to battle Van der Poel at Liège-Bastogne-Liège

Most popular, latest on cyclingnews.

Tadej Pogačar missing Evenepoel as he prepares to battle Van der Poel at Liège-Bastogne-Liège

Mathieu van der Poel's 'batteries recharged' for battle with Pogačar in Liège-Bastogne-Liège

‘The pain is getting less and less’ - Remco Evenepoel optimistic after Itzulia crash

‘The pain is getting less and less’ - Remco Evenepoel optimistic after Itzulia crash

Geraint Thomas heading to Monte Grappa on Saturday to recon Giro d'Italia stage 20

Geraint Thomas heading to Monte Grappa on Saturday to recon Giro d'Italia stage 20

tour de france 2015 pcs

The Road Bikes of the 2015 Tour de France

These 22 road bikes, each used by a Tour de France team, are the fastest, lightest, best-handling models ever made

this image is not available

Bretagne-Séché Environnement

this image is not available

It’s a bit strange to see an Italian bike company sponsoring a French team. But for the past five years, the relationship has been a good one for Colnago and Europcar. Colnago provides Europcar’s riders with several framesets from which to choose, including this C60 , the only carbon frame still made entirely in Italy. Campagnolo Super Record EPS components and Bora Ultra carbon wheels, Selle Italia saddles, and Deda handlebars and stems complete the team’s all-Italian build.

Ag2r la Mondiale

Ag2r has been riding Germany’s Focus Izalco  since 2013, but after spending three years on Campagnolo components and Fulcrum wheels, the team switched to SRAM components and Zipp wheels for 2015. The French team is actually the only squad in this year’s Tour using SRAM components and Zipp wheels . Each rider’s Izalco Max road frame was built with what appears to be a production-ready version of SRAM’s yet-to-be-released and “no-we’re-not-talking-about-it” wireless electronic drivetrain.

Lotto-Soudal

Ridley makes several frames available to its riders for road stages, including this retro-looking Helium SL, the bike of choice for breakaway specialist Thomas De Gendt. While the paint harks back to the days of lugged steel, this frameset is designed to be one of the lightest in the peloton, which is perfect for a KOM-chaser like De Gendt. Team bikes also come with  Campagnolo Super Record EPS components and Bora Ultra carbon wheels, Continental tires, and Deda handlebars, stems, and seat posts.

Of the three teams sponsored by Specialized in this year’s Tour de France, Astana is the only one riding Campagnolo Super Record components. It’s also the only squad riding wheels made by Corima, a French company that made its name building wheels for track cyclists in the 1990s. The bike pictured here is built with Corima’s 47mm MCC S+ wheelset. Each wheel has 12 carbon spokes—bladed spokes in the front for aerodynamics, and conical spokes in the rear for stiffness. The resulting wheel is light, aerodynamic , and expensive.

BMC is taking the “If it ain’t broke don’t fix it” approach to its bikes for the 2015 Tour de France by using bikes that have remained essentially unchanged since Cadel Evans won the 2011 Tour. Every member of the team, including Tejay van Garderen  until he abandoned, is using BMC’s top-of-the-line Team Machine SLR01 with Shimano Dura Ace Di2 components and C50 wheels. As seen here, van Garderen prefers an anatomic bend for his 3T handelbars, a trend we saw on about two thirds of the bikes in this year’s Tour.

Cannondale-Garmin

Cannondale-Garmin riders are aboard the brand-new Cannondale SuperSix Evo , a bike that was officially released just days before the Tour began in Utrecht . Cannondale completely re-designed the SuperSix to be stiffer, more compliant, and more aerodynamic than the previous iteration. Shimano Dura Ace components, Mavic wheels, FSA bars, stems, and seat posts, and Fizik saddles complete the build.

From 1994 to 2013, Orbea had been one of the longest-standing bike sponsors in the professional peloton. But when the orange-clad Euskaltel-Euskadi team collapsed at the end of 2013, the Basque company was left without a team to support. Luckily, after signing a two-year deal with France’s Cofidis squad this past off-season, Orbea and its newest version of the popular Orca frameset is back in the Tour.

First spotted at May’s Tour of Italy, the redesigned Lapierre Xelius SL is the choice of FDJ’s riders at the Tour de France . The “SL” indicates that it’s lighter than the original Xelius. But it’s also more comfortable thanks to an innovative design that separates the bike’s seat stays from the seat tube, allowing for a bit of flex to make the bike more compliant. An interesting note: The bike’s right chain stay lists Schwalbe as the team’s tire sponsor, but most riders used Vittoria tubulars instead.

