2005 TOUR DE FRANCE


The '2005 Tour de France' was the 92nd Tour de France, taking place from July 2 to July 24, 2005. It comprised 21 stages over 3607 km, ridden at an average speed of 41.654 km/h. The first stages were held in the département of the Vendée, for the third time in 12 years. The 2005 Tour was announced on October 28 2004. It was a clockwise route, visiting the Alps before the Pyrenees. The 2005 Tour saw Lance Armstrong make history by winning Le Tour for an unprecedented seventh time, all of which were won consecutively.

Contents
Overview
Podium favorites
Stages
Stage recaps
Teams and riders
Final standings
Rider's jerseys progress chart
Retirement/Withdrawals
See also
External links

Overview


Commercial poster for the 2005 Tour.

Overview of the stages

The traditional prologue on the first day was replaced by an individual time trial of more than twice the length of a standard prologue. This stage crossed from the mainland of France to the ÃŽle de Noirmoutier. The most famous route to this island is the Passage du Gois, a road that is under water at high tide. This road was included in the 1999 Tour. Several of the favorites crashed there that year, and ended that stage 7 minutes behind the peloton. This year they took the bridge to the island.
Later in the race, there was one more time trial, on the penultimate day. Also, there were just three uphill finishes (Courchevel, Ax-3 Domaines and Pla d'Adet), a lower number than in previous years. The finish line of the last stage was, as has been since 1975, on the Champs-Élysées in Paris.
The Tour commemorated the death of Fabio Casartelli. During the 15th stage the riders passed the Col du Portet d'Aspet, where Casartelli died exactly 10 years earlier. The Tour also commemorated the first time there was an official mountain climb in the Tour, the Ballon d'Alsace. During the 9th stage this mountain was passed again, exactly 100 years after the first ascent in the Tour.
The race jury invoked the 'rain rule' for the Champs-Elysees, meaning that Lance Armstrong became the winner of the General classification the first time the race passed the finish line, rather than the eighth time as normal.

Podium favorites



Lance Armstrong / Discovery Channel

Ivan Basso / Team CSC

Jan Ullrich / T-Mobile

Joseba Beloki / Liberty Seguros

Santiago Botero / Phonak

Stefano Garzelli / Liquigas-Bianchi

Roberto Heras / Liberty Seguros

Andreas Klöden / T-Mobile

Floyd Landis / Phonak

Levi Leipheimer / Team Gerolsteiner

Francisco Mancebo / Illes Balears-Caisse d'Epargne

Iban Mayo / Euskaltel-Euskadi

Denis Menchov / Rabobank

Alexandre Vinokourov / T-Mobile

Stages


StageRouteDistanceTypeDate
Fromentine - Noirmoutier en l'ÃŽle19 km (12 mi)Individual time trial Saturday, July 2
Challans - Les Essarts181.5 km (112.5 mi) Sunday, July 3
La Châtaigneraie - Tours212.5 km (132 mi) Monday, July 4
Tours - Blois67.5 km (42 mi)Team time trial Tuesday, July 5
Chambord - Montargis183 km (113.7 mi) Wednesday, July 6
Troyes - Nancy199 km (123.7 mi) Thursday, July 7
Lunéville - Karlsruhe (Germany)228.5 km (142 mi) Friday, July 8
Pforzheim (Germany) - Gérardmer231.5 km (143.8 mi) Saturday, July 9
Gérardmer - Mulhouse170 km (105.6 mi)Mountain stage Sunday, July 10
''Rest day'' Monday, July 11
Grenoble - Courchevel192.5 km (119.6 mi)Mountain stage Tuesday, July 12
Courchevel - Briançon173 km (107 mi)Mountain stage Wednesday, July 13
Briançon - Digne-les-Bains187 km (116 mi)Mountain stage Thursday, July 14
Miramas - Montpellier173.5 km (107.8 mi) Friday, July 15
Agde - Ax-3 Domaines220.5 km (137 mi)Mountain stage Saturday, July 16
Lézat-sur-Lèze - Saint-Lary Soulan (Pla d'Adet)205.5 km (127 mi)Mountain stage Sunday, July 17
''Rest day'' Monday, July 18
Mourenx - Pau180.5 km (112.2 mi)Mountain stage Tuesday, July 19
Pau - Revel239.5 km (148 mi) Wednesday, July 20
Albi - Mende189 km (117 mi) Thursday, July 21
Issoire - Le Puy-en-Velay153.5 km (95 mi) Friday, July 22
Saint-Étienne - Saint-Étienne55 km (34 mi)Individual time trial Saturday, July 23
Corbeil-Essonnes - Paris Champs-Élysées144 km (89.5 mi) Sunday, July 24
''Total''3606 km (2240.7 mi)


