2020 Tour de France Route
The 107th Tour de France will see the Grand Départ in Nice, and will crawl its way to the western part of the country before the first high mountain stage of the Pyrenees. The race will wind east before darting through the middle of France and then ponderous climbs in the Alps, Jura, and Vosges mountain ranges before scaling to the top of La Planche des Belles Filles. The picturesque Champs-Élysées will again take its rightful place as the finish of this legendary tour.
This iteration of the Tour will feature nine flat stages, eight mountain ranges, four summits, three hilly stages, and a one-time trial. Sportsbookreview is a must for those who want the latest breaking news on the Tour so make sure to be on point and check out below for the precise itinerary of the 2020 Tour de France.
At this time, the prospect of running the Tour de France without spectators is being discussed due to COVID-19.
2020 Tour de France Stages
Stage | Date | Start | Finish | Distance | Terrain |
1 | Sat June 27 | Nice Moyen Pays | Nice | 156km | Flat |
2 | Sun June 28 | Nice Haut Pays | Nice | 187km | Mountain |
3 | Mon June 29 | Nice | Sisteron | 198km | Flat |
4 | Tues June 30 | Sisteron | Orcières-Merlette | 157km | Hilly |
5 | Weds July 1 | Gap | Privas | 183km | Flat |
6 | Thurs July 2 | Le Teil | Mount Aigoual | 191km | Hilly |
7 | Fri July 3 | Millau | Lavaur | 168km | Hilly |
8 | Sat July 4 | Cazères-sur-Garonne | Loudenvielle | 140km | Mountain |
9 | Sun July 5 | Pau | Laruns | 154km | Mountain |
Rest day | Mon July 6 | Charente-Maritimes | |||
10 | Tues July 7 | The Château d’Oleron | Saint-Martin-de-Ré | 170km | Flat |
11 | Weds July 8 | Châtelaillon-Plage | Poitiers | 167km | Flat |
12 | Thurs July 9 | Chauvigny | Sarran Corrèze | 218km | Hilly |
13 | Fri July 10 | Châtel-Guyon | Puy Mary Cantal | 191km | Mountain |
14 | Sat July 11 | Clermont-Ferrand | Lyon | 197km | Flat |
15 | Sun July 12 | Lyon | Grand Colombier | 175km | Mountain |
Rest day | Mon July 13 | Isère | |||
16 | Tues July 14 | La Tour-du-Pin | Villard-de-Lans | 164km | Mountain |
17 | Weds July 15 | Grenoble | Col de la Loze | 168km | Mountain |
18 | Thurs July 16 | Méribel | La-Roche-sur-Foron | 168km | Mountain |
19 | Fri July 17 | Bourg-en-Bresse | Champagnole | 160km | Flat |
20 | Sat July 18 | Lure | Planche de Belles Filles | 36km | Time trial |
21 | Sun July 19 | Mantes-la-Jolie | Paris (Champs-Élysées) |
Current Team Rankings
Pos. Team Class Points
1 Astana Pro Team (WT ) 5859
2 Team Jumbo-Visma (WT) 5557
3 BORA – Hansgrohe (WT) 4600
4 Team INEOS (WT) 4453
5 Bahrain – McLaren (WT) 4443
6 Trek – Segafredo (WT ) 3956
7 Deceuninck – Quick Step (WT) 3816
8 Groupama – FDJ (WT) 3780
9 Lotto Soudal (WT) 3419
10 AG2R La Mondiale (WT) 3404
11 Movistar Team (WT) 3348
12 Cofidis, Solutions Crédits (WT) 3277
13 UAE-Team Emirates (WT) 3234
14 Team Sunweb (WT) 2890
15 EF Pro Cycling (WT) 2448
16 CCC Team (WT) 2350
17 Team Arkéa Samsic (PRT) 2182
18 Israel Start-Up Nation (WT) 2107
19 Mitchelton-Scott (WT) 1850
20 NTT Pro Cycling (WT) 1509
21 B&B Hotels – Vital Concept p/b KTM (PRT) 913
22 Team Total Direct Energie (PRT) 874
Nairo Quintana Sets Sights on Tour de France
Colombian cyclist Nairo Quintana embraced his new home with ProTeam outfit Arkéa-Samsic while the rest of the racing world scratched their collective heads as to why he would leave Moviestar. Well, so far, the decision has been an unmitigated success. Earlier this month the 30-year-old veteran finished second overall in Paris-Nice.
But now he has his sights set on La Grande Boucle and is hoping to bring a mountain of momentum into the competition. Nevertheless, no one knows when the coronavirus hysteria will abate but Le Tour race director, race director Christian Prudhomme, is confident there will be no interruptions or change of schedule, “It is still more than a hundred days until the start of the Tour. The hunger for the race will be immense once activities are resumed.”
However, his opinion regarding Paris-Roubaix going on as scheduled in April is vastly different, “All sports are currently being canceled. I don’t think much will change in April. And that makes perfect sense. Let’s be honest, I don’t think it will be feasible. There is a chance but we also have to show a sense of responsibility. Cycling is no different from the rest.”