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 Perfiles de etapas del Tour de France 2019  infographic
El gráfico muestra el perfil de cada etapa en el Tour de France, con sprints intermedios, ascensos de montaña categorizados, puntos de bonificación y estaciones de avituallamiento identificadas.
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Perfiles de etapas del Tour de France 2019

July 6, 2019 - July 28, 2019 - La ruta del Tour de France 2019 incluye 30 ascensos ctegorizados en cinco finales de montaña en lo que los organizadores prometen que será "el Tour más alto de la historia”, y que han establecido para alentar las escapadas y los ataques. La distancia total de la carrera es de 3.460km, con la Gran Salida desde Bruselas el 6 de julio y el final en París el 28 de julio.

This year's Tour de France will celebrate the 100th anniversary of the showcase race's iconic yellow jersey.

With France emerging from the carnage of World War I, the Tour offered its beacon of hope to the war-ravaged nation. In 1919, the race leader's yellow jersey — which has become cycling's most iconic symbol — was introduced.

Only four riders have won five Tours - Jacques Anquetil, Bernard Hinault, Miguel Indurain and Eddy Merckx. Lance Armstrong was stripped of his seven titles for doping.

British rider Chris Froome will try to win his fifth title this year, but will have to depose his Team Sky teammate Geraint Thomas over the 3,460-kilometer race.

The race begins with a flat stage for sprinters around the city of Brussels and stays there the next day for the 27-kilometer team time trial.

After leaving Belgium, the Tour snakes through the Champagne and Lorraine regions. Stage 4 for sprinters starts in Reims — the Champagne-producing city where 25 French kings were crowned in its cathedral.

With the race leaving the Alsace region, Stage 7 is the longest at 230 kilometers (143 miles) and made for sprinters. The next day's stage is a hilly one, with several short but sharp climbs from Macon to Saint-Etienne.

The first rest day is July 16 in Albi in southern France, followed by a sprint stage before the Tour enters the high Pyrenees. Stage 14 on July 20 features finishes with a climb up the Tourmalet pass, one of the most famed in Tour history.

Riders tackle three days of Alpine climbing on stages 18-20, featuring an ascent up the famed Galibier and imposing Iseran — standing 2,770 meters— and culminating with a relentless 33.4-kilometer trek up to the ski resort of Val Thorens.

After the weary peloton is flown toward Paris, the race ends the next day with its processional showcase stage on the Champs-Elysees.

Sources
PUBLISHED: 25/06/2019; STORY: Graphic News
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