IAM Cycling

IAM Cycling has been riding Scott bikes since the team was launched in 2013. At this year’s Tour, the team is riding three models for the road stages: the Addict , the original Foil, and a new version of the Foil released just before the start of the race. More aerodynamic than the original Foil, the new model features seat stays and fork blades that have been re-designed to maximize airflow. The Swiss team is also the only squad in the Tour to ride wheels built by DT Swiss (although DT hubs can be found on wheels made by several other companies).

Katusha is one of two teams sponsored by Canyon in this year’s Tour, and most of its riders choose the Aeroad CF SLX for road stages. The Aeroad’s down tube and seat tube have been designed to be as aerodynamic as possible, with the seat tube shaped to follow the contour of the rear wheel as closely as possible. Team riders run Shimano Dura Ace Di2 components and Mavic wheels.

Lampre-Merida

The only Italian squad in this year’s Tour de France , Lampre-Merida gives its riders two bikes to choose from: the Merida Reacto EVO aero-road bike and the new Scultura seen here. One of the lightest frames in the peloton, it’s constructed using more than 400 pieces of carbon fiber in an attempt to keep weight low without sacrificing stiffness or comfort. The team uses Shimano’s Dura Ace Di2 components, but pairs them with Rotor’s 3D+ crankset and chainrings. The top of the fork on this bike hasn’t been cut yet, an indication that the rider hasn’t finished fine-tuning his position on the new frame.

Etixx—Quick-Step

Etixx—Quick-Step riders can choose either the Specialized Venge or Tarmac for the Tour’s road stages. The Tarmac pictured here belongs to World Champion Michal Kwiatkowski, who recently abandoned the race. “Kwiato” usually rides a white Tarmac with custom paint that matches his rainbow jersey, but the paint adds extra weight. Although the weight savings is minimal, Kwiato rode the standard-issue team frameset on hillier days during the Tour.

Tinkoff-Saxo

Roman Kreuziger is one of Alberto Contador’s most trusted support riders, and like his Spanish captain, he rides Specialized’s Tarmac during the Tour’s road stages. Like the rest of his team his bike has Shimano components, Roval wheels, and FSA handlebars, stems, seatposts, and crankset. The team is also one of several in this year’s Tour using Prologo saddles, a newer Italian company that’s quickly gaining popularity in the pro peloton.

Team Sky rides the Pinarello F8 , which debuted prior to last year’s  Tour de France . The model represents the Italian company’s attempt at creating a bike that’s perfect for both flat and mountain stages. Shimano provides the team with Dura Ace Di2 components, Dura Ace carbon wheelsets, and PRO handlebars and stems. The team sources its own tires because it doesn’t want to be limited by what a sponsor provides. We saw wheels with tires by Veloflex, FMB, and Continental at the team’s hotel prior to the start of the Tour.

One of the smallest bikes in the Tour de France , Nairo Quintana’s Canyon Ultimate CF SLX is also one of the lightest. The Colombian’s bike is built with Campagnolo’s Super Record EPS electronic drivetrain and Bora Ultimate carbon wheels. The team uses power meters made by Power2Max, and Quintana’s is engraved to honor his victory in the 2014 Giro d’Italia.

Giant-Alpecin

Shortly before the start of the Tour, Giant released the new TCR Advanced SL frameset. It’s designed to be lighter, stiffer, and more agile than its predecessor—all traits that make it an ideal option for the riders of Giant-Alpecin. Shimano was the team's first title sponsor, so it makes sense that the squad still uses Dura Ace Di2 components and wheels, as well as PRO stems, handlebars, and saddles. The team uses 25mm tires from Vittoria, in keeping with the “wider is better” tire trend we noticed while wandering the pits before each stage.

Orica-GreenEDGE

Like IAM Cycling, Australia’s Orica-GreenEDGE rides Scott bikes and and brought the new Foil for a few of its riders at the Tour. Unfortunately, this bike didn’t make it too far: It belongs to Simon Gerrans, who fractured his wrist in a crash during Stage 3. Orica’s also gone all in with Shimano, so the team rides Dura Ace Di2 electronic components, Dura Ace C50 and C35 carbon wheelsets, and PRO handlebars and stems. Fizik saddles and Continental tubular tires put the finishing touches on the team’s Tour de France build.

LottoNL-Jumbo

The Dutch LottoNL-Jumbo squad has been riding Bianchi frames since last season. For road stages, the riders are using the latest version of Bianchi’s top-of-the-line racing frameset, the Oltre XR2. Despite the bike’s Italian origins, the team uses Shimano’s Dura Ace Di2 components and C50 and C35 wheels, along with Vittoria tires and FSA cockpits.

