Schlagwort-Archive: 113. Tour de France

TdF 2026: GRAND DÉPART BARCELONA 2026

Key points :
• The third start of the du Tour de France in Spain, following San Sebastian (in 1992) and Bilbao (in 2023), will be the first welcomed by Barcelona, to kick off the 113th edition of the race.
• The Catalan capital, which has already welcomed the Tour de France for stages on three occasions (in 1957, 1965 and 2009), shares a long history with cycling, especially on the roads of Montjuïc hill, which has hosted stages of the Vuelta a España and Volta a Catalunya as well as races at the World Championships and Olympic Games.
• The main site of the 1992 Olympics will also be at the heart of the programme on the first two stages on 4th and 5th July 2026, because the finishes of the inaugural team time-trial (19.7 km) and the following day’s stage (178 km) will both take place on Montjuïc hill in front of the Olympic stadium, with, from the outset, a possible showdown between the big favourites for the race.

Travelers who choose the Costa Brava or Costa Dorada as a destination generally enjoy a very leisurely break between beaches, museums and tapas bars. This, however, is certainly not the programme conjured up for the riders on the Tour de France 2026, whose first two stages promise a lively start to the race. In Barcelona, the Montjuïc district is steeped in the memories of all the major sporting events that have taken place here, whether they be the Formula 1 Spanish Grand Prix in the 1970s or, of course, the 1992 Olympic Games, for which this promontory was the nerve centre.

In cycling terms, the place is not unfamiliar to the pack, because stage finishes on the Tour de France, Vuelta a España or Volta a Catalunya have taken place here over time, won (not necessarily in chronological order) by elite riders such as Miguel Poblet, Federico Bahamontes, Jacques Anquetil, Felice Gimondi, Bernard Hinault, Thor Hushovd, Philippe Gilbert, or more recently Remco Evenepoel and Tadej Pogacar.

The battle on the Tour in 2026 will begin with the 50th team time-trial in its history, a custom borrowed from the Vuelta but a first for the Tour, this time adding a subtlety experimented since 2023 on Paris-Nice. On the collective race against the clock, individual times will be taken into account, meaning the battle between the favourites will begin on the very first day of the race. It will not begin in earnest on the first section, where the groups of riders still pedalling one behind another may perhaps have the time to catch a glimpse of the Sagrada Familia, which has just been completed to celebrate the centenary of the death of its creator Antoni Gaudi. Instead, on leaving the long straight lines and entering the more winding roads on Montjuïc hill, the teams are likely to start losing elements in the last four kilometres. Race director, Thierry Gouvenou, even thinks that there are likely to be two points at which some riders fall behind before reaching the finishing line at the foot of the Olympic stadium. The first Yellow Jersey will almost certainly go to the leader of one of the most prominent teams.

The start of the following stage will take place in Tarragona, which will become the southernmost point visited in the history of the Tour. It is on returning to the Catalan capital after travelling along the coast that the racing scenario will be set to turn into a pitched battle. Two tough slopes will have to be tackled by the riders on a twelve-kilometre long final circuit: the Montjuïc Castle slope, which is a 1.6-km wall-like ascent with an average gradient of 9.3%, should serve, on the third climb up it, as a springboard for the last pretenders for victory, who will do battle on the 600 metres of the Olympic Stadium slope. “There are many roads in this district and as a result plenty of possibilities for drawing up a circuit. I think we have managed to find the most difficult combination possible,” said Thierry Gouvenou, who compared the route with the many races that have previously come to a conclusion on the site.

For the third stage, the pack will head towards the French border for a destination which has not yet been unveiled, after leaving Granollers, which is just as famous for its handball club as for its F1 Moto GP race circuit.

The stages for the Grand Départ from Barcelona
• Saturday 4th July, stage 1: Barcelona > Barcelona (team time-trial, 19.7 km)
• Sunday 5th July, stage 2: Tarragona > Barcelona (178 km)
• Monday 6th July, stage 3: Granollers > ???

2026 GRAND DÉPART: THE CROWNING GLORY OF BARCELONA

Key points:
 The Mayor of Barcelona, Jaume Collboni, hosted the director of the Tour de France, Christian Prudhomme, at an official ceremony held this morning to announce that the 113th edition will get under way in the Catalan capital on Saturday, 4th July 2026.
 The host city of the 1992 Olympic Games has already rolled out the red carpet for the Tour de France on three occasions (1957, 1965 and 2009). It also provided the backdrop for the opening of the Vuelta in 2023. The 2026 route will feature two stages inside Catalonia and the start of a stage finishing on French soil.

South we go. The venue chosen for the Grand Départ of the 2026 Tour de France will set a new record in the history of the event, as Barcelona, straddling the 41st parallel, will edge out Porto-Vecchio as the southernmost start of the race by a dozen minutes of latitude.
The Grande Boucle has already graced the streets of the Catalan capital, most recently in 2009, when Thor Hushovd outsprinted the Spanish speedsters Óscar Freire and José Joaquín Rojas to take stage6 right next to Montjuïc Stadium. Since that fleeting Spanish sojourn, the Tour has gone through the wild experience of a Grand Départ in the Basque Country in 2023 and is now gearing up for another equally intense adventure on the shores of the Mediterranean. The Grande Boucle will share a momentous occasion with the people of Barcelona, as the Sagrada Família is slated to finally reach completion in 2026. The cathedral, whose silhouette has become an iconic symbol of Barcelona, sprang from the brilliant mind of the architect Antoni Gaudí, who adorned the city with numerous buildings and part of his whimsical spirit before he died, as fate would have it, in 1926.

Barcelona is a global architecture hub and a nexus of sport in Spain. Long before the 1992 Olympic Games, Montjuïc Hill was the scene of a street circuit that hosted events such as the Formula1 Spanish GP in the 1970s. Even more importantly, the city is the focal point of one of the oldest and most prestigious races on the cycling calendar: the Volta a Catalunya, first held in 1911. The Vuelta a España has visited Barcelona 40 times over the years, including two starts in 1962 and 2023. French fans of a certain age will no doubt recall a blink-and-you-miss-it 3.8km time trial in 1978, which Bernard Hinault won en route to his first Vuelta a España triumph.

There is something for the tifosi too, with Felice Gimondi’s world championship victory here in 1973, as well as the poignant memory of Fabio Casartelli’s Olympic gold in 1992. The Belgian Claude Criquielion topped the podium when the Worlds returned to Barcelona in 1984. Meanwhile, Spanish cycling maniacs will remember one of their all-time greats, Alejandro Valverde, and his two stage wins in Barcelona in the Volta a Catalunya, a race he won four times. Last but not least, Catalan aficionats have plenty of time to watch the local talent Juan Ayuso continue developing into an even finer rider, primed to shine on home roads in 2026.

Tour de France stages in Barcelona
2009
Stage 6 , Girona > Barcelona, 181.5km (Thor Hushovd, NOR)
Stage 7, Barcelona > Andorra Arcalís, 224km (Brice Feillu, FRA)
1965
Stage 11 , Ax-les-Thermes > Barcelona, 240km (José Pérez Francés, ESP)
Stage12 , Barcelona > Perpignan, 219km (Jan Janssen, NED)
1957
Stage 15a , Perpignan > Barcelona, 197 km (René Privat, FRA)
Stage 15b , Barcelona > Barcelona, 9.6km ITT (Jacques Anquetil, FRA)
Stage 16 , Barcelona > Ax-les-Thermes, 220km (Jean Bourlès, FRA)