The 2025 Tour de France route was presented today. It includes some familiar mountains for us, as we’ll be returning to the Hautacam, Mont Ventoux, and Col de la Loze. Memories! 🤩 What’s your favorite memory?
With the announcement of the 2025 Tour de France route, it seems clear what the organization’s intention is. ASO has chosen a course with relatively few (flat) time trial kilometers, and they’re returning to locations where Jonas Vingegaard has had significant success in the past. Also, the bonus seconds at summit finishes have been removed. The aim is to set up a new showdown between the Dane and his great rival, Tadej Pogacar. France wants to avoid a repeat of last year.
Six mountain stages, six summit finishes: the course designers have opted for true classics. The Tour de France finishes on Mont Ventoux, and other legendary climbs like the Col du Tourmalet, Hautacam and La Plagne are also on the menu. The three weeks of racing in France are packed with elevation. At first glance, the course seems tailored for Pogacar, but honestly, what course wouldn’t be? With the opening stage in Lille and the following hilly stages, ASO aims to prevent the Slovenian from claiming the yellow jersey from day one.
With so many summit finishes, the world champion is surely salivating, but there’s a deeper story behind the Tour organization’s choices. Pogacar has a history on Peyragudes, Hautacam, Mont Ventoux and the Col de la Loze. On Peyragudes, he narrowly defeated his Visma | Lease a Bike rival, but the following day, UAE Team Emirates’ leader was soundly beaten on the way to Hautacam, thanks in part to a strong Wout van Aert. And who can forget the memorable ride to Malaucène, where Vingegaard showed Pogacar his heels for the first time in 2021? For Visma | LaB, that’s the exact place they secured a double whammy, if you will, as Van Aert won that stage. The team has already expressed delight with the route.
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The 2025 Tour de France route was presented today. It includes some familiar mountains for us, as we’ll be returning to the Hautacam, Mont Ventoux, and Col de la Loze. Memories! 🤩 What’s your favorite memory?
The Col de la Loze can rightfully be called the darkest day of Pogacar’s career. During the 2023 Tour de France, he broke down on the slopes of this Alpine pass, losing almost six minutes to the yellow jersey holder. It’s as if Tour director Christian Prudhomme wants to instill a bit of fear in the defending champion. However, for the Slovenian, it could also be an opportunity for redemption: after proving his strength in the recent Tour with a dominant victory, he could solidify his standing on ground where he previously faltered. For Vingegaard, this course offers an added boost: he knows he’s already beaten his rival on Hautacam and the Col de la Loze.
By removing bonus seconds at summit finishes, the organization aims to send a message. Pogacar won four summit finishes in 2024, and they hope this will make the Slovenian’s sprinting prowess less decisive in the general classification. It also gives breakaway riders more chances. In the true mountain stages, attackers stood no chance against the might of UAE Team Emirates, Visma | Lease a Bike and Soudal Quick-Step. Now, without extra time up for grabs, the breakaway group might be less tempting to chase.
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Now, enough about the two main rivals. There are three weeks of racing ahead, and they can hardly win every stage. Alongside the mountain stages, the first week will also be a highlight. A start in northern France usually means flat, flat and more flat, but not this time: there are only two full sprint opportunities in the first week. Instead, there’s a series of hilly stages, with plenty of elevation and short, sharp climbs. The punchers are already dreaming about their chances, no doubt. The yellow jersey is within reach.
While there’s a two-man race brewing for the general classification, a similar duel seems to be shaping up in the first week. Who else but Mathieu van der Poel and Wout van Aert are likely to be favorites for the yellow jersey in week one? With challenging finishes in stages two, four, six and seven, things look promising (or rather, yellow) for the rivals. And don’t forget the time trial in Caen: 33 kilometers of flat asphalt, which suits Van Aert well. But the Glasgow world champion also knows how to handle a time trial: in a similar situation, Van der Poel managed to defend his yellow jersey in 2021.
Earlier this week, the Dutchman indicated that he wasn't certain about a potential Tour start. He might consider returning to mountain biking in the summer, as that remains a major goal. But with such an enticing first week, including a return to the Mûr-de-Bretagne, where he claimed his emotional Tour stage (and the yellow jersey), it’ll be hard to say no to mister Prudhomme. For Alpecin-Deceuninck, this could also be the perfect opportunity for a unique one-two punch: Jasper Philipsen already has his sights set on the first stage, and Van der Poel could take over in the following stages.