ImageSize = width:800 height:600
PlotArea = width:550 height:500 left:25 bottom:100
AlignBars = justify
TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal
Period = from:0 till:250
ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:10 start:0
Legend = orientation:horizontal top:50 left: 125
Colors=
id:Indi value:green legend:Individual_time_trial
id:Moun value:red legend:Mountain_stage
id:Team value:blue legend:Team_time_trial
id:Rest value:white
PlotData=
color:yellow width:20 textcolor:black align:center
bar:1 from:start till:19 text:"Fromentine → Noirmoutier en l'Île" color:green
bar:2 from:start till:181.5 text:"Challans → Les Essarts"
bar:3 from:start till:212.5 text:"La Châtaigneraie → Tours"
bar:4 from:start till:67.5 text:"Tours - Blois" color:blue
bar:5 from:start till:183 text:"Chambord - Montargis"
bar:6 from:start till:199 text:"Troyes - Nancy"
bar:7 from:start till:228.5 text:"Lunéville - Karlsruhe"
bar:8 from:start till:231.5 text:"Pforzheim (Germany) - Gérardmer"
bar:9 from:start till:170 text:"Gérardmer - Mulhouse" color:red
bar:10 from:start till:100 text:"''Rest day''" color:white
bar:11 from:start till:192.5 text:"Grenoble - Courchevel" color:red
bar:12 from:start till:173 text:"Courchevel - Briançon" color:red
bar:13 from:start till:187 text:"Briançon - Digne-les-Bains" color:red
bar:14 from:start till:173.5 text:"Miramas - Montpellier"
bar:15 from:start till:220.5 text:"Agde - Ax-3 Domaines" color:red
bar:16 from:start till:205.5 text:"Lézat-sur-Lèze - Saint-Lary Soulan (Pla d'Adet)" color:red
bar:17 from:start till:100 text:"''Rest day''" color:white
bar:18 from:start till:180.5 text:"Mourenx - Pau" color:red
bar:19 from:start till:239.5 text:"Pau - Revel"
bar:20 from:start till:189 text:"Albi - Mende"
bar:21 from:start till:153.5 text:"Issoire - Le Puy-en-Velay"
bar:22 from:start till:55 text:"Saint-Étienne" color:green
bar:23 from:start till:144 text:"Corbeil-Essonnes - Paris Champs-Élysées"
TextData=
pos:(350, 60) text:Distance (km)

Stage recaps


See:

2005 Tour de France, Stage 1 to Stage 11

2005 Tour de France, Stage 12 to Stage 21

Teams and riders


Main articles: List of teams and cyclists in the 2005 Tour de France

189 riders in 21 teams commenced the 2005 Tour de France, 155 riders finished.
Of the competitors in the 2005 Tour, the tallest rider was Johan Van Summeren at 1.98 metres and the shortest was Samuel Dumoulin at 1.58 metres. The heaviest rider was Magnus Bäckstedt at 95 kg, the lightest was Leonardo Piepoli at 57 kg. Christopher Horner and Laurent Lefevre shared the lowest resting heart rate, 35 beats per minute. The "average" rider in 2005 was 1.79 metres tall, weighed 71 kg, and had a resting heart rate of 50 beats per minute.

