Tour de France unveils 2026 route with double Alpe d’Huez for men and Ventoux debut for women

A picture


The 2026 men’s and women’s Tours de France will climax on two of the most famous climbs in world cycling, Alpe d’Huez and Mont Ventoux.The mountains will host key stages, with the Ventoux featuring in the Tour de France Femmes for the first time.A double stage finish to the ski station at Alpe d’Huez will provide the pivotal moment in the 113th running of the men’s race, whose route, along with the women’s event, was revealed in Paris on Thursday morning.The men’s Tour starts in Barcelona on 4 July with a rare team time trial over 19km and spends three days in north-east Spain before crossing the Pyrenees into France, with a first climbing finish to Les Angles.The threat of pro-Palestinian protests, which overshadowed this year’s Vuelta a Espana and forced the cancellation of the final stage, during the Grand Départ in Catalunya in July appear to have receded, for now.

There are a number of familiar stage towns – Pau, Bordeaux, Bergerac, Chambéry, Gap and Paris – and some innovations, including a mountain finish, deep in the Pyrenees, to Gavarnie-Gèdre, and a first visit to the fearsome climb of Plateau de Solaison.On a route with more than 54,000m of vertical gain, there is no doubt that the showcase finale on Alpe d’Huez, which will host the finishes to stages 19 and 20, will be the key moment of the race.The penultimate stage, 24 hours before the peloton arrives in Paris for a reprise of this year’s circuit around Montmartre, has a monstrous 5,600m elevation gain and takes in the climbs of the Croix de Fer, Télégraphe and Galibier, before the second haul to the Alpe, via the rugged and steep Col de Sarenne.As the men’s race focuses on Alpe d’Huez, the Tour de France Femmes makes another big step in prestige, by moving to a new slot in the calendar, a week after the men’s race ends, and breaking new ground with a firstvisit to Mont Ventoux.The new stand-alone date for the Femmes reveals how quickly the race has established itself and how popular it has become, particularly after the win of France’s Pauline Ferrand-Prévot this summer.

“We no longer need men for the Tour de France Femmes to exist,” said the race director, Marion Rousse,“There’s no need to have the men’s race as a platform to launch the women’s race,Now people are waiting to see us,Sign up to The RecapThe best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend’s actionafter newsletter promotion“People have embraced us and we are fixed in the sporting landscape,The new dates, separate to the men, prove it.

”After a Grand Départ in Switzerland, with stages in Lausanne and to Geneva, the race crosses to France for an individual time trial to Dijon, before turning south through the Rhone valleyand a penultimate stage to the summit of the “Giant of Provence”.From the Vaucluse, the peloton heads towards the Côte d’Azur for the final stage, in central Nice, on 9 August.The Femmes also hits new heights, with almost 19,000m of climbing in nine stages of racing.
sportSee all
A picture

Tour de France unveils 2026 route with double Alpe d’Huez for men and Ventoux debut for women

The 2026 men’s and women’s Tours de France will climax on two of the most famous climbs in world cycling, Alpe d’Huez and Mont Ventoux. The mountains will host key stages, with the Ventoux featuring in the Tour de France Femmes for the first time.A double stage finish to the ski station at Alpe d’Huez will provide the pivotal moment in the 113th running of the men’s race, whose route, along with the women’s event, was revealed in Paris on Thursday morning.The men’s Tour starts in Barcelona on 4 July with a rare team time trial over 19km and spends three days in north-east Spain before crossing the Pyrenees into France, with a first climbing finish to Les Angles.The threat of pro-Palestinian protests, which overshadowed this year’s Vuelta a Espana and forced the cancellation of the final stage, during the Grand Départ in Catalunya in July appear to have receded, for now

A picture

Australia beat India by two wickets in the second men’s one-day international – as it happened

That’s the series 2-0 to Australia, with one to play in Sydney on Saturday. They get the win, and it never really felt as close as the final margin suggests. At 132 for 4, maybe, when Carey fell, or 187 for 5 when it was Short getting out, those were the points when it might have been close. But Connolly settled things down after the Carey wicket, and Owen counterpunched so effectively after Short was out that he more or less finished the contest then and there. India had a slight chance at the end but not enough runs to play with

A picture

England win series after washout in final New Zealand T20 but Brook left frustrated

England’s T20 series against New Zealand ended as it had started, with a washout. On a previously dry day, the weather teased and taunted. Rain first intervened at 7.17pm, two minutes after the start of play. After a brief resumption it returned, paused, gave the ground staff a bit of time to mop up, allowed the umpires to schedule a 10pm restart and then fell once again at 9

A picture

New Zealand v England: final men’s T20 abandoned – as it didn’t happen

Harry Brook accepts the trophy, a big old handful of silver. He smiles the smile of a ten-year-old in the family photo at Christmas, and that is that. Thanks for your company and correspondence about everything from the weather to the Tims.Do join us for the ODI series between the same teams, which starts on Sunday at 1am in the UK, an hour before the clocks go back. Let’s hope it’s better than this

A picture

From monkey elixir to fentanyl: Tyler Skaggs’s death is merely a chapter in baseball’s 136-year drug fix

As the LA Angels stand trial over the pitcher’s death in the quiet shadow of the World Series fanfare across town, a sport confronts a truth practically as old as the game itselfBefore steroids, before amphetamines and before fentanyl, baseball’s first documented chemical dalliance came from monkey testicles. In August 1889, a worn-down pitcher for the Pittsburgh Alleghenys named James Francis “Pud” Galvin, so nicknamed for his once-devastating ability to reduce hitters to “pudding”, was in need of a spark. He was 32, his right arm a rubbery relic of nearly 5,000 innings pitched, his career on the fade. Then came salvation in a syringe. A French-Mauritian doctor by the name of Charles-Édouard Brown-Séquard published a paper – The Effects Produced on Man by the Subcutaneous Injections of a Liquid Obtained from the Testicles of Animals – in which he claimed that a few drops of an extract sourced from dogs and guinea pigs might well make ordinary men stronger and more virile

A picture

The Ravens’ doomsday clock inches towards midnight. Will their season survive?

A few months ago Baltimore were seen as a Super Bowl contender; now they’re struggling to make the playoffs. We assess their chances of turning things aroundThe Ravens’ season is on the brink. Coming out of a bye week, Baltimore are 1-5 after a miserable start partly because their roster has been ripped apart by injuries. Next up are the Chicago Bears, who have come into some form. Beat the Bears, and the Ravens could turn the year around