Procycling

Vittel La Planche des Belles Filles

The Tour heads into the Vosges for a summit inish on the irst cat- one climb of 2017

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The story goes that the beautiful young women of Plancher-Bas, in the Vosges mountains, fled to a lake in a nearby forest to hide from Swedish invaders in 1635. Their pursuers found them, but rather than submit, they followed the lead of Inès, a farmer’s daughter who was the most beautiful of them all, and leapt into the icy depths of the lake. (In a ratings-grabbing tangent, the legend also hints at a moment of fatal attraction between Inès and a young Swedish soldier.) The reality is more prosaic – the forest was known as the place of ‘belles fahys’, the beautiful beech trees. Where the story of powerful Swedes comes from no-one is sure, although Fredrik Kessiakoff, the Swedish Astana rider, did come 56th here in 2012.

Planche des Belles Filles, which comes at the end of stage five and is the first category-one climb of the 2017 Tour, has recently been written into the race’s narrative. It was first included in 2012, and again in 2014. A third appearance in six Tours, and the fact that both previous times it has been an early but important battlegrou­nd, has made it one of the most anticipate­d climbs of 2017. Though it hasn’t been a place to make significan­t time gains – in 2012, 22 riders finished within two minutes of stage winner Chris Froome; in 2014, 21 finished within two minutes of Vincenzo Nibali – it is a tone-setter for the overall race. And with its appearance as early as stage five, how could it be any different this year? The 2017 visit has more in common with 2012. In 2014, this was the final climb of a roller coaster day with many climbs; this year, as with 2012, it’s a rolling stage with only a single categorise­d climb beforehand. Expect small time gains and more significan­t psychologi­cal advantages at the top.

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