2019 Tour de France: Stage 21 preview
Sunday, July 28 2019: Rambouillet - Paris Champs-Elysees , 128km
- Race Home
-
Stages
-
Stage 1194.5km | Brussels - Brussels
-
Stage 227.6km | Brussels (TTT) -
-
Stage 3215km | Binche - Epernay
-
Stage 4213.5km | Reims - Nancy
-
Stage 5175.5km | Saint-Die-Des-Vosges - Colmar
-
Stage 6160.5km | Mulhouse - La Planche Des Belles Filles
-
Stage 7230km | Belfort - Chalon-Sur-Saone
-
Stage 8200km | Macon - Saint-Etienne
-
Stage 9170.5km | Saint-Etienne - Brioude
-
Stage 10217.5km | Saint-Flour - Albi
-
Rest Day 1-
-
Stage 11167km | Albi - Toulouse
-
Stage 12209.5km | Toulouse - Bagneres-De-Bigorre
-
Stage 1327.2km | Pau (ITT) -
-
Stage 14117.5km | Tarbes - Tourmalet
-
Stage 15185km | Limoux - Foix
-
Rest Day 2Nimes -
-
Stage 16177km | Nimes - Nimes
-
Stage 17200km | Pont Du Gard - Gap
-
Stage 18208km | Embrun - Valloire
-
Stage 19126.5km | Saint-Jean-De-Maurienne - Tignes
-
Stage 2059km | Albertville - Val Thorens
-
Stage 21128km | Rambouillet - Paris Champs-Elysees
- View all Stages
-
- Contenders
- History
- Start list
Stage 21: Rambouillet – Paris Champs-Élysées
Date: July 28, 2019
Distance: 128 km
Stage type: Flat
Finally, the climbs are almost over and the Eiffel Tower and Paris' other celebrated landmarks will soon be visible on the skyline. The Tour's final stage has long been a victory parade, with the yellow jersey and his teammates toasting each other with champagne and then leading the race onto the Champs-Élysées for several laps of fast and furious racing, concluding with arguably the most prestigious bunch sprint of the season and well-deserved laps of honour.
Yet it hasn't always unfolded like this. Four decades ago, Bernard Hinault and Joop Zoetemelk produced an unforgettable duel that began in the Chevreuse hills west of Paris and continued right to the line, where the pair finished more than two minutes ahead of the remnants of the bunch. Although shorter than that 1979 stage, the final approach to the French capital does present the opportunity for a repeat in as much as it passes through the Chevreuse, crossing two fourth-category climbs before heading into Paris for eight laps on the Champs-Élysées circuit.
A more likely scenario will see the King of the Mountains, who at the end of this high-altitude race might be decked out in the yellow jersey rather than the crowd-pleasing red polka dots, crest those final two hills ahead of the bunch. There is, of course, little chance of the remaining sprinters allowing him more leeway than that, having battled their way through the Alps, their last likely encounter in Nîmes by now almost a distant memory.
Bearing all of that mountainous terrain in mind, this bunch finale could be contested by a very select members of the sprinting fraternity. Alexander Kristoff won last year's stage on the famous avenue, and one of the most resilient of sprinters it would be little surprise to see the Norwegian in contention for a repeat. Dutchman Dylan Groenewegen, the winner here in 2017, is another to watch for.
The latest race content, interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, direct to your inbox!
Latest on Cyclingnews
-
'Extremely dangerous' – Teenager Paul Seixas navigates 'melting' descents at Tour de France to move up to fifth overall on debut
Frenchman describes downhill road off the Puy Mary as 'like an ice rink' before biding time to finish third at Le Lioran -
'He's doing a different race than us' - Juan Ayuso is in the fight for the podium but accepts Tadej Pogačar is in a race of his own
'There are five or six riders aiming for two spots on the podium' says new best young rider competition leader -
'It would be typically Belgian just to find the negatives' - Remco Evenepoel bounces back from mini-crisis to move onto Tour de France GC podium
Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe leader adds fuel to overall challenge with impressive turnaround -
'They put wood on the fire' – Is Tadej Pogačar's popularity fading as he's booed by 'haters' at the Tour de France?
World champion says negative reaction from some spectators only adds 'gives more power' for him and teammates after Le Lioran victory




