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Tour de France 2019: Updated results, stage winners, schedule, race leaders
Keep track of the annual grand tour with a full rundown of stage winners and race leaders.
The 106th annual Tour de France is churning right along after a commemorative journey through Brussels to open the 2019 Grand Tour, and a handful of countries have already been represented through the early stages of the 2,200-mile cycling competition.
The 23-day event, won by Geraint Thomas in 2018, features 21 total daylong stages and some of the best cyclists from around the globe. The first two stages of this year's Tour went to the Netherlands, with Mike Teuinessen taking the opening flat stage and his team, Jumbo-Visma, winning the team time trial from the Royal Palace of Brussels to the Atomium. Belgium, meanwhile, claimed three stages in the 6-10 run, with Wout van Aert taking Stage 10 on July 15. Simon Yates, brother of 2016 fourth-place finisher Adam Yates, took Stage 12 on the mountain and roared back to win Stage 15 as well, with Italy claiming its second stage three days later.
Be sure to check in right here at CBS Sports for updated stage results, schedules and more on the 2019 Tour de France:
2019 Tour de France stage winners
Stage 1: Mike Teunissen (Netherlands) Stage 2: Team Jumbo-Visma (Netherlands) Stage 3: Julian Alaphilippe (France) Stage 4: Elia Viviani (Italy) Stage 5: Peter Sagan (Slovakia) Stage 6: Dylan Teuns (Belgium) Stage 7: Dylan Groenewegen (Netherlands) Stage 8: Thomas De Gendt (Belgium) Stage 9: Daryl Impey (South Africa) Stage 10: Wout van Aert (Belgium) Stage 11: Caleb Ewan (Australia) Stage 12: Simon Yates (Great Britain) Stage 13: Julian Alaphilippe (France) Stage 14: Thibaut Pinot (France) Stage 15: Simon Yates (Great Britain) Stage 16: Caleb Ewan (Australia) Stage 17: Matteo Trentin (Italy) Stage 18: Nairo Quintana (Colombia) Stage 19: Egan Bernal (Colombia) Stage 20: Vincenzo Nibali (Italy)
2019 Tour de France stage schedule
- Stage 21: July 28, 7:55 a.m. ET
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Egan Bernal Wins the 2019 Tour de France as Caleb Ewan Takes the Final Stage Victory in Paris
The first Latin American Tour champion has officially sealed his win.
- Bernal—the first Colombian and first Latin American Tour champion, and the youngest winner in modern race history—took the lead on Stage 19 and held it through a final day in the Alps and the ceremonial last stage in Paris.
- After winning twice already this year, Caleb Ewan took the prestigious Stage 21 victory in a bunch sprint on the Champs-Élysées.
- Peter Sagan won a record-breaking seventh green jersey, and Romain Bardet salvaged his Tour to win the King of the Mountains classification.
It was a day of triumph in Paris as Egan Bernal celebrated his official victory at the Tour de France on Sunday.
Bernal, considered a strong favorite to win this year due to his superb climbing and comfort at high altitudes, became both the first Colombian and the first Latin American to win the Tour when he crossed the final finish line on the Champs-Élysées. At age 22, he’s also the youngest winner in modern race history; you’d have to go back to 1909 to find a younger champion in François Faber. (Henri Cornet, who won the second Tour in 1904, is the youngest ever.)
Bernal emerged as the probable winner on Stage 18 . There, he launched a powerful solo attack in the Alps and became the only overall contender to put in time on Julian Alaphilippe, the French underdog who led the race for 14 stages total this year. Bernal then took the yellow jersey the following day , leading the field when officials ended the stage early due to flooding and mudslides.
On Stage 20, the final day in the mountains, he defended his lead comfortably as Alaphilippe cracked and fell out of the top four. In the process, Bernal became the presumptive winner of the Tour , and since nothing egregious happened on the last, largely ceremonial stage in Paris, his lead was made official and permanent when the race concluded on Sunday.
