Procycling

Briançon Izoard

The inal mountain stage of the race, with the hardest summit inish of the entire 2017 Tour

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The 2017 Tour goes above 2,000m four times in the whole race, and it does it all in the space of two days. If yesterday was bad, then today could be worse as the finish line is right up in the dead air at 2,360m above sea level. The route describes the shape of a horseshoe and the first section should be of little consequenc­e to the peloton, however weary it is at this stage, because it travels south with more down than up along the Durance valley road. The route makes an excursion along the eastern shore of the Lac de SerrePonço­n and the cat-three Côte des Demoiselle­s Coiffées before picking up the River Urbaye and heading upstream. It’s a very gradual climb up the valley road through Barcelonet­te and Jausiers – the sort of terrain where big groups get away – before turning off left at SaintPaul-sur-Urbaye for a rare return to the Col du Vars, last used in the Tour in 2000, but a regular feature of the mammoth north-south stages of the 1950s and 60s. The Vars is at its most testing during a long middle section that runs for 2km at about 10 per cent. The descent isn’t particular­ly technical but it does bunch up towards Guillestre at the bottom. Finally, the race makes for the big event, not just of the stage but possibly the Tour: the 14km Col d’Izoard. Purists may baulk at finishing a stage on a col – what goes up should come down after all – but the toughness of the Izoard, with long sections upwards of nine per cent and a short section of 14 per cent near the top, just after the other-worldly dolomite rocks of the Casse Déserte, will provide the penultimat­e stratifica­tion of the GC. The King of the Mountains jersey will also be decided here. It’s the only stage where there are double points for the winner.

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