Tour de France 2013
Tour de France 2013 | |
Racing series | UCI WorldTour |
Host country | France |
Competition period | June 29th to July 21st |
Stages | 21st |
overall length | 3403.5 km |
Starting field | 198 from 34 nations in 22 teams (169 of them arrived at the finish) |
winner | |
Overall rating | 1. Chris Froome (SKY) 83:56:40 h 2. Nairo Quintana (MOV) +4: 20 min 3. Joaquim Rodríguez (KAT) +5: 04 min |
Team evaluation | Team Saxo-Tinkoff 251: 11: 07 h |
Scoring jerseys | |
Yellow jersey | Chris Froome (SKY) |
Green jersey | Peter Sagan (CAN) |
Dotted jersey | Nairo Quintana (MOV) |
White jersey | Nairo Quintana (MOV) |
course | |
← 2012 | 2014 → |
The 2013 Tour de France was the 100th staging of the most important stage cycle race in the world. It began on June 29, 2013 in Porto-Vecchio and ended on July 21, 2013 after 21 stages, traditionally on the Avenue des Champs-Élysées in Paris . 198 drivers from 22 teams and 34 nations started. The riders covered a distance of 3,403.5 kilometers during the 2013 Tour de France.
The winner of the 100th Tour de France was the Briton Chris Froome , who achieved his first tour victory after finishing second last year. A total of 169 drivers reached the destination in Paris.
Starting position
Field of participants
22 teams with 9 riders each took part in the 2013 Tour de France. The 19 ProTeams were entitled to start , one more than in the previous year. Therefore, the organizer ASO only invited three Professional Continental Teams for 2013 , namely the French teams Team Europcar , Sojasun and Cofidis, Solutions Crédits . The 198 drivers who competed at the start of the race came from 34 different nations, including Germany with ten and Switzerland with three. As usual, most of the participants in the tour came from France (42 drivers), followed by Spain with 27 and Italy with 18 drivers. For the first time in years, no athletes from Austria or Ukraine took part.
At 41, the German Jens Voigt was the oldest participant in the 2013 Tour de France, 19-year-old Danny van Poppel was the youngest starter in the field. For the 17th time, Stuart O'Grady took part in the tour, drawing level with George Hincapie , who had only set this record the year before. This year, all drivers born in 1988 or later fell into the junior ranking; at the start of the Tour there were 35 (approx. 18%).
A detailed start list with an overview of the nationalities, successes and exits of the individual drivers and teams during the Tour de France 2013 can be found on the separate page → Driver Field 2013 .
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Shortly before the start of the tour, the former Rabobank team was able to present a new main sponsor. The team that started this season under the name Blanco Pro Cycling Team entered the race as the Belkin Pro Cycling Team . The FDJ team started under the name FDJ.fr from the start of the tour. As a result, the shirt color was changed from white to blue.
Favorites
In the absence of last year's winner Bradley Wiggins, the two top favorites for the overall win were last year's runner-up Chris Froome (SKY) and the two-time Tour winner Alberto Contador (TST). Froome has already won the Tour de Romandie and the Critérium du Dauphiné this year and has the winner of Paris-Nice at his side in the form of the Australian Richie Porte . Other contenders for a place on the podium were the Spaniards Joaquim Rodríguez (KAT) and Alejandro Valverde (MOV). Rodríguez finished the Tour of Spain and Italy on the podium last year , and was also the winner of the UCI WorldTour individual classification . Valverde finished second in the Vuelta last year . The strong Spanish Movistar team included the Costa Rican Andrey Amador , the winner of the Tour de Suisse 2013, Rui Costa , and the winner of the Basque Country Tour 2013, Nairo Quintana . The extended group of favorites from Team BMC included the 2011 Tour winner, Cadel Evans , and the 2013 California Tour winner , Tejay van Garderen . The Belgian Jurgen Van Den Broeck (LTB), the Dutchman Bauke Mollema (BLA) and the eighth of the 2012 tour, Pierre Rolland (EUC) battled for a place in the top ten . There was also this year's winner of the Tour of Catalonia , Daniel Martin , and last year's Giro winner Ryder Hesjedal from the Garmin Sharp team.