Geraint Thomas, the 2018 Tour champion and Bernal’s co-captain on the dominant British team Ineos, finished behind him on the General Classification to place second. Jumbo–Visma’s Steven Kruijswijk will join them on the final podium in third, while the German dark horse Emanuel Buchmann quietly rode a solid Tour to place fourth.
It’s the fifth straight Tour de France title for Ineos, and the outfit’s seventh victory in eight years—a feat it earned with four different riders (Bernal, Thomas, Chris Froome four times, and Bradley Wiggins as the first in 2012).
Egan Bernal's Stage 19 Gear
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Kask Valegro Helmet
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Alaphilippe, who raced an admirable Tour and defended his yellow jersey for 10 days straight until Bernal finally snatched it away, maintained fifth overall, ahead of Spanish favorite Mikel Landa in sixth and Colombians Rigoberto Urán and Nairo Quintana in seventh and eighth. For his unexpectedly strong and consistent performance at the front of the General Classification, Alaphilippe was awarded the red number for Most Combative Rider over the entire Tour.
Caleb Ewan, the young Australian upstart on Lotto–Soudal, added a third stage victory to his résumé on Sunday when he prevailed in a bunch sprint to the finish on the Champs. Racing in his debut Tour, Ewan reached the podium four times this year before finally out-sprinting the pack to win on Stage 11 .
Ewan then made a repeat victory on Stage 16 , beating frequent rivals Elia Viviani and Dylan Groenewegen. With his third win on the Champs, Ewan has announced himself as one of the most exciting sprinters in elite men’s road racing.
Indeed, a new generation of Tour contenders has emerged this year, and it won’t wait for the old guard to pass the torch. Bernal was the youngest competitor to finish the 2019 Tour, and in addition to yellow, he also won the white jersey as the race’s Best Young Rider.
Caleb Ewan's Stage 11 Gear
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Peter Sagan, meanwhile, made Tour history by handily winning a record-breaking seventh green jersey in the Points Classification. The Slovak sprinter had tied Erik Zabel’s Tour record of six career green jersey wins last year. Now, he’ll go home in green for the seventh time in the last eight Tours.
Romain Bardet, who struggled to find his form early on this year and quickly fell out of contention for the overall win, managed to salvage his Tour with a comeback in the final week. He stole the polka dot jersey from Tim Wellens (who had defended it for 15 days) in the Alps on Stage 18, then carried through two more days of climbing to the finish in Paris.
Bardet didn’t win any stages this year—and, curiously, he never won any individual climbs—but by racking up points on summits like the Col d’Izoard and Col du Galibier, he can go home satisfied as winner of the King of the Mountains classification.
Next year, the Tour will start on June 27 in the southeastern French city of Nice. The course will be announced in October, but until then the focus will stay on Bernal and Ineos—and whether anyone can challenge them in the coming years.
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Tour de France 2019: Results
Egan Bernal won the 106th edition of the Tour de France, while Geraint Thomas and Steven Kruijswijk rounded out the podium in Paris. Caleb Ewan sprinted to three victories. Simon Yates and Julian Alaphilippe both won two stages.
Check out the final GC of the 2019 Tour de France.
Click on the links in underneath scheme for standings, results and race reports.
Tour de France 2019 results
More about the tour de france, tour de france 2019: ewan wins on champs-élysées, bernal takes yellow home, tour de france 2019: nibali solos to victory, bernal wins the gc, tour de france 2019: bernal takes yellow in shortened race, tour de france 2019: quintana solos to victory, alaphilippe retains lead, tour de france 2019: trentin solos to victory, alaphilippe stays in yellow.
Giro d'Italia stage 11 Live - The sprinters return
Tour de france: wout van aert wins stage 10.
Crosswinds wreak havoc on GC times, Alaphilippe leads into first rest day
Wout van Aert ( Jumbo-Visma ) claimed his maiden individual Tour de France win on stage 10, and on a day of racing that saw the overall standings change after a number of contenders lost significant time in the crosswinds.
