
As with most cycling races, competitors enter as part of a team. The race consists of 20 to 22 teams with nine riders each. Traditionally, entry is extended to invitation only, with invitations granted only to the best of the world's professional teams.
The Tour is a stage race, each stage being a one day race and this year there will be 21 stages. The time each rider takes to complete each stage is accumulated. Riders are often awarded time bonuses as well as their prize for finishing. Riders who finish in the same group are awarded the same time. Two riders are said to have finished in the same group if there is less than the length of a bike between them. A rider who crashes in the last three kilometres is given the time of the group in which he would have otherwise finished.
The ranking of riders by accumulated time is known as the General Classification. The winner is the rider with the least accumulated time after the final day.
There are subsidiary competitions within the race, some with distinctive jerseys for the best rider.
The classification for the famous Leaders jersey's are:
• Yellow Jersey for the General Time Classification.
• Green Jersey for the General Points Classification.
• White and Red Polka-Dotted Jersey for the Best Climber Classification.
• White Jersey for the Best Young Rider, for riders no more than 25 years old in the year of the race.
The tour de France 2008 begins with the Grand Depart on 5 July in Brest and concludes in great style on 27 July at the Champs d'Elysee in Paris.
The three week race will be made up of 21 stages and will cover just over 3500kms.
These 21 stages have the following profiles: 10 flat stages, 5 mountain stages, 4 medium mountain stages and 2 individual time-trial stages.
Distinctive aspects of the race include: 4 mountain finishes, 2 rest days, 82 kilometres of individual time-trials and 19 Category 1, Category 2 and highest level passes will be climbed.
|
Date |
From |
To |
Distance |
Notes |
|
5 July 2008 |
Brest |
Plumelec |
195km |
Flat |
|
6 July 2008 |
Auray |
Saint-Brieuc |
165km |
Flat |
|
7 July 2008 |
Saint Malo |
Nantes |
195km |
Flat |
|
8 July 2008 |
Cholet |
Cholet |
29km |
ITT |
|
9 July 2008 |
Cholet |
Chateauroux |
230km |
Flat |
|
10 July 2008 |
Aigurande |
Super-Besse Sancy |
195km |
MM |
|
11 July 2008 |
Brioudes |
Aurillac |
158km |
MM |
|
12 July 2008 |
Figeac |
Toulouse |
174km |
Flat |
|
13 July 2008 |
Toulouse |
Bagnères-de-Bigorre |
222km |
HM |
|
14 July 2008 |
Pau |
Lourdes/Hautacam |
154km |
HM |
|
15 July 2008 |
Pau |
|
|
rest day |
|
16 July 2008 |
Lannemezan |
Foix |
166km |
MM |
|
17 July 2008 |
Lavelanet |
Narbonne |
168km |
Flat |
|
18 July 2008 |
Narbonne |
Nimes |
182km |
Flat |
|
19 July 2008 |
Nimes |
Digne-les-Bains |
182km |
Flat |
|
20 July 2008 |
Digne-les-Bains |
Pratonevoso |
216km |
HM |
|
21 July 2008 |
Cuneo |
|
|
rest day |
|
22 July 2008 |
Cuneo |
Jauziers |
157km |
HM |
|
23 July 2008 |
Embrun |
L'Alpe d'Huez |
210km |
HM |
|
24 July 2008 |
Bourg d'Oisans |
Saint-Etienne |
197km |
MM |
|
25 July 2008 |
Roanne |
Montlucon |
163km |
Flat |
|
26 July 2008 |
Cerilly |
Saint-Amand-Montrond |
53km |
ITT |
|
27 July 2008 |
Etampes |
Paris/Champs-Elysées |
143km |
Flat |
|
Total Distance |
3500km |
|
Key: MM = Medium Mountains / HM = High Mountains / ITT = Individual Time-Trial
L'Etape du Tour is French for 'stage of the tour' and as an organised event (by the Amaury Sport Organisation), allows amateur cyclists to race over the same route as a Tour de France stage. This will take place on Sunday the 6th of July 2008 and will follow the exact route of stage 10 of the 2008 Tour de France.
L'Etape is usually mapped out over mountain roads and this year the race will return to the Pyrenees. It will start from the city of Pau and will finish on top of the Hautacam mountain, which towers above the pilgrim city of Lourdes at 1520m high.
It would be a crime to visit France for the Tour de France and not sample the many delights that France has to offer. We suggest that you combine your passion for this tour de France history event with an unforgettable trip with friends or a family holiday that everyone can enjoy.
The location of the tour travel through some of the most beautiful parts of France. There are hundreds of different ways for everyone to enjoy the Tour de France 2008. So don't wait any longer and make your reservation for your accommodation today by exploring the nearby properties with availability.
We advise you to start researching and booking now to ensure that you find a property to enjoy that will best suit your requirements.
To find out more about de France tour travel, simply click on the links provided on the right side of this page. Also tour de France travel package (as above) will be found by referring to the links on the right. The links will be helpful in finding available accommodation in the towns or area where the tour de France route passes through.
Please see our travel page for details.
France in July is one of the best experiences not just for following the Tour de France, but sampling some of the best food, drink and glorious sights to behold.
There are many organised tours some even allow you to ride your bike on parts of the stages, just before or after the tour. But if you prefer to leave the riding to the professionals there are alternative ways to follow the tour. Your exciting trip could follow one of these suggestions.
Pick which stages you would like to see most. Trying to cover every stage especially in the mountains is horrific, this is where the traffic builds up and becomes a nightmare. Instead, arrive early and depart late for selected stages and use the time in between to enjoy France: rent a bike and ride part of the stage, visit chateaus, go to wineries, eat a meal at a Michelin one-star restaurant or go snowboarding in the Alps (yes, really, even in July, you can tackle the glacier at Les Deux Alpes, near the famous L'Alpe d'Huez stage).
Another suggestion is to be in Paris for the final stage. Watching the final stage of the Tour in Paris is particularly rewarding. Not because it's likely that the general classification will be won or lost there, but because the final stage includes multiple laps of honour by the winner on the Champs d'Elysee.