The favorites in the fight for the white jersey of the best young professional included the Colombian Nairo Quintana (MOV) and the Americans Tejay van Garderen and Andrew Talansky (GRM). For the victories in the mass sprints on the flat stages, the 23-time stage winner Mark Cavendish (OPQ) and last year's winner of the green jersey , Peter Sagan (CAN), were the main candidates. Other favorites were the Germans John Degenkolb , Marcel Kittel (both ARG ) and the four-time stage winner André Greipel (LTB).
In the team time trial , the world champions from Omega Pharma-Quick-Step and the Sky team, which had many good time trials, were favorites. In the absence of Olympic champion Bradley Wiggins and time trial specialist Fabian Cancellara , world champion Tony Martin (OPQ) was the big favorite in the two individual time trials . It was expected that his greatest opponent, Chris Froome, would be particularly accommodated by the routing of the second individual time trial.
Tour itinerary
Stages
Unlike in 2012 , the tour did not begin with a prologue , but with a flat stage. The first three stages were driven entirely on the Mediterranean island of Corsica , which was part of the tour's program for the first time. The tour then entered mainland France with a team time trial in Nice and continued the tour the next day from Cagnes-sur-Mer . After the relatively flat sections at the beginning of the tour, the first two high mountain stages in the Pyrenees were due at the beginning of the second race week . The 8th stage ended after the riders had crossed the Col de Pailhères (2001 m / HC ) with a mountain finish in the first category in Ax-3 Domaines at 1372 meters. The next day there was a mountain stage with five Pyrenees passes. After the rest day , the race continued in western France. The first of the two individual time trials was held on the 11th stage. In the further course, the drivers crossed France in a south-easterly direction. The first mountain arrival in the Alps took place on the French national holiday . The longest stage at 242 kilometers ended on Mont Ventoux (HC) at 1912 meters. The last week started with a low mountain stage with the goal in Gap . This was followed by the second individual time trial on an undulating course. On the final three difficult high mountain stages, the Col de la Madeleine and the Col du Glandon had to be crossed, mountain arrivals were in L'Alpe d'Huez and Semnoz . The tour traditionally ended on the Avenue des Champs-Élysées in Paris .
First week
Daryl Impey (OGE) | 27:12:29 h | |
2. | Edvald Boasson Hagen (SKY) | + 0:03 min |
3. | Simon Gerrans (OGE) | + 0:05 min |
4th | Michael Albasini (OGE) | + 0:05 min |
5. | Michał Kwiatkowski (OPQ) | + 0:06 min |
6th | Sylvain Chavanel (OPQ) | + 0:06 min |
7th | Chris Froome (SKY) | + 0:08 min |
8th. | Richie Porte (SKY) | + 0:08 min |
9. | Nicolas Roche (TST) | + 0:14 min |
10. | Roman Kreuziger (TST) | + 0:14 min |
In the first week of the tour, the tour ran through largely flat terrain, so that the favorites were not yet in the top overall ranking. The first stage, as a flat stage, provided the perfect conditions for a sprinter to be the first to wear the overall leader's yellow jersey. This was achieved by the German Marcel Kittel (ARG), who on the first day also took the lead in the points and junior ranking. Juan José Lobato (EUS) was the first to wear the dotted jersey . The first stage was also special due to an unusual incident in the finish area. The team bus of the Orica GreenEdge team got stuck on scaffolding at the finish line and could only be driven out of the way a short time before the field arrived.