Tour de France 2019 stage 10 finish line quotes
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Van Aert – making his Grand Tour debut – won ahead of Elia Viviani (Deceuninck-QuickStep) and Caleb Ewan (Lotto Soudal) in Albi, but the stage was dominated by the splits caused with 30km to go as Team Ineos and several allies tore the peloton apart during a section of crosswinds.
The effort succeeded, with Thibaut Pinot (Groupama FDJ), Richie Porte (Trek-Segafredo), Rigoberto Uran (EF Education First) and Jakob Fuglsang (Astana) all conceding 1:40 on a group that contained Nairo Quintana, Julian Alaphilippe and the Team Ineos pair of Geraint Thomas and Egan Bernal. Alaphilippe heads into the first rest day with a 1:12 lead over Thomas, with Bernal four seconds further adrift. For Pinot, this was a disaster of a day after his stage 8 heroics had seen him rise up the standings. He now sits 10th overall at 2:33.
Van Aert’s sprint was only possible due to the fact that Jumbo-Visma’s primetime sprinter Dylan Groenewegen missed the earlier splits. The Dutch squad need not have worried, however, and as the sprinters opened up their efforts for the line Van Aert proved that he was the strongest. He came through on the left side with Viviani on his flank, but the Italian was unable to find the necessary speed. Ewan finished a distant third, while Michael Matthews and his well-numbered Team Sunweb train could only secure fourth despite excellent positioning until the final 200m.
"I can’t believe it, beating all those fast guys in the sprint. Ah... Sorry, I can’t believe it. It’s above anything else. I felt it in the last 10 days, how big this race is. Winning in my first attempt...wow," said the winner.
"It became quite nervous in the finale. I managed to stay in front and kept our leader Stevie in position. Unfortunately, Dylan was not in the first group and I was allowed to go for the sprint. From the last one, I learned I had to go early, so I went 250m from the line. It was close with Viviani, but one centimetre is enough."
Pinot and Uran blow their Tour hopes
For the GC contenders who lost time, this was a significant blow to their Tour de France challenges. Although Alaphilippe leads the race ahead of the first rest day, it’s Team Ineos who are perfectly placed with Thomas and Bernal. The British team were instrumental in causing the main split and then used the likes of Luke Rowe, Gianni Moscon and Michal Kwiatkowski to good effect. Steven Kruijswijk (Jumbo-Visma), Enric Mas (Deceuninck-QuickStep), Romain Bardet (AG2r La Mondiale), Adam Yates (Mitchelton-Scott) and Daniel Martin (UAE Team Emirates) were all on the right side of the split, but for several others, their chances of winning the Tour or even reaching the podium have been severely dented.
All of the hard work and reward Pinot achieved on stage 8 was undone in an instant, while Uran will be kicking himself after his team pulled off the front just moments before Team Ineos split the race. Another shift saw Mikel Landa (Movistar) lose even more time and George Bennett (Jumbo-Visma) drop almost 10 minutes when he was needlessly sent back to the team car for bottles just as the pace began to increase. Jumbo-Visma’s fourth win of the race will paper over the fact that they sent their best-placed rider and second option for GC back towards the team cars at such a critical point.
The Pinot and Fuglsang group battled through the closing stages and at one point they had reduced the Ineos and Deceuninck - Quick Step echelon to just 14 seconds – mainly due to an extraordinary turn of speed from Astana’s Alexey Lutsenko. However, that injection of pace shelled the chase of a number of riders, and soon after Porte, Pinot and a desperate-looking Fuglsang were forced to fend for themselves. Up ahead, Moscon and Rowe and Bora’s contingent went through the gears as they marshaled the lead group as the gap began to once again expand. Pinot and Fuglsang grimly hung on with the gap at 28 seconds but as the road turned towards Albi the advantage began to quickly expand as more and more riders aided the first group.