Trek Factory Racing

Bauke Mollema and the riders of Trek Factory Racing all have the completely re-designed Trek Madone for the Tour’s flatter stages. In the mountains, many of them switch to the lighter Emonda, a bike that was released prior to last year’s Tour. The team uses Shimano Dura Ace Di2 components along with Bontrager wheels, handlebars, stems, and saddles. Veloflex is the team’s choice for tires, although we spotted some bikes mounted with handmade FMB tubulars for the cobbles of Stage 4.

.css-1t6om3g:before{width:1.75rem;height:1.75rem;margin:0 0.625rem -0.125rem 0;content:'';display:inline-block;-webkit-background-size:1.25rem;background-size:1.25rem;background-color:#F8D811;color:#000;background-repeat:no-repeat;-webkit-background-position:center;background-position:center;}.loaded .css-1t6om3g:before{background-image:url(/_assets/design-tokens/bicycling/static/images/chevron-design-element.c42d609.svg);} Racing

109th liege bastogne liege 2023 mens elite

La Flèche Wallonne 2024 Results

ncl invitational miami

NCL Leaves Riders and Staff in Limbo

79th omloop het nieuwsblad 2024 men's elite

Is Matteo Jorgenson Too Tall to Win a Grand Tour?

106th giro d'italia 2023 stage 21

2024 Giro d’Italia | 6 Reasons to Be Psyched

63rd itzulia basque country 2024 stage 3

Jonas Vingegaard-Hansen Released from Hospital

a group of cyclists riding on gravel

2024 Life Time Grand Prix | Faves & How to Watch

a group of people posing for a photo

Swenson and De Crescenzo Win Levi's Gran Fondo

cycling 82nd la fleche wallonne 2018

La Flèche Wallonne 2024 | How to Watch & More

cycling ronde van vlaanderen race men

Patrick Lefevere Apologizes for Sexist Remarks

10th amstel gold race ladies edition 2024

2024 Amstel Gold Race Results

121st paris roubaix 2024

Sénéchal Sparks Controversy with Bianchi Critique

  • Tour de France
  • Giro d'Italia
  • La Vuelta ciclista a España
  • World Championships
  • Amstel Gold Race
  • Milano-Sanremo
  • Tirreno-Adriatico
  • Liège-Bastogne-Liège
  • Il Lombardia
  • La Flèche Wallonne
  • Paris - Nice
  • Paris-Roubaix
  • Volta Ciclista a Catalunya
  • Critérium du Dauphiné
  • Tour des Flandres
  • Gent-Wevelgem in Flanders Fields
  • Clásica Ciclista San Sebastián
  • INEOS Grenadiers
  • Groupama - FDJ
  • EF Education-EasyPost
  • Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale Team
  • BORA - hansgrohe
  • Bahrain - Victorious
  • Astana Qazaqstan Team
  • Intermarché - Wanty
  • Lidl - Trek
  • Movistar Team
  • Soudal - Quick Step
  • Team dsm-firmenich PostNL
  • Team Jayco AlUla
  • Team Visma | Lease a Bike
  • UAE Team Emirates
  • Arkéa - B&B Hotels
  • Alpecin-Deceuninck
  • Grand tours
  • Countdown to 3 billion pageviews
  • Favorite500
  • Profile Score
  • Stage winners
  • All stage profiles
  • Race palmares
  • Complementary results
  • Finish photo
  • Contribute info
  • Contribute results
  • Contribute site(s)
  • Results - Results
  • Info - Info
  • Live - Live
  • Game - Game
  • Stats - Stats
  • More - More
  •   »  

Race information

tour de france 2015 pcs

  • Date: 18 July 2021
  • Start time: 16:30
  • Avg. speed winner: 40.748 km/h
  • Race category: ME - Men Elite
  • Distance: 108.4 km
  • Points scale: GT.A.Stage
  • UCI scale: UCI.WR.GT.A.Stage - TM2022
  • Parcours type:
  • ProfileScore: 14
  • Vert. meters: 699
  • Departure: Chatou
  • Arrival: Paris Champs-Élysées
  • Race ranking: 1
  • Startlist quality score: 1646
  • Won how: Sprint of large group
  • Avg. temperature:

Grand Tours

  • Vuelta a España

Major Tours

  • Volta a Catalunya
  • Tour de Romandie
  • Tour de Suisse
  • Itzulia Basque Country
  • Milano-SanRemo
  • Ronde van Vlaanderen

