The 2024 Tour de France will finish with a time trial in Nice, marking the first time in history that the race will end outside of the Paris area. The change of venue for the grand finale of the Tour has been forced by Paris’ hosting of the 2024 Olympics, which get underway in the city on July 26.
It will also be the first time that the Tour concludes with a time trial since Greg LeMond dramatically pipped Laurent Fignon on the Champs-Elysées in 1989.
The length and precise nature of the time trial have yet to be revealed, but Tour organiser ASO has confirmed that the 2024 Tour will finish on Sunday, July 21, just five days before the opening ceremony of the Olympics.
ASO has yet to confirm when the 2024 Tour de France Femmes will take place, but a change of date may be necessary to avoid a clash with the Olympics.
“This new finish, conditioned by the logistical imperatives that will already block the Champs-Elysées just a few days before the start of the Paris 2024 Olympic Games, is accompanied by a significant sporting challenge as the last stage will be an individual time trial,” Tour organiser ASO said in a statement on Thursday.
“The sporting qualities of the riders likely to win mean that the Tour could remain undecided until the last few kilometres, as was the case in 1989, the last time the event offered a time trial to close the proceedings.”
The penultimate stage of the 2024 men’s Tour, meanwhile, is set to take in the rugged terrain in the hinterland of Nice, which has provided so many breathless finales to Paris-Nice over the years.
“The riders will be on the region’s roads on Saturday, 20 July,” ASO said. “They are all aware that the Nice backcountry lends itself to unbridled, high-intensity rides, almost systematically on the final stage of Paris-Nice. So, there could be opportunities just until the very end to rattle the yellow jersey.”
The location of the Grand Départ of the 2024 Tour is due to be announced early in the New Year, with Florence expected to be the site of the race’s first-ever Italian start. It would be the Tour’s third foreign Grand Départ in succession after Copenhagen in 2022 and Bilbao in 2023.
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