Tour de France: The Longest Day

Tour de France: The Longest Day

The Tour de France is the most brutal and unforgiving test of human endurance. But compared to the race’s earliest editions, today’s feats can look like child’s play.

History Tour de France

As the Tour de France peloton gathers in the lovely town of Embrun, nestled on a cliff above the Durance river, the riders may well be cursing Christian Prudhomme for sending them on a leg-sapping 222km ride down to Salon-de-Provence, the longest stage of this year’s tour. 

They should count themselves fortunate not to have been racing during the reign of Henri Desgrange, who thought nothing of taking the Tour from Les Sables d’Olonne on the Atlantic coast in 1919, all the way through the Vendée and down to Bayonne in the Basque region for a mighty 482km in the saddle, an all-time record distance. 

3/7/1922 Tour de France 1922. Stage 5 – Les Sables D’Olonne to Bayonne. Cyclists Firmin Lambot and Joseph Muller stops for a break by the water pump during the 432km stage, the longest ever stage on the Tour.

 

Early Tours were very much a circuit of France, hugging its borders without much troubling the interior, and completed by bicycle: no train transfers, making for extraordinary daily distances.

Bearing in mind the Treaty of Versailles had only been signed the day before the 67 starters left Paris, and northern Europe and its roads remained in tatters following World War One, it should come as no surprise that 1919 also holds the record for the least number of finishers in the race’s history: ten men are shown in the official records. (An eleventh, Paul Duboc, was disqualified having been found to have completed the final stage by car, and who can blame him?).

2/7/1921 Tour de France 1921. Stage 5 – Les Sables D’Olonne to Bayonne. Riders cross the bridge in the town of St Andre De Cubzac.

Indeed, by the end of the second stage, just 27 riders remained in the hunt for the maillot jaune, only introduced that year as a way of identifying the leader from a pack of grey jerseys. It was a savage race of attrition, completed by extraordinary men in extraordinary times.

And the winner of the 482km stage to Bayonne on a Sunday in July, 1919? Jean Alavoine of France, in a time a few minutes shy of 19 hours. It was followed by two consecutive rest days. You can’t say they hadn’t earned them.

This article is an extract from Rouleur #63. 

The post Tour de France: The Longest Day appeared first on The world's finest cycling magazine.

History Tour de France


READ MORE

Pauline Ferrand-Prévot only knows how to win – and the Tour de France Femmes is her latest target: ‘I want to be the best’

Pauline Ferrand-Prévot only knows how to win – and the Tour de France Femmes is her latest target: ‘I want to be the best’

The Frenchwoman returns to road racing with Visma-Lease a Bike in 2025, and her home race is at the top of her wish list

Leggi di più
‘Volunteers are the backbone of the sport’ - Carole Leigh on a lifetime of service to bike racing

‘Volunteers are the backbone of the sport’ - Carole Leigh on a lifetime of service to bike racing

The British woman has organised and officiated bike races since she was a teenager and hopes more people will follow in her footsteps

Leggi di più
Olav Kooij and the quest to be the fastest man in the world

Olav Kooij and the quest to be the fastest man in the world

The Dutchman is confident in the fact that he’s on the cusp of being the sport’s best current sprinter

Leggi di più
Josh Tarling and the pursuit of perfection: ‘I hope my peak will start next year’

Josh Tarling and the pursuit of perfection: ‘I hope my peak will start next year’

The 20-year-old Ineos Grenadiers rider on learnings from the racing season, managing adult life, and setting achievable goals

Leggi di più
Laurence Pithie: I want to challenge Van der Poel for Monument wins next year

Laurence Pithie: I want to challenge Van der Poel for Monument wins next year

The New Zealand rider talks about his journey to the top of the sport, moving to Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe and his ambitions to start to win...

Leggi di più

MEMBERSHIP

JOIN ROULEUR TODAY

Independent journalism, award winning content, exclusive perks.

Banner Image