Tour de France 2014: Yorkshire to London

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Posted Thursday 17th January 2013 –

2014-le-tour

Today more details of the Grand Départ of the Tour de France 2014 were revealed, the 101st edition of Le Tour will start in Yorkshire with two stages before heading to London, seven years after the success of the Grand Départ of Le Tour in 2007 and two years after the London Olympics. The stage details are –

Stage one – Leeds – Harewood – Otley – Ilkley – Skipton – Kettlewell – Aysgarth – Hawes – Reeth – Leyburn – Ripon – Harrogate

Stage two – York – Knaresborough – Silsden – Keighley – Haworth – Hebden Bridge – Elland – Huddersfield – Holmfirth – Sheffield

Stage three – Cambridge – Epping Forest – the Olympic Park – the Mall

The first stage will start on Saturday 5th July 2014 in front of the Town Hall of Leeds, the main city of Yorkshire. The stage will cover 190 km (120 miles) through the countryside, especially the splendid Yorkshire Dales National Park in the Pennines, before reaching Harrogate, where the first Yellow Jersey of the Tour de France 2014 will be awarded. The next day, the riders will leave from the historic city of York for Sheffield on a very tricky 200-km (125 miles) stage whose final section, especially with the formidable Holme Moss to climb, will resemble a short Liège-Bastogne-Liège.

After two stages in Yorkshire, the peloton will head south on Monday 7th July, with a stage from the University City of Cambridge to London. The capital city will provide the perfect backdrop and a picture-postcard setting for the millions of followers of the Tour de France. After passing the Olympic Park, the race will continue along the banks of the Thames and the city’s monuments: Tower Bridge, the Tower of London, Big Ben, Westminster Abbey… As in the prologue of the Tour de France in 2007 and the road races of the Olympic Games in 2012, the finish will be on The Mall in front of Buckingham Palace. Royal indeed!

Christian Prudhomme, Tour de France Director, said: “Yorkshire is a region of outstanding beauty, with breath-taking landscapes whose terrains offer both sprinters and attackers the opportunity to express themselves. We have encountered a phenomenal desire to welcome the Tour de France and no doubt that popular acclaim will be particularly in evidence over there. The Grand Départ of the Tour de France 2007 in London, the first ever organised in the United Kingdom, will remain unforgettable. We are very glad to return, seven years after, to this magnificent city.”

Gary Verity, Chief Executive of Welcome to Yorkshire said: “The routes of the Grand Départ will showcase some of Yorkshire’s iconic cycling climbs and the county’s stunning land and cityscapes. The peloton will be technically tested as they tackle some challenging terrain in what are sure to be two exhilarating days of racing in the county. The British public’s response since the news broke that the 2014 Grand Départ would be hosted in Yorkshire has been overwhelming and I am sure the route announcements today will encourage even more people to come to the county to experience for themselves the phenomenon that is Le Tour”.

Keith Wakefield, Leader of Leeds City Council, said: “As a city we are absolutely thrilled to be hosting the start of the world’s largest annual sporting event in 2014, and speaking personally as an avid fan of the Tour de France and keen cyclist for over 25 years, I am incredibly proud and excited that Leeds has been given the honour of starting this amazing and legendary race. The Grand Départ is going to be a real celebration for everyone in the city and our very special guests from all over the globe to enjoy, highlighting the best that Leeds and Yorkshire has to offer for a few days that none of us will ever forget.”

Boris Johnson, the Mayor of London, said: “It has been the most incredible epoch in the history of cycling that any of us can remember; and I am absolutely delighted that the world’s greatest cycling race is coming to the capital. People will see London framed by shooting velocipedes for what will be a fantastic spectacle of sport. I am going to be in the crowd and I hope thousands more will too.”