The second stage made it difficult for overall leader Kittel to defend his yellow jersey . She had four mountain classifications, including one of the second category, the climbs of which made pure sprinters fall behind in the field. So Kittel also reached the goal with a clear gap behind the new overall leader Jan Bakelants (RLT), but was able to maintain the lead in the points classification. The jersey of the best young rider went to the Pole Michał Kwiatkowski (OPQ), the dotted jersey went to the Frenchman Pierre Rolland (EUC). The RadioShack Leopard team took over the team classification from the Vacansoleil-DCM Pro Cycling Team .
Jan Bakelants maintained the overall lead on the third stage, but Peter Sagan (CAN) took over the green jersey from Marcel Kittel. During this stage the first tasks came up: Andrei Grigoryevich Kaschetschkin (AST) and Yohann Bagot (COF) finished the race. The fourth stage of the Tour de France on July 2, 2013 was held as a team time trial. The Australian Orica GreenEdge team won the stage by just one second over the favored Omega Pharma Quick-Step Cycling Team . With the victory, Orica-GreenEdge took the lead in the team classification. The team's best-placed driver, Simon Gerrans , became the new overall leader. After the rather unspectacular fifth stage won by Mark Cavendish (OPQ), he deliberately dropped back at the end of the sixth stage to allow the South African and his team-mate Daryl Impey to take over the yellow jersey. During this stage, Impey went down in tour history as the first African overall leader of the Tour of France.
The last stage of the first week was again a hilly stage. It was won by Sagan from Slovakia, while Blel Kadri (ALM) replaced Pierre Rolland as the leader of the mountain classification. In the overall standings, Daryl Impey was ahead of Edvald Boasson Hagen (SKY) and Simon Gerrans, who were three and five seconds behind, respectively. Chris Froome (SKY) was the best overall winner so far in 7th place, Alberto Contador (TST) in 11th, Alejandro Valverde (MOV) in 17th and Cadel Evans (BMC) in 22nd. Peter Sagan clearly showed the points the German André Greipel (LTB) and Mark Cavendish. In the mountain price classification, Blel Kadri had a narrow one point lead over Pierre Rolland. Simon Clarke (OGE) was in third place. Michał Kwiatkowski was placed 16 seconds ahead of the American Andrew Talansky (GRS) and 19 seconds ahead of Nairo Quintana (MOV) from Colombia in the young professional competition . In the team standings , Orica GreenEdge led ahead of Sky ProCycling and the Saxo-Tinkoff team .
The first week of racing hit the Astana Pro Team hard: in addition to Kaschetschkin (3rd stage) and Fredrik Kessiakoff (6th stage), the team's captain, Janez Brajkovič , had to end the tour due to a fall after the 6th stage. Lotto Belisol captain Jurgen Van Den Broeck also gave up the race after the fifth stage.
Second week
Chris Froome (SKY) | 55:22:58 h | |
2. | Bauke Mollema (BLA) | + 2:28 min |
3. | Alberto Contador (TST) | + 2:45 min |
4th | Roman Kreuziger (TST) | + 2:48 min |
5. | Laurens ten Dam (BLA) | + 3:01 min |
6th | Jakob Fuglsang (AST) | + 4:39 min |
7th | Michał Kwiatkowski (OPQ) | + 4:44 min |
8th. | Nairo Quintana (MOV) | + 5:18 min |
9. | Jean-Christophe Péraud (ALM) | + 5:39 min |
10. | Joaquim Rodríguez (KAT) | + 5:48 min |
Peter Sagan (CAN) | 357 P. | |
2. | Mark Cavendish (OPQ) | 273 P. |
3. | André Greipel (LTB) | 217 P. |
Pierre Rolland (EUC) | 50 p. | |
2. | Chris Froome (SKY) | 33 P. |
3. | Richie Porte (SKY) | 28 p. |
Michał Kwiatkowski (OPQ) | 55:27:42 h | |
2. | Nairo Quintana (MOV) | + 0:34 min |
3. | Andrew Talansky (GRS) | + 1:10 min |
Tinkoff | 165: 29: 45 h | |
2. | Movistar | + 2:26 min |
3. | Belkin-Pro Cycling Team | + 2:32 min |
At the beginning of the second week of the tour, there were two high mountain stages in the Pyrenees on the program. The eighth stage, held on July 6th, took the riders from Castres to Ax 3 Domaines. The 2001 meter high Col de Pailhères of the highest mountain category had to be overcome. At its summit, the souvenir Henri Desgrange (award for the first rider on the highest mountain of the tour) was awarded. After an attack from the field, the Colombian Nairo Quintana (MOV) secured this € 5,000 prize. On the last climb, Chris Froome got rid of all his pursuers and crossed the finish line with almost a minute ahead of his team mate Richie Porte . Behind them followed Alejandro Valverde and, surprisingly, Bauke Mollema (BLA) with his assistant Laurens ten Dam . Alberto Contador finished eighth, Joaquim Rodríguez (KAT) was eleventh. Cadel Evans and Andy Schleck lost a lot of time, as did Daryl Impey, who finished over seven minutes behind Froome.