Van Aert's trajectory shows no sign of slipping
The early hours of the stage were a drab affair, with Kasper Asgreen (Deceuninck-QuickStep), Tony Martin (Jumbo-Visma) and Maxime Monfort (Lotto Soudal) once again providing the entertainment at the front of the main field. Anyone who has watched this Tour throughout will have the image of those three riders burned into their retinas, such as has been their efforts in break-chasing since the race left Brussels. Surely, even they’re tired of each other by now.
Today’s escape featured Anthony Turgis (Total Direct Energie), Tony Gallopin (AG2R La Mondiale), Odd Christian EIking (Wanty-Gobert), Mads Wurtz Schmidt (Katusha-Alpecin), Natnael Berhane (Cofidis) and Michael Schar (CCC Team), but with so many sprinters yet to open their accounts in the race the chances of success for the break were always limited. The bunch held the leaders at a safe distance over the rugged terrain, and with 39km to go the gap was down to less than a minute.
EF Education First looked to split the race at that point, and although they had the bunch strung out, they were unable to make it count. Other teams would be far more successful a few kilometres later, and with 28km to go the early break had been caught and the peloton split into three distinct groups.
Team Sunweb had the numbers entering the final kilometre, but they were soon swamped when the pure sprinters opened for the line. This appeared to catch Matthews out, with the Australian seemingly looking for wheels rather than clear air, but there was no uncertainty for Van Aert. The young Belgian has taken the WorldTour by storm, but the last few weeks have been something else, even by his standards. A time trial win and a sprint stage at the Dauphine have now been topped by a Tour de France stage win.
Full Results
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Daniel Benson was the Editor in Chief at Cyclingnews.com between 2008 and 2022. Based in the UK, he joined the Cyclingnews team in 2008 as the site's first UK-based Managing Editor. In that time, he reported on over a dozen editions of the Tour de France, several World Championships, the Tour Down Under, Spring Classics, and the London 2012 Olympic Games. With the help of the excellent editorial team, he ran the coverage on Cyclingnews and has interviewed leading figures in the sport including UCI Presidents and Tour de France winners.
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Martinsicuro - Fano
Giro d'Italia 2024
A flat stage for the first 50 km and then studded with walls and hairpin bends to the finish. After a rather simple initial part along the Adriatic coast, the stage moves away from the sea to face repeated short, steep climbs that come in the final two thirds of the route.
Riccione - Cento
Completely flat stage through the plains of Emilia-Romagna.
Castiglione delle Stiviere - Desenzano del Garda TUDOR ITT
The second time trial test is predominantly flat with several undulations within it and an elevation gain of roughly 250 metres. The riders cross a few villages and a series of minor ups and downs. The road is almost constantly slightly downhill heading towards the shore of Lake Garda.
Manerba del Garda - Livigno (Mottolino)
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Livigno - Santa Cristina Val Gardena/St. Christina in Gröden (Monte Pana)
A high mountain fraction broken up by the Adige and Isarco valleys, basically a 3-part stage: mountain, with Foscagno Stelvio (this year’s Cima Coppi, the highest point of the race); plain, from Prato allo Stevio until shortly after Bolzano; mountain, with the ascent of Passo Pinei and the finish in Val Gardena.
Selva di Val Gardena/Wolkenstein in Gröden - Passo del Brocon
Intense climbing stage with brutal amount of elevation gain despite its short distance. The route climbs from the start on the Passo Sella, followed by a flat section in the Fassa and Fiemme Valleys all the way to Predazzo.
Fiera di Primiero - Padova
This stage features a single, rather modest climb in the opening half of the route (the KOM of Lamon) followed by about 150 km of slightly downhill false flat.
Mortegliano - Sappada
The stage begins by riding up the Tagliamento Valley, heading north and crossing the towns of San Daniele del Friuli, Forgaria nel Friuli and Peonis. After Tolmezzo, the succession of climbs leading to the finish line begins: Passo Duron, Sella Valcalda and Cima Sappada.