Final standings


RankNameCountryTeamTime
(Ave. Speed)
1'Lance Armstrong' 'Discovery Channel' 86h 15' 02"
(41.654 km/h)
2 Ivan Basso Team CSC 4' 40"
3 Jan Ullrich T-Mobile Team 6' 21"
4 Francisco Mancebo Illes Balears 9' 59"
5 Alexander Vinokourov T-Mobile 11' 01"
6 Levi Leipheimer Team Gerolsteiner 11' 21"
7 Michael Rasmussen Rabobank 11' 33"
8 Cadel Evans Davitamon-Lotto 11' 55"
9 Floyd Landis Phonak 12' 44"
10 Óscar Pereiro Phonak 16' 04"
11 Christophe Moreau Crédit Agricole 16' 26"
12 Yaroslav Popovych Discovery Channel 19' 02"
13 Eddy Mazzoleni Lampre-Caffita 21' 06"
14 George Hincapie Discovery Channel 23' 40"
15 Haimar Zubeldia Euskaltel 23' 43"
16 Jörg Jaksche Liberty Seguros 24' 07"
17 Bobby Julich Team CSC 24' 08"
18 Oscar Sevilla T-Mobile Team 27' 45"
19 Andrey Kashechkin Crédit Agricole 28' 04"
20 Giuseppe Guerini T-Mobile Team 33' 02"
21 Carlos Sastre Team CSC 34' 24"
22 Xabier Zandio Illes Balears 36' 20"
23 Leonardo Piepoli Saunier Duval-Prodir 36' 20"
24 Michael Boogerd Rabobank 38' 29"
25 Paolo Savoldelli Discovery Channel 44' 30"
26 Georg Totschnig Team Gerolsteiner 49' 14"
27 Mikel Astarloza AG2R Prévoyance 54' 03"
28 Laurent Brochard Bouygues Télécom 55' 29"
29 Sandy Casar Française des Jeux 56' 47"
30 José Azevedo Discovery Channel 59' 48"

Rider's jerseys progress chart


ImageSize = width:480 height:600
PlotArea = left:25 right:0 bottom:20 top:15
DateFormat = yyyy
Period = from:1 till:22
TimeAxis = orientation:vertical order:reverse
ScaleMajor = gridcolor:white unit:year increment:1 start:1
Colors =
id:yellow value:rgb(1,1,0.4)
id:red value:rgb(1,0.5,0.5)
id:green value:rgb(0.7,1,0.5)
id:lightgrey value:rgb(0.95,0.95,0.95)
PlotData=
bar:Leader color:yellow width:110 mark:(line,black) align:center fontsize:S shift:(0,2)
# shift texts up or down manually to avoid overlap
from:1 till:4 text:David Zabriskie
from:4 till:9 text:Lance Armstrong
from:9 till:10 text:Jens Voigt
from:10 till:22 text:Lance Armstrong
bar:Sprinter color:green
# shift texts up or down manually to avoid overlap
from:1 till:2 text:David Zabriskie
from:2 till:12 text:Tom Boonen
from:12 till:22 text:Thor Hushovd
bar:Mountains color:red
# shift texts up or down manually to avoid overlap
from:1 till:2 text:N/A
from:2 till:3 text:Thomas Voeckler
from:3 till:6 text:Erik Dekker
from:6 till:7 text:Karsten Kroon
from:7 till:8 text:Fabian Wegmann
from:8 till:22 text:Michael Rasmussen
bar:Young color:lightgrey
# shift texts up or down manually to avoid overlap
from:1 till:3 text:Fabian Cancellara
from:3 till:8 text:Yaroslav Popovych
from:8 till:10 text:Vladimir Karpets
from:10 till:13 text:Alejandro Valverde
from:13 till:22 text:Yaroslav Popovych
# axis labels are always positioned below the chart
# a workaround for getting labels above the chart is to position them with absolute values
# translators: you will have to reposition these texts (or just discard this TextData section)
TextData=
pos:(65, 590) text:Leader
pos:(172,590) text:Sprinter
pos:(282,590) text:Mountains
pos:(405,590) text:Young

