TDF 2024:- Stage 16: Gruissan – Nimes, 188.6km ***Spoilers***
Stage 16: Gruissan – Nimes, 188.6km
July 16th.
Start Time: 12-05BST.
Stage 16 of the Tour de France 2024 is a 188.6km flat stage from Gruissan to Nîmes.The stage route leaves the coast near Narbonne, and heads over the Pic Saint-Loup. The 2nd stage of the 2017 Vuelta a España went in the opposite direction. The race from Nîmes to Gruissan spanned over 200 kilometres and featured less than 600 vertical metres. Strong winds shredded the peloton in the finale. The route from Gruissan to Nîmes heads more inland, with an altitude gain of almost 1,200 metres, which still favors the fast men.
While Gruissan was not part of the Tour de France before, the opposite is true for Nîmes. The race has visited the ancient city three times in the past decade. Alexander Kristoff (2014), Caleb Ewan (2019), and Nils Politt (2021) claimed victories in those editions.
Profile.
Map.
The Climb.
Côte de Fambetou (Cat. 4)
Final Kilometres.
The peloton takes the D135 Chemin des Canaux to Aubord and Caissargues. It then joins the D999 near Rodilhan. There's a left turn at a roundabout onto Boulevard du Président Salvador Allende. Now there are no more turns before the finish, but there are several roundabouts where the race goes straight on.
The finish line is on Bd Allende by Nîmes Métropole Colisée, and near the Stade des Costières.
What to Expect.
The route is 100% tailored for the fast men. There’s only one climb on the course, the Côte de Fambetou, which rises 1.2 kilometres with an average gradient of 5%. It’s a mere trifle, unlikely to affect the race dynamics, since its summit is 76 kilometres from the finish.
However, what could influence the race are crosswinds. Conditions in this part of Occitany can get quite lively. Fingers crossed that the Mistral blows, eh?
Gruissan
Stage town for the first time.
Town in the Aude department (11)
Population: 5,100
GRUISSAN AND CYCLING
Although the Tour de France has never made a stop in Gruissan, it has already visited the immediate vicinity of the Aude seaside resort, notably during its visits to Narbonne and Narbonne-Plage, which have generally favoured sprinters.
Specialities: eel bourride, Mediterranean fish and seafood, Aude wines (La Clape, Minervois, Corbières). Oysters from Gruissan and Leucate.
Eel bourride
This is a typical dish of the fishermen of Bages and Gruissan. In the land of the ponds, bourride is cooked with a heel of ham and potatoes, topped with a parsley and olive oil sauce.
Nîmes
Stage town for the 20th time
Prefecture of Gard
Population: 154,850
NIMES AND CYCLING
The 19 stages of the Tour de France that finish in Nimes have often been won by sprinters, although the race's final visit went an escapee, solid German Nils Politt, who won solo at the foot of the arena. In 2019, Caleb Ewan won his second stage of the Tour de France here, following his victory in Toulouse five days earlier. In 2014, close to the Costières stadium, Norway's Alexander Kristoff won the final stage of the race, controlling a peloton that had just caught New Zealander Jack Bauer, who had broken clear from the start. 2008 saw the revelation on the Tour of the extraordinary talent of Isle of Man speedster Mark Cavendish.
Specialities: brandade de Nimes, Villaret croquants (dry cakes), picholine (AOC green olive), Nimes olive oil (AOC), Nimes pâtés, gariguettes (strawberries), Costières de Nimes (AOC wine). Jeans originate from Nimes (Denim).
Nimes brandade
Brandade is a Nimes speciality made with cod or, more precisely, hake, which was the name given to salted and dried hake, a fish caught in the Mediterranean, before becoming the local name for cod. Brandade was born from the combination of three ingredients that could only be found in Nimes: sea salt harvested fifty kilometres away, local hake later replaced by cod, and olive oil, which is abundant here.
Comments
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Maxim van Gils will be a DNS, he's tested positive for Covid on the rest day.
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Stage 16: Gruissan – Nimes, 188.6km, July 16th.
"The stage route leaves the coast near Narbonne, and heads over the Pic Saint-Loup"
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No road goes over the Pic Saint-Loup, a road goes a bit higher on its south side, but the road on its north side is much lower. If you want to hike to its peak, you park off the road on its south side, and then need a good hour.to reach its top.
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I guess that's why it says heads over, not goes over.
"Science is a tool for cheaters". An anonymous French PE teacher.0 -
🙃
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Pic Saint-Loup is one of the ten grand cru designated wine appellations of the Languedoc, is it not?
"Science is a tool for cheaters". An anonymous French PE teacher.0 -
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Harper joins Van Gils as DNS. Both covid.
I just had a dose of the latest strain and wouldn't much fancy riding my bike anywhere with it.
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Looks like G is one of the very lucky ones who can carry on regardless, despite covid positive test a few days ago.
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2020 Voodoo Marasa
2017 Cube Attain GTC Pro Disc 2016
2016 Voodoo Wazoo0 -
Did he actually test positive? This seems to be accepted as a fact by the media, but the only interview I've seen is one where he said he had covid-like symptoms but was testing negative. Did that ever change?
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On the podcast he said he tested positive, met with team docs and a UCI guy and was cleared to race
Warning No formatter is installed for the format1 -
It makes me uneasy that people are carrying on despite having it. It seems daft enough that people risk their health carrying on with a broken wrist, but at least nobody else is going to catch that.
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Yeah, I agree. I think if you test positive, even if you are asymptomatic, then you should leave the race.
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Broken wrists can be catching if you can't hold the handlebars properly.
But yeah, it feels irresponsible to continue with Covid. According to Geraint they're now treating it like any other cold virus
Warning No formatter is installed for the format0 -
Lot of crosswind talk ...might see visma desperation
"If I was a 38 year old man, I definitely wouldn't be riding a bright yellow bike with Hello Kitty disc wheels, put it that way. What we're witnessing here is the world's most high profile mid-life crisis" Afx237vi Mon Jul 20, 2009 2:43 pm0 -
I think the talk is mostly commentator desperation tbh
Seems unlikely based on the forecasts but the teams will be nervous as there's always the possibility in that part of France
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A pity it’s not in any forecast.
Crosswind later, sure, but 15kph isn’t likely to cause splits.
"Science is a tool for cheaters". An anonymous French PE teacher.0 -
Carlton will be in full roundabout panic mode today.
"Science is a tool for cheaters". An anonymous French PE teacher.0 -
Looks like there's wind a bit further south and a bit further east, but nothing exciting on the route.
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Except the first few km.
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And the prize for the most embarassing break goes to...
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People wouldn't test.
[Castle Donington Ladies FC - going up in '22]0 -
It's a battle of wills between him and the peloton.
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Stopping and having a piss was a strong move. No way the peloton was going to beat that.
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I know it suggests it'll be a really slow, boring stage, but watching the entire peloton slowly up to ensure Dujardin remains the doomed break of the day, whilst he pedals ever slower to try and get caught, has been brilliant entertainment.
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The peloton is full of people riding with all sorts of bugs and viruses though, we see them continue with gastro issues (again, I really don't know how they do it from my own experiences when I get a stomach bug). Covid is now just seen in the same way.
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This could be the dullest stage ever
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When they turn right towards beziers I'm confident something will happen.
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I'm going to take the dogs for a walk so you can all thank me when you get entertained by 30 minutes of complete chaos.
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