Chris Froome's clear superiority at this stage raised doubts about the legitimacy of his success. A sports scientist attested him a “non-human” performance for the final ascent of the eighth stage. Three-time tour winner Greg LeMond also expressed concerns about Froome's assurances that prohibited substances would not improve his performance. In the overall standings, Froome was now the leader, followed by his assistant Richie Porte in second place. This resulted in a similar combination as in the 2012 Tour, when two Sky drivers were also in the lead. Back then, it was Bradley Wiggins overall leader and Froome second. Alejandro Valverde was third, 1:25 minutes behind, followed by Mollema and ten Dam as well as Roman Kreuziger and Alberto Contador from the Saxo-Tinkoff team. As the best placed young professional, Nairo Quintana also held the lead in the standings for the white jersey, in the overall standings he was 2:02 minutes behind Froome. In the mountain classification, Froome drew level with Pierre Rolland and took over this jersey due to the faster overall time. The Movistar team was now ahead in the team classification.
During the second stage in the Pyrenees on the following day, Froome's pursuers managed to distance his helper Richie Porte, who fell far behind the leading group. Froome was therefore without teammates and on his own, but was able to fend off the attacks, which were mainly driven by Quintana. The other favorites refrained from attacking Froomes, so that the runaway Daniel Martin (GRS) could win the stage . Due to the great deficit of Portes, Alejandro Valverde moved up to second place in the overall standings. Pierre Rolland scored enough points in the mountain classifications to overtake Froome again and take over the dotted jersey again.
After the rest day on Monday, July 8th, a flat stage was on schedule. This was won by Marcel Kittel, who was able to celebrate the first double stage win on this tour. However, he couldn't catch up with Peter Sagan, who confidently defended the green jersey. The eleventh stage was the first individual time trial of the Tour de France 2013. The stage was won by German Tony Martin (OPQ) with a twelve second lead over Chris Froome, who was able to extend his lead in the overall standings. Third place went to Belgian Thomas De Gendt (UCI), around a minute behind Martin. Kwiatkowski took over the white jersey from Quintana again. The following twelfth stage was won again by Marcel Kittel, which was the third victory in a row for German riders and a total of fifth stage victory for a German in the 100th Tour de France.
Despite the unspectacular routing as a flat stage, the 13th stage held some surprises in store: there was a strong wind, and Alberto Contador's Saxo-Tinkoff team was constantly attacking Chris Froome. He again had no team mate at his side, and Edvald Boasson Hagen, an important helper of Froomes, was no longer available at the start of the stage. In connection with the wind, the attacks led to the main field being split up into several groups. From the leading group, Mark Cavendish achieved his second stage success, with Mollema, ten Dam, Kreuziger, Contador, Sagan and Jakob Fuglsang (AST), who was the new captain of the Astana team after the failure of Janez Brajkovič , at the top of the race . These drivers were 1:09 minutes ahead of Chris Froome's group, who also included most of the other favorites. Alejandro Valverde had a technical defect on the bike and was unable to catch up with the others afterwards. He therefore fell almost ten minutes behind Mollema, who was able to reduce his gap to Froome to 2:28 minutes. Contador and Kreuziger moved up to third and fourth. Since most of the other Movistar drivers had fallen behind with Valverde, the Saxo-Tinkoff team took the lead in the team standings.
