TOUR 2024: How well do you know the Tour de France? Try the AP's quiz (2024)

How well do you know the Tour de France? Try this quiz ahead of cycling’s biggest races, which starts on Saturday:

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1. From which city does the 2024 Tour de France start?

a. London

b. Florence, Italy

c. Duesseldorf, Germany

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2. Where does the race finish?

a. Paris

b. Nice, France

c. Brussels, Belgium

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3. What is the record for the most Tour de France wins?

a. Seven

b. Four

c. Five

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4. Who wears the yellow jersey at the Tour de France?

a. The race leader

b. The rider with the most stage wins

c. The best young rider in the race

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5. What is the name of the team associated with the Tour’s biggest doping scandal?

a. U.S. Postal

b. Festina

c. Team Sky

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6. Which rider was nicknamed the Cannibal?

a. Lance Armstrong

b. Miguel Indurain

c. Eddy Merckx

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7. What is the Red Lantern?

a. A red lantern signaling the final kilometer of each stage

b. The name given to the last-place rider in the general classification

c. The starting hut in time trial stages

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8. What is the broom wagon?

a. A vehicle used to clean the road ahead of every stage

b. A vehicle following the race and picking up riders unable to make it to the finish

c. The lowest gear ratio possible used on steep climbs

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9. When is the last time a Frenchman won the Tour de France?

a. 2022

b. 1985

c. 1978

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10. What is the smallest winning margin at the Tour de France?

a. 58 seconds

b. 8 seconds

c. 13 seconds

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11. Which rider holds the record for the most stage wins at the Tour de France?

a. Mark Cavendish

b. Chris Froome

c. Eddy Merckx

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12. How many riders have died in the Tour?

a. 2

b. 12

c. 4

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13. During which climb did Jonas Vingegaard take the lead from Tadej Pogacar during the 2022 Tour?

a. Col du Granon

b. Alpe d’Huez

c. Col du Galibier

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14. Vingegaard and Pogacar have won the last four editions of the Tour. How many stages have the two rivals won combined?

a. 9

b. 17

c. 14

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15. Who was the last rider to win the Giro d’Italia and the Tour in the same year?

a. Vincenzo Nibali

b. Lance Armstrong

c. Marco Pantani

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16. How much money does the Tour de France winner earn?

a. 500,000 euros ($534.000).

b. 1 million euros ($1.07 million).

c. 1.2 million euros ($1.3 million).

ANSWERS:

1. b. The race starts in Italy for the first time.

2. b. The final stage will be held outside Paris for the first time since 1905 because of a clash with the Olympics, moving instead to the French Riviera. Because of security and logistical reasons, the French capital won’t have its traditional Tour finish on the Champs-Elysees.

3. c. Only four riders have achieved this feat: Eddy Merckx, Jacques Anquetil, Bernard Hinault and Miguel Indurain. Lance Armstrong won the race seven times in a row from 1999-2005 but was later stripped of his titles for doping.

4. a. The yellow jersey is called “le maillot jaune” in French. It was created in 1919, well after the Tour started in 1903. The newspaper that sponsored the race, L’Auto, was printed on yellow paper, hence the jersey’s color.

5. b. The 1998 Tour de France was notable for the major scandal that emerged with the discovery of widespread doping on the Festina team. The subsequent police crackdown led to seven of the original 21 teams either withdrawing or being ejected from the Tour.

6. c. Eddy Merckx reportedly earned the nickname following his first Tour win in 1969, after a teammate told his daughter Merckx would not let anyone else win anything. “Daddy, he is the Cannibal,” the girl said.

7. b. “Lanterne Rouge” applies to the last-place rider in the general classification.

8. b. The broom wagon picks up riders unable to make it to the finish.

9. b. France has lacked a Tour winner since Bernard Hinault posted the last of his five victories back in 1985.

10. b. Greg LeMond’s margin of victory over French rider Laurent Fignon in the 1989 Tour. Fignon started the final day with a 50-second lead over his American rival but the Frenchman suffered from saddle sores and dropped 58 seconds in the final time trial to lose the yellow jersey.

11. a and c. Both Mark Cavendish and Eddy Merckx have won a record 34 Tour stages. Cavendish is trying to break the record this year.

12. c. The first rider to die during the race was Adolphe Heliere, who passed away during a rest day in 1910. Francisco Cepeda died after a crash in the downhill of the Col du Galibier in 1935. One of the most successful British riders, Tom Simpson, died of heart failure during the 13th stage in 1967 which was later determined to be from an overdose of drugs and alcohol. The last rider to die on the Tour was Fabio Casartelli, who died after crashing in the descent of the 1,069-meter (3,507-foot) Col de Portet d’Aspet during the 1995 edition of the race.

13. a. En route to his first Tour de France win, Vingegaard moved away from Pogacar in the brutal climb to the top of the Col du Granon to enjoy a winning finish to an epic day in the Alps. The stage featured two other monster ascents, the daunting Col du Telegraphe and Col du Galibier.

14. c. Pogacar has won 11 stages, Vingegaard just 3.

15. c. Pantani did the Giro-Tour double in 1998. Nibali made an attempt in 2016 after claiming the Giro but the 2014 Tour champion finished 30th that year. Armstrong rode the Giro only once, in 2009, and his 12th-place finish was later wiped out for doping. Pogacar is making an attempt this year after dominating the Giro in May.