Championships

  • European championships

Top classics

  • Omloop Het Nieuwsblad
  • Strade Bianche
  • Gent-Wevelgem
  • Dwars door vlaanderen
  • Eschborn-Frankfurt
  • San Sebastian
  • Bretagne Classic
  • GP Montréal

Popular riders

  • Tadej Pogačar
  • Wout van Aert
  • Remco Evenepoel
  • Jonas Vingegaard
  • Mathieu van der Poel
  • Mads Pedersen
  • Primoz Roglic
  • Demi Vollering
  • Lotte Kopecky
  • Katarzyna Niewiadoma
  • PCS ranking
  • UCI World Ranking
  • Points per age
  • Latest injuries
  • Youngest riders
  • Grand tour statistics
  • Monument classics
  • Latest transfers
  • Favorite 500
  • Points scales
  • Profile scores
  • Reset password
  • Cookie consent

About ProCyclingStats

  • Cookie policy
  • Contributions
  • Pageload 0.0921s

Tour de France 2015: Riders and teams

Tour de France 2015

Tour de France 2015: Route maps, height profiles, and more

Click on the images to zoom

Tour de France 2015: All stages - source: letour.fr

More about the Tour de France

Tour de france 2015: withdrawals.

Tour de France 2015 Withdrawals

Tour de France

  • Stages - Results
  • Previous winners
  • Football Home
  • Fixtures - Results
  • Premier League
  • Champions League
  • Europa League
  • All Competitions
  • All leagues
  • Snooker Home
  • World Championship
  • UK Championship
  • Major events
  • Olympics Home
  • Tennis Home
  • Calendar - Results
  • Australian Open
  • Roland-Garros
  • Mountain Bike Home
  • UCI Track CL Home
  • Men's standings
  • Women's standings
  • Cycling Home
  • Race calendar
  • Vuelta a España
  • Giro d'Italia
  • Dare to Dream
  • Alpine Skiing Home
  • Athletics Home
  • Diamond League
  • World Championships
  • World Athletics Indoor Championships
  • Biathlon Home
  • Cross-Country Skiing Home
  • Cycling - Track
  • Equestrian Home
  • Figure Skating Home
  • Formula E Home
  • Calendar - results
  • DP World Tour
  • MotoGP Home
  • Motorsports Home
  • Speedway GP
  • Clips and Highlights
  • Rugby World Cup predictor
  • Premiership
  • Champions Cup
  • Challenge Cup
  • All Leagues
  • Ski Jumping Home
  • Speedway GP Home
  • Superbikes Home
  • The Ocean Race Home
  • Triathlon Home
  • Hours of Le Mans
  • Winter Sports Home

IMAGES

  1. Official Tour de France 2015 console gameplay trailer released

    tour de france 2015 pcs

  2. PCM 2015 Tour de France Diary

    tour de france 2015 pcs

  3. Tour De France 2015 Review

    tour de france 2015 pcs

  4. Tour de France 2015: All of the best photos from the world's most

    tour de france 2015 pcs

  5. Tour De France 2015 review

    tour de france 2015 pcs

  6. Tour de France 2015

    tour de france 2015 pcs

VIDEO

  1. 2015 Tour de France stage 20

  2. 2015 Tour de France stage 12

  3. Tour de France 2015

  4. Tour de Francia 2015: Recorrido y etapas

  5. Tour de France 2015 stage 1 ps4

  6. Le Tour de France 2015 avec MisterMV

COMMENTS

  1. Tour de France 2015 Stage 21 results

    Chris Froome is the winner of Tour de France 2015, before Nairo Quintana and Alejandro Valverde. André Greipel is the winner of the final stage.

  2. 2015 Tour de France

    The 2015 Tour de France was the 102nd edition of the Tour de France, one of cycling's Grand Tours.The 3,360.3 km (2,088 mi)-long race consisted of 21 stages, starting on 4 July in Utrecht, the Netherlands, and concluding on 26 July with the Champs-Élysées stage in Paris. A total of 198 riders from 22 teams entered the race. The overall general classification was won by Chris Froome of Team ...

  3. Tour de France 2015: Results

    Tour de France 2015: Results. The 2015 Tour de France started on July 4th in Utrecht, the Netherlands, and finished on July 26th in Paris. Chris Froome took the overal, while André Greipel won the most stages: 4. Nairo Quintana was the best youngster and Peter Sagan was the best rider in the points classification.(Slideshow route/profile)

  4. Tour de France 2015: Race History

    Find out the latest news, stage reports, race scores and expert analysis from the 2015 Tour de France. Cyclingnews.com: The world centre of cycling.