The 14th stage, a "low mountain range" on the edge of the Alps, was held on Saturday, July 13th. A large breakaway group won here with a seven-minute lead over the main field. However, the relatively large deficit did not have any serious impact on the ratings of the tour. At the end of the second week, Froome was still in the lead, followed by Mollema, Contador, Kreuziger, ten Dam, Fuglsang, Kwiatkowski, Quintana, Jean-Christophe Péraud (ALM) and Joaquim Rodríguez. Peter Sagan (357 points) continued to lead the scoring, followed by Mark Cavendish (273 points), André Greipel (217 points) and Marcel Kittel (177 points). In the mountain classification Pierre Rolland was with 50 points ahead of Chris Froome with 33 points and Richie Porte with 28 points. Michał Kwiatkowski continued to wear the white jersey, followed by Nairo Quintana and Andrew Talansky. Last year's winner of this classification, Tejay van Garderen (BMC), was already more than 27 minutes behind Kwiatkowski. The fastest team was the Danish team Saxo-Tinkoff, followed by Movistar and Belkin.
Ratings in the course of the tour
The table shows the leader in the respective classification or the wearer of the classification jerseys or colored back numbers at the end of the respective stage. The individual stage articles, which are linked in the first column, offer a more detailed overview of the placements after a stage.
Anmerkungen zur Tabelle:
Final score
Chris Froome (SKY) |
83:56:40 h (40.544 km / h) |
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2. | Nairo Quintana (MOV) | + | 4:20 min
3. | Joaquim Rodríguez (KAT) | + | 5:04 min
4th | Alberto Contador (TST) | + | 6:27 min
5. | Roman Kreuziger (TST) | + | 7:27 min
6th | Bauke Mollema (BEL) | + 11:42 min |
7th | Jakob Fuglsang (AST) | + 12:17 min |
8th. | Alejandro Valverde (MOV) | + 15:26 min |
9. | Daniel Navarro (COF) | + 15:52 min |
10. | Andrew Talansky (GRS) | + 17:39 min |
Peter Sagan (CAN) | 409 P. | |
2. | Mark Cavendish (OPQ) | 312 P. |
3. | André Greipel (LTB) | 267 P. |
Nairo Quintana (MOV) | 147 P. | |
2. | Chris Froome (SKY) | 136 P. |
3. | Pierre Rolland (EUC) | 119 P. |
Nairo Quintana (MOV) | 84:01:00 h | |
2. | Andrew Talansky (GRS) | + 13:19 min |
3. | Michał Kwiatkowski (OPQ) | + 14:39 min |
Team Saxo-Tinkoff | 251: 11: 07 h | |
2. | Ag2r | + | 8:28 min
3. | RadioShack Leopard | + | 9:02 min
Christophe Riblon Ag2r |
The 2013 Tour de France finished 169 out of 198 riders who started, so around 85% of the cyclists reached the finish in Paris. The fastest and thus the winner of the tour was Chris Froome, who covered the distance in a total of 83 hours, 56 minutes and 40 seconds. He reached an average speed of 40.5 kilometers per hour. Froome was the fastest of all 2007 winners on the Tour. Second behind Froome was Nairo Quintana from Colombia, who was 4:20 minutes behind the leader on his first tour. Quintana was recognized as the fastest young professional as well as the best in the mountains. Two Spaniards followed in third and fourth place: Joaquim Rodríguez was 5:04 minutes behind Froome, Alberto Contador was 6:27 minutes behind. Fifth place went to Contador's team-mate Roman Kreuziger, who finished the tour 7:27 minutes behind Froome. Sixth was Bauke Mollema from the Netherlands and Jakob Fuglsang from Denmark seventh. They were 11:42 and 12:17 minutes behind. Eighth and ninth place were occupied by two Spanish racing drivers, Alejandro Valverde and Daniel Navarro were 15:26 and 15:52 minutes behind Chris Froome. The best American was Andrew Talansky, who was classified 17:39 minutes behind the leader and thus finished tenth. The Canadian Svein Tuft was 169th and last of the tour ( Lanterne Rouge ), he was 4:27:55 hours behind at the finish.
The points classification (green jersey) was won again by Peter Sagan from Slovakia, he achieved 409 points and was thus again victorious in this classification after last year. Second place behind Sagan went to Mark Cavendish from Great Britain. With 312 he was well behind the Slovak. Third in the points evaluation was the German André Greipel with 267 points. A total of 140 drivers achieved points in this evaluation. The winner in the mountain classification for the dotted jersey was Nairo Quintana with 147 points. He won just ahead of Chris Froome, who had scored 136 points. Third place went to Frenchman Pierre Rolland with 117 points. A total of 74 drivers received mountain points. The white jersey of the best young driver went to Nairo Quintana, who with his second place in the overall standings was 13:19 minutes ahead of Andrew Talansky, who came second in the young professional standings. Third was Michał Kwiatkowski from Poland, 14:39 minutes behind Quintana.
The team competition was won by the Danish team Saxo-Tinkoff around Contador and Kreuziger. The riders of this team needed 251: 11: 07 hours for the 3,403.5 kilometers of the Tour de France 2013. With a gap of 8:28 minutes, the French team Ag2r La Mondiale achieved second place ahead of the RadioShack Leopard from Luxembourg, the 9: Was 02 minutes behind Saxo-Tinkoff. The last place in this classification went to the Cannondale team, which took 6:21:09 hours longer than Saxo-Tinkoff to reach the finish.
The Frenchman Christophe Riblon was honored as the most combative driver of the tour. He won the 18th stage to Alpe d'Huez and received the red shirt number for the following day . Furthermore, Riblon was involved in numerous escape attempts.
Special features of the 100th edition
- For the first time since the 100th anniversary in 2003 , the Tour de France 2013 took place exclusively on French territory.
- For the first time in the history of the Tour of France, stages were held in Corsica .
- On the occasion of the anniversary, with the exception of Lance Armstrong, all around 1,400 riders who were still alive and who had ever finished the tour were invited to attend the finish of the 100th tour in a grandstand on the Avenue des Champs-Élysées .
- For the first time in the history of the tour, the riders had to climb the climb to L'Alpe d'Huez twice in one stage.
- This year there was an evening stage for the first time : the final stage to and in Paris did not start until 5 p.m., so that the finish on the Avenue des Champs-Élysées took place at 9.45 p.m.
- In addition, the traditional circuit on the final stage in the center of Paris did not turn in front of the Arc de Triomphe - as was usual up to now - but included Place Charles-de-Gaulle . Thus the drivers lapped the Arc de Triomphe for the first time.
- The logo was also modified for the 2013 tour: A “100” was added below the existing word mark in gray, which includes the “e” at the lower right end of the normal logo and thus a reference to “100 e ”, the hundredth Discharge, manufactures.
Prize money
Prize money of € 2,026,900 was distributed during the tour.
- ↑ The prize money in the overall ranking was the only one that was staggered up to the last place and amounted to € 950 for 20th place and € 400 from 91st place to last place.