16. a. 500,000 euros.

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More Tour de France coverage: https://apnews.com/tag/TourdeFrance

TOUR 2024: How well do you know the Tour de France? Try the AP's quiz (2024)

FAQs

Is the Tour de France an annual answer? ›

The Tour de France (French pronunciation: [tuʁ də fʁɑ̃s]; English: Tour of France) is an annual men's multiple-stage bicycle race held primarily in France.

What is the Tour de France simple explanation? ›

The Tour de France is a stage race, meaning it takes place over the course of several days with a start and finish each day. Each day's route is called a stage. The Tour is 21 stages over the course of 23 days, so the riders get only 2 rest days over the 3 week period.

How many stages are in the Tour de France? ›

The Tour de France is a 21-stage event. The 2024 edition will begin in Florence, Italy, on June 29 and conclude in Nice, France, on July 21. Every day, the cyclists start together to complete the stage of a race. Every stage varies in distance and physical demand.

What time does the Tour de France start each day? ›

What time does the Tour de France start? Coverage of the 2024 Tour de France's first stage begins at 6:30 a.m. on June 29. Each stage will kick off between 6 and 7:30 a.m. EST, with the exception of the 21st and final stage, which starts at 10:10 a.m. EST on July 21.

How hard is the Tour de France? ›

The speed. Combining every edition of the Tour since 2007, the average pace of the winner has been 40.07km/h (24.89mph). Anyone who has ridden a local time trial will know that it's difficult to maintain this pace for 10 miles, let alone the 2000-plus miles covered in the Tour.

What are 3 facts about the Tour de France? ›

It was created by a French newspaper editor and cyclist, Henri Desgrange, to garner publicity for his newspaper, L'Auto (now L'Equipe). The race lasted 19 days and covered about 1,550 miles (2,500 kilometers). The riders left Paris for Lyon, then on to Marseille, Toulouse, Bordeaux, Nantes, and back to Paris.

What makes the Tour de France so special? ›

The Tour de France is like a giant bike race that goes all over France and sometimes even pops into neighboring countries. It started way back in 1903, making it one of the oldest bike races in the world. The race lasts for three weeks and covers around 3,500 kilometers (that's like riding from Paris to Istanbul!).

What is the goal of Tour de France? ›

The Tour de France, a cycling monument, is committed to promoting mobility by bicycle. It wishes to generate a positive impact by inspiring all those who can to make cycling a part of their life every day...

What is the hardest stage in the Tour de France? ›

Plateau de Beille - stage 15

Stage 15 is arguably the toughest stage of the race with five mountain passes totalling a whooping 5,000 metres of climbing across 197.7 kilometres. Held on Bastille Day, stage 15 will be a crucial stage and could win or lose someone's Tour de France.

How many riders are in the Tour de France 2024? ›

With 176 riders and 22 teams, the TDF 2024 is sure to be exciting for cycling fans. While people may know favorites like Tadej Pogacar, Jonas Vingegaard and Jasper Philipsen, people can't count out the newcomers. Derek Gee, who is going to his first Tour de France, is one of three riders representing Canada.

Who won stage 4 TDF 2024? ›

Tadej Pogacar wins Stage 4 of the Tour de France 2024 and reclaims the lead in the TDF General Classification.

How many hours a day do Tour de France riders ride? ›

The Tour de France is arguably one of the toughest challenges in elite sport – three weeks in the saddle, riding 5-6 hours a day, along thousands of kilometres of roads and ascending some of Europe's most iconic (and savage) peaks.

Who owns the Tour de France? ›

The Tour de France is organised each year by Amaury Sports Organisation (A.S.O.), an independent business that is a subsidiary of Groupe Amaury, the family-run media empire headed by Marie-Odile Amaury, the widow of Philippe Amaury, and her two children, Jean-Etienne and Aurore.

Why is the Tour de France not finishing in Paris? ›

Route and stages

The route also visited the microstate of San Marino, making it the 14th country to be visited by a Tour stage. The race will not finish in Paris, owing to preparations for the Paris 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games, which start on 26 July.

Is the Tour de France yearly? ›

Also known as "Le Grande Boucle" or "Le Tour", the Tour de France is the world's largest annual sporting event. It's a cycling competition that is held in France every year (sometimes neighboring countries) and takes place in 21 stages with a course that covers approximately 3,500 kilometers.

Is the Tour de France course the same every year? ›

The route changes every year, with the majority of the route in France, and often crosses borders. In 2023, the route is 3,404 kilometers. The race will take place from July 1 to July 23, and the Grand départ (mass start) will be hosted in Bilbao! You'll find a map of the complete route here.

Do riders get to keep the yellow jersey? ›

The yellow jersey on the first day of the Tour is traditionally permitted to be worn by the winner of the previous year's race; however, wearing it is a choice left to the rider, and in recent years has gone out of fashion. If the winner does not ride, the jersey is not worn.

What is the annual revenue of the Tour de France? ›

The revenue generated from this pedal-powered spectacle is estimated to be anywhere between $60 million and $150 million per annum, according to sources consulted by The Hustle. This figure represents about 50% of the total annual revenue of the Amaury Sport Organisation, the owner of the race.

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