  5. Tour de France 2015 route

    Tour de France 2015 stages. Stage 1: Saturday July 4, Utrecht - Utrecht (Ned) (ITT) 13.7km. Tour de France profile stage 1_2. This flat 13.7km individual time trial is the only one to feature in ...

  6. Stages of the 2015 Tour de France

    Stage 1: Utrecht; Saturday, July 4, 14km ITT. For the second year in a row, the Tour's Grand Départ takes place outside France, in the Dutch city of Utrecht. But for the first time since 2012 ...

  7. Tour de France 2015: Route and stages

    Tour de France 2015: Route and stages. The 102nd Tour de France opened July 4th in Utrecht, The Netherlands, and after over 3,344 kilometres of racing the finish was in Paris on July 26th. The route certainly was a climber's dream, with Chris Froome outshining in the Pyrenees and he held off Nairo Quintana in the Alps.

  8. Results Tour de France 2015

    159. Svein TUFT. Orica - GreenEdge. 4h48'08". 160. Sebastien CHAVANEL. FDJ. 4h56'59". Results of the cycling race Tour de France GC in 2015 won by Christopher Froome before Nairo Alexander Quintana Rojas and Alejandro Valverde Belmonte.

  9. Tour de France 2015: Riders and teams

    Saturday, July 4 the 2015 Tour de France starts in the Netherlands with a short time trial. The super-trio Contador, Nibali and Quintana are confirmed, whilst 2013 winner Chris Froome almost certainly will be in also. Joaquim Rodríguez is eyeing up a good result and will be at the start, just like talented youngster Wilco Kelderman.

  10. Tour de France 2015 Route, Stages & Results

    Stage 20 / 110.5 KM T. Pinot. Stay up to date with the full 2015 Tour de France schedule. Eurosport brings you live updates, real-time results and breaking Cycling - Road news.

  11. Tour de France 2015 Route Map

    2015 Tour de France map. By Cycling News. published 26 May 2015. Full route of 102nd edition. Race Home. Stages . Stage 1. 13.8km | Utrecht (ITT) - Stage 2. 166km | Utrecht - Zelande Stage 3.

  12. Tour de France 2015 Standings

    Stay up to date with the 2015 Tour de France standings. Follow this season's top riders and make Eurosport your go-to source for Cycling - Road results.

  13. Tour de France 2020 Stage 21 results

    Tadej Pogačar is the winner of Tour de France 2020, before Primož Roglič and Richie Porte. Sam Bennett is the winner of the final stage.

  14. The Road Bikes of the 2015 Tour de France

    BMC is taking the "If it ain't broke don't fix it" approach to its bikes for the 2015 Tour de France by using bikes that have remained essentially unchanged since Cadel Evans won the 2011 ...

  15. Summary

    Stephen CUMMINGS (MTN-QHUBEKA) won the stage in Mende before Thibaut PINOT (FDJ) and Romain BARDET (AG2R LA MONDIALE).Christopher Froome is the Yellow Jersey...

  16. Tour de France 2015 Route stage 1: ITT in Utrecht (NL)

    Tour de France 2015 Route stage 1: ITT in Utrecht (NL) Saturday, July 4, 2015 - The Grand Départ of the Tour de France is in Utrecht, centrally located in the Netherlands. Both start and finish are at Jaarbeurs for an individual time trial of 13.8 kilometres. The route is technical with a lot of twists and turns through the heart of the city.

  17. Best moments

    Video of the best moments of the 2015 Tour de France presented during the Presentation Ceremony of the 2016 Tour de France.Vidéo présentée lors de la cérémon...

  18. Tour de France 2021 Stage 21 results

    Tadej Pogačar is the winner of Tour de France 2021, before Jonas Vingegaard and Richard Carapaz. Wout van Aert is the winner of the final stage.

  19. Tour de France 2015: Riders and teams

    Riders and teams. Saturday, July 4 the 2015 Tour de France starts in the Netherlands with a short time trial. The super-trio Contador, Nibali and Quintana are confirmed, whilst 2013 winner Chris Froome almost certainly will be in also. Joaquim Rodríguez is eyeing up a good result and will be at the start, just like talented youngster Wilco ...

  20. Tour de France 2015

    Get updates on the latest Tour de France 2015 action and find articles, videos, commentary and analysis in one place. Eurosport is your go-to source for Cycling news.

  21. Summary

    Greg VAN AVERMAET (BMC RACING TEAM) won the stage in Rodez before Peter SAGAN (TINKOFF-SAXO) and Jan BAKELANTS (AG2R LA MONDIALE).Christopher Froome is the Y...