placement | 1. | 2. | 3. | annotation |
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Stage ranking | € 8,000 | € 4,000 | € 2,000 | staggered up to 20th place (200 €) |
Team time trial | € 10,000 | € 5,000 | € 2,500 | staggered up to 20th place (200 €) |
Intermediate sprints | € 1,500 | € 1,000 | 500 € | 18 intermediate sprints during the tour |
Mountain classification cat. HC | € 800 | 450 € | € 300 | 7 ratings during the tour |
Mountain classification cat. 1 | € 650 | 400 € | 150 € | 8 ratings during the tour |
Mountain classification cat. 2 | 500 € | 250 € | - | 13 ratings during the tour |
Mountain classification cat. 3 | € 300 | - | 16 ratings during the tour | |
Mountain classification cat. 4 | € 200 | - | 20 ratings during the tour | |
Young drivers | 500 € | - | fastest young driver of the stage | |
Most combative driver | € 2,000 | - | except time trials | |
team | € 2,800 | - | fastest team of the stage |
Special ratings:
- Souvenir Henri Desgrange on the Col de Pailhères for the first: € 5,000; This rating was won by the Colombian Nairo Quintana .
space | team | Prize money |
---|---|---|
1 | Sky ProCycling | € 525,690 |
2 | Movistar | € 344,980 |
3 | Team Saxo-Tinkoff | € 205,780 |
4th | Katusha | € 134,900 |
5 | Omega Pharma-Quick Step | € 121,260 |
6th | Ag2r | € 102,910 |
7th | Cannondale Pro Cycling | € 79,110 |
8th | RadioShack Leopard | € 63,210 |
9 | Argos-Shimano team | € 52,910 |
10 | Belkin-Pro Cycling Team | € 52,260 |
11 | Vacansoleil DCM | € 48,030 |
12 | Garmin Sharp | € 45,930 |
13 | Orica GreenEdge | € 44,670 |
14th | Lotto Belisol | € 42,950 |
15th | Team Europcar | € 40,170 |
16 | Astana Pro Team | € 26,540 |
17th | Euskaltel Euskadi | € 23,890 |
18th | BMC Racing Team | € 17,710 |
19th | Soy sun | € 15,220 |
20th | Cofidis, Solutions Crédits | € 14,710 |
21st | FDJ.fr | € 12,890 |
22nd | Lampre-Merida | € 11,180 |
reporting
Germany
In Germany there was still no live broadcast of the Tour de France on the public channels ARD and ZDF . Following the stages, they broadcast reports with a total duration of 100 minutes distributed over the entire course of the tour. ARD sports coordinator Axel Balkausky justified the move away from live reporting on the one hand with extensive restrictions in the sports budgets of the public broadcasters. On the other hand, there was no lasting structural change in cycling with regard to the doping problem. The German tour participants Simon Geschke and André Greipel expressed their displeasure with a report in the morning magazine on July 18, which had made them appear as a fraud. Rudolf Scharping , President of the Association of German Cyclists , called for a rethink on the part of the public broadcasters against the background of the success of German cyclists on the tour, the popularity of cycling and the changes that have occurred in cycling.
Only the special interest broadcaster Eurosport broadcast live broadcasts of stages of the Tour de France in Germany. The daily live broadcasts lasted at least two and sometimes up to seven hours. According to its own information, the station had the best ratings in nine years. Eurosport reached an average of 0.43 million viewers aged three and over per stage. The average market share was 4.4 percent, well above the channel average of 0.6 percent. In absolute numbers, the best value of 0.77 million viewers was achieved on the 15th stage . The largest market share of 7.3 percent was achieved on the 18th stage . In the advertising-relevant group of 14 to 49 year olds, the average was 0.11 million viewers per stage. The average market share in this target group was 3.1 percent.