Alpago - Bassano del Grappa
Relatively flat opening at Lake Santa Croce, heading downhill to Vittorio Veneto and the Muro di Ca' del Poggio, which leads into the Prosecco area. After crossing the Piave River, the route reaches the slopes of the brutal Monte Grappa, which will be tackled twice.
Roma - Roma
The final stage is divided into two parts: the first is the peloton’s outing to Lido di Castel Fusano on the Tyrrhenian Sea. It's 16 kilometres one way and another 16 kilometres back before the stage enters its second and final part, the finishing circuit (8 laps) of 9.5 kilometres, which very much resembles last year’s lap through the eternal city.
Venaria Reale - Torino
Stage 1 kicks off in the suburbs of Turin and finishes in the centre. After a flat initial phase of around 45 km, the riders will tackle three climbs.
San Francesco al Campo - Santuario di Oropa (Biella)
Challenging stage featuring the first summit finish. After a flat run-up across Canavese and Vercellese areas the pink caravan will reach Valdengo, where a succession of minor climbs begins.
Novara - Fossano
Predominantly flat stage with some minor ups and downs in the central part.
Acqui Terme - Andora
A fairly flat stage, the only obstacles are the Col di Melogno climb (8 km at around 5%) midway through the stage and the final Capo Mele, which is tackled from the same side as during the Milano-Sanremo.
Genova - Lucca
The riders leave the city of Genova and travel along the coast on the Aurelia state road in the first 50 km. The stage has just two climbs on the menu.
Torre del Lago Puccini (Viareggio) - Rapolano Terme
A demanding stage characterised by a hilly second part and three gravel sectors totalling almost 12 km. The first two are shared with the Strade Bianche, the third is a new one.
Foligno - Perugia TUDOR ITT
Individual time trial clearly divided into two parts. The first 32 km, flat and largely non-technical, lead to the foot of Umbria’s capital city of Perugia. The riders then tackle the ascent of Casaglia, with gradients up to 16%.
Spoleto - Prati di Tivo
Short stage with no flat ground to play with and plenty of elevation gain.
Avezzano - Napoli
Stage clearly divided into two parts. The first 180 km are the run-up to a demanding finale with short and punchy climbs.
Pompei - Cusano Mutri (Bocca della Selva)
The stage begins calmly with the first part of the race as good as flat.
Foiano di Val Fortore - Francavilla al Mare
Stage clearly divided into two parts. The first crosses the Apennines to Termoli and the second, entirely flat, is played out along the ss.16 state road and the shores of the Adriatic Sea.
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Intermediate sprint | Arlanc
Sprint | finish, kom sprint (1) mur d'aurec-sur-loire, kom sprint (3) côte des guillaumanches, kom sprint (3) côte de saint-just, team day classification, race information.
- Date: 14 July 2019
- Start time: 13:25 (15:25 CET)
- Avg. speed winner: 42.064 km/h
- Race category: ME - Men Elite
- Distance: 170.5 km
- Points scale: GT.A.Stage
- UCI scale: UCI.WR.GT.A.Stage - TM2022
- Parcours type:
- ProfileScore: 114
- Vert. meters: 2717
- Departure: Saint-Étienne
- Arrival: Brioude
- Race ranking: 0
- Startlist quality score: 1699
- Won how: Sprint à deux
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The 2019 Tour de France was the 106th edition of the Tour de France, one of cycling's three Grand Tours.The 3,365.8 km (2,091 mi)-long race consisted of 21 stages, starting in the Belgian capital of Brussels on 6 July, before moving throughout France and concluding on the Champs-Élysées in Paris on 28 July. A total of 176 riders from 22 teams participated in the race.
The winner of the 2019 Tour de France will effectively be determined after one mammoth final climb to the finish line at Val Thorens on stage 20, before the race heads into Paris for the finale ...
The 106th annual Tour de France is churning right along after a commemorative journey through Brussels to open the 2019 Grand Tour, and a handful of countries have already been represented through ...
Egan Bernal won the 2019 Tour de France, finishing safely with the peloton at the end of the largely ceremonial Stage 21.Caleb Ewan took the final stage win in a bunch sprint on the Champs ...
Who won the Tour de France in 2019? Egan Bernal won the 106th edition of the Tour de France. He is the first cyclist from Colombia to win the race and was the youngest rider in this year's race at ...
Egan Bernal officially won the 2019 Tour de France on Sunday.; Bernal—the first Colombian and first Latin American Tour champion, and the youngest winner in modern race history—took the lead ...
Tour de France 2019: Results. Egan Bernal won the 106th edition of the Tour de France, while Geraint Thomas and Steven Kruijswijk rounded out the podium in Paris. Caleb Ewan sprinted to three victories. Simon Yates and Julian Alaphilippe both won two stages. Check out the final GC of the 2019 Tour de France.
Geraint Thomas says he is "fine" after a late crash, as Mike Teunissen claimed a surprise win on the opening stage of the 2019 Tour de France in Brussels. Team Ineos rider Thomas toppled off his ...
Tour de France: Bernal takes yellow on shortened stage 19. Egan Bernal (Team Ineos) was the big winner during a shortened stage 19 of the Tour de France. Although the jury ruled there would be no ...
Egan Bernal ( Team Ineos) is one stage away from sealing the overall victory at the Tour de France, crossing the stage 20 finish line at Val Thorens hand-in-hand with teammate and reigning ...
Stage 18 » Embrun › Valloire (208km) Nairo Quintana is the winner of Tour de France 2019 Stage 18, before Romain Bardet and Alexey Lutsenko. Julian Alaphilippe was leader in GC.
The Tour de France is an annual road bicycle race held over 23 days in July. Established in 1903 by newspaper L'Auto, the Tour is the best-known and most prestigious of cycling's three "Grand Tours"; the others are the Giro d'Italia and the Vuelta a España. The race usually covers approximately 3,500 kilometres (2,200 mi), passing through France and neighbouring countries such as Belgium.
Stage 10 » Saint-Flour › Albi (217.5km) Wout van Aert is the winner of Tour de France 2019 Stage 10, before Elia Viviani and Caleb Ewan. Julian Alaphilippe was leader in GC.
Julian Alaphilippe is the winner of Tour de France 2019 Stage 13 (ITT), before Geraint Thomas and Thomas De Gendt. Julian Alaphilippe was leader in GC.
Follow live coverage of the 2019 Tour de France, including news, results, stage reports, photos, podcasts and expert analysis - stages Page - Cyclingnews
Stage 21 (Final) » Rambouillet › Paris (128km) Egan Bernal is the winner of Tour de France 2019, before Geraint Thomas and Steven Kruijswijk. Caleb Ewan is the winner of the final stage.
Wout van Aert ( Jumbo-Visma) claimed his maiden individual Tour de France win on stage 10, and on a day of racing that saw the overall standings change after a number of contenders lost ...
Tuesday 21 May 2024. A high mountain fraction broken up by the Adige and Isarco valleys, basically a 3-part stage: mountain, with Foscagno Stelvio (this year's Cima Coppi, the highest point of the race); plain, from Prato allo Stevio until shortly after Bolzano; mountain, with the ascent of Passo Pinei and the finish in Val Gardena. Go to stage.
Stage 11 » Albi › Toulouse (167km) Caleb Ewan is the winner of Tour de France 2019 Stage 11, before Dylan Groenewegen and Elia Viviani. Julian Alaphilippe was leader in GC.
Stage 14 » Tarbes › Col du Tourmalet (111km) Thibaut Pinot is the winner of Tour de France 2019 Stage 14, before Julian Alaphilippe and Steven Kruijswijk. Julian Alaphilippe was leader in GC.
Stage 9 » Saint-Étienne › Brioude (170.5km) Daryl Impey is the winner of Tour de France 2019 Stage 9, before Tiesj Benoot and Jan Tratnik. Julian Alaphilippe was leader in GC.