Stage 17) La Mure - Serre Chevalier - WEDNESDAY 19 JULY / 183KM


STAGE 17 - WEDNESDAY 19 JULY / 183KM

A huge Alpine stage, with four very tough climbs, culminating in the high point of the race: the Col du Galibier

Here we go: the Alps. The first stage of the final mountain range gets going in La Mure, a modest town south of Grenoble whose claim to fame is being the penultimate stop on the Route Napoléon. 
The stage heads east, further into the Isère département before turning north for the cat-two Col d’Ornon. The Ornon is the gateway to the classic Alpine terrain of the Tour. To the northwest is the magnificent Belledonne Massif, with its hydroelectric dams. To the east: the peaks and ski complexes of Alpe d’Huez on the Grandes Rousses massif. The Alpe isn’t on the agenda, though this stage does visit two behemoths. The first is the Col de la Croix de Fer, via the western ascent which it shares, for the most part, with the Col du Glandon. Despite a couple of downhill sections offering some reprieve, it’s a hard climb, and at 24km it’s long. Its gradient also varies and the 5.2 per cent average includes those descents and veils long sections at nine, 10, even 11 per cent. And that’s just an hors-categorie hors d’oeuvre to a very indigestible main course, an ascent of the Col du Galibier via the Télégraphe. From the bottom in Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne to the top of the Galibier, the roof of the Tour at 2,645m, is 35km of upward progress. The Télégraphe KoM and the 3km descent thereafter means they’re separate beasts, but there’s barely time to catch breath between them
This will be the first ascent of the Galibier since 2011 - the longest fallow period in the climb’s history. It was due to be used in 2015, but a landslide meant the race was re-routed over the Croix de Fer. After a quite technical 8km descent to the junction with the top of the Lauteret, it’s almost arrow straight on the schuss to Serre Chevalier.

MILLAR SAYS
Into the Alps and it’s a monster day of climbing. With 50km and one mountain before the Croix de Fer, an escape will go clear and that will contain guys who can climb. Whether they survive for the stage win depends if the GC race kicks off before the Télégraphe/Galiber ascent. These are long passes and both get harder the further up you go so any weaknesses are quickly spotted and exploited. There’ll be no comebacks on the downhill to the finish as it’s all big road and usually a headwind.

TOUR HISTORY
The last time the Tour had a stage win at Serre Chevalier, which is two thirds of the way down the Lautaret descent to Briançon, the stage was much the same, climbing the Glandon, Télégraphe and Galibier. Tony Rominger won there in 1993 in a three-up sprint, with only four more riders finishing within 4:30.

PREVIOUS WINNERS
1974 VICENTE LÓPEZ CARRIL
1975 BERNARD THÉVENET
1993 TONY ROMINGER

58.7 - Km of categorised climbing in this stage, more than any other. Next: stage 12, 45.8 km
58 - Number of times since 1911, the first time, that the Tour has crossed the Galibier
3 - Number of times the Tour has previously finished at Serre Chevalier

0 km -- La Mure -- 12:20
30 km -- Col d’Ornon -- 13:14
47.5 km -- Allemont -- 13:35
78.5 km -- Col de la Croix de Fer -- 14:48
132.5 km -- Col du Télégraphe -- 16:15
155 km -- Col du Galibier -- 17:07

183 km -- Serre Chevalier -- 17:36

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