1 | 2 | 3 | 4th | 5 | 6th | 7th | 8th | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14th | 15th | 16 | 17th | 18th | 19th | 20th | 21st | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Range from 3 year olds |
0.35 | 0.40 | 0.26 | 0.21 | 0.43 | 0.36 | 0.33 | 0.48 | 0.40 | 0.36 | 0.40 | 0.45 | 0.41 | 0.52 | 0.77 | 0.43 | 0.40 | 0.63 | 0.49 | 0.56 | 0.42 |
Market share for 14 to 49 year olds |
1.9 | 1.8 | 1.8 | 2.0 | 2.9 | 2.9 | 2.8 | 3.9 | 2.8 | 3.1 | 3.1 | 3.3 | 3.5 | 4.8 | 4.8 | 2.4 | 3.3 | 4.6 | 4.2 | 3.4 | 1.3 |
See also
Web links
- Official website of the Tour de France
- Regulations of the Tour de France 2013 (French / English) PDF, 3 MB
- Tour de France 2013 in the ProCyclingStats.com database
Individual evidence
- ↑ Sélection des équipes de la 100e édition du Tour de France. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on May 1, 2013 ; Retrieved May 5, 2013 (French). Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ 198 participants from 34 nations - Austria and Ukraine are missing
- ↑ Team presentation in Corsica - Tour de France start list
- ↑ 17. Tour participation - O'Grady sets a record ( memento of the original from January 16, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Cycling - Team Blanco starts the tour as Belkin ( memento of the original from June 29, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. de.eurosport.yahoo.com of June 24, 2013
- ↑ Cycling - FDJ baptise son équipe cycliste FDJ.fr à partir du prochain Tour de France ( Memento of the original from June 27, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. equipecyclistefdj.fr of June 24, 2013
- ↑ Radsport News presents the tour favorites radsport-news.com from June 28, 2013
- ↑ July 2, 2013: 4th stage, MZF Nice - Nice, 25.0 km radsport-news.com accessed on June 29, 2013
- ↑ July 10, 2013: 11th stage, EZF Avranches - Mont Saint-Michel, 33.0 km radsport-news.com accessed on June 29, 2013
- ↑ July 17, 2013: 17th stage, EZF Embrun - Chorges, 32.0 km radsport-news.com accessed on June 29, 2013
- ↑ Grand start 2013. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on February 13, 2012 ; accessed on February 29, 2012 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Nice 2013. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on July 14, 2012 ; Retrieved July 18, 2012 (English). Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ SZ-Online: Tour leaders are annoyed
- ↑ Focus Online: Designated Tour Winner doped ?: Cycling critic: "Froome is not human"
- ^ Spiegel Online: Tour de France: Kittel expands German winning streak
- ↑ Focus Online: 13th stage of the Tour de France: Cavendish celebrates victory of the day in Saint-Amand-Montrond
- ↑ Cycling News: Black Friday for Valverde
- ↑ No invite for Armstrong to ceremony honoring all Tour de France finishers. VeloNation, June 27, 2013, accessed on July 29, 2013 .
- ↑ Cheers to the 100th! ( Memento of the original from June 30, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. letour.fr accessed on June 30, 2013
- ↑ July 21, 2013: 21st stage, Versailles - Paris, 118.0 km radsport-news.com accessed on June 30, 2013
- ↑ Race regulations. (PDF (1.5 MB)) Prize money. (No longer available online.) ASO , pp. 19-24 , archived from the original on March 6, 2016 ; accessed on June 25, 2013 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Regulations Tour de France 2013 - Prize money. In: live-radsport.ch. Retrieved June 25, 2013 .
- ↑ Tour de France - Prize money list: "Peanuts" for Kittel & Co. (No longer available online.) Eurosport, July 22, 2013, archived from the original on July 25, 2013 ; Retrieved July 22, 2013 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Pit Weber: ARD and ZDF: Revised the error "Tour exit"! radsport-news.com, July 22, 2013, accessed July 22, 2013 .
- ^ Axel Balkausky: Balkausky - "Systematic and area-wide doping". Sportschau.de, July 16, 2013, accessed on July 22, 2013 .
- ↑ Christoph Nister: The exciters of the 100th Tour de France. LAOLA.at, July 22, 2013, accessed on July 22, 2013 .
- ^ A b Markus Ehrenberg: Tour de France: Rudolf Scharping wants ARD and ZDF back. Tagesspiegel Online, July 21, 2013, accessed on July 22, 2013 .
- ↑ a b c Frederic Servatius: Quota check: Tour de France. Quotemeter.de, July 22, 2013, accessed on July 22, 2013 .