Retirement/Withdrawals


189 riders started the 2005 Tour de France, 34 did not complete the event.
#Constantino Zaballa, Saunier Duval-Prodir (SDV) – Withdrawal, Stage 5
#Claudio Corioni, Fassa Bortolo (FAS) – Withdrawal, Stage 6
#Steve Zampieri, Phonak (PHO) – Withdrawal, Stage 7
#Alessandro Spezialetti, Lampre-Caffita (LAM) – Withdrawal, Stage 7
#Christophe Mengin, Française des Jeux (FDJ) – Did Not Start, Stage 8
#Serhiy Honchar, Domina Vacanze (DOM) – Did Not Start, Stage 8
#Sylvain Calzati, AG2R Prévoyance (A2R) – Withdrawal, Stage 8
#Isaac Gálvez, Illes Balears (IBA) – Withdrawal, Stage 8
#Léon van Bon, Davitamon-Lotto (DVL) – Withdrawal, Stage 8
#Luciano Pagliarini, Liquigas-Bianchi (LIQ) – Withdrawal, Stage 9
#Jaan Kirsipuu, Crédit Agricole (C.A) – Withdrawal, Stage 9
#Igor González de Galdeano, Liberty Seguros team (LSW) – Withdrawal, Stage 9
#Jose Angel Gómez Marchante, Saunier Duval-Prodir (SDV) – Withdrawal, Stage 9
#David Zabriskie, Team CSC (CSC) – Withdrawal, Stage 9
#Gerrit Glomser, Lampre-Caffita (LAM) – Withdrawal, Stage 10
#Jevgeni Petrov, Lampre-Caffita (LAM) – Excluded (Did not pass blood test after 10th stage), Stage 10
#Dario Frigo, Fassa Bortolo (FAS) – Excluded (due to finding of doping products in his wife's car before 11th stage), Stage 11
#Kim Kirchen, Fassa Bortolo (FAS) – Withdrawal, Stage 11
#Stefano Zanini, Quick Step (QST) – Withdrawal, Stage 11
#Jean-Patrick Nazon, AG2R Prévoyance (A2R) – Withdrawal, Stage 11
#Jens Voigt, Team CSC (CSC) – Eliminated on time, Stage 11
#Kevin Hulsmans, Quick Step (QST) – Eliminated on time, Stage 11
#Tom Boonen, Quick Step (QST) – Did Not Start, Stage 12
#Manuel Beltrán, Discovery Channel (DSC) – Withdrawal, Stage 12
#Robert Hunter, Phonak Hearing Systems (PHO) – Withdrawal, Stage 12
#Nicolas Fritsch, Saunier Duval-Prodir (SDV) – Withdrawal, Stage 12
#Angelo Furlan, Domina Vacanze (DOM) – Withdrawal, Stage 12
#Alejandro Valverde, Illes Balears (IBA) – Withdrawal, Stage 13
#Gerben Löwik, Rabobank (RAB) – Did Not Start, Stage 14
#David Herrero, Euskaltel-Euskadi (EUS) – Withdrawal, Stage 15
#Wilfried Cretskens, Quick Step (QST) – Withdrawal, Stage 15
#Magnus Bäckstedt, Liquigas-Bianchi (LIQ) – Did Not Start, Stage 16
#Gianluca Bortolami, Lampre-Caffita (LAM) – Did Not Start, Stage 16
#Andreas Klöden, T-Mobile Team (TMO) – Withdrawal, Stage 17

Cofidis, Bouygues Télécom and Team Gerolsteiner finished with full line-up.

See also



List of teams and cyclists in the 2005 Tour de France

Road bicycle racing

External links



Tour de France 2005 official site

Outside Online's coverage of the 2005 Tour de France

More: Tour de France 2005 links

2005 Tour de France coverage

Humorous look at the Tour de France

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves