Starting out from the Basque Country on July 1, the 2023 Tour de France will visit each of France's five mountain ranges as the most prestigious event in cycling marks its 120th year.
The decisive stage finish will be held at the Puy de Dome, a climb where Denmark's Johnny Weltz triumphed 35 years ago.
One of Weltz's countrymen, Jonas Vingegaard, is defending his title this year, while key rival Tadej Pogacar is returning from a wrist injury just in time for his expected challenge.
The opening stage was won by Adam Yates, who retained the Yellow Jersey until Tour debutant Jai Hindley hit the front when he triumphed on the first mountain stage from Pau to Laruns.
On the climb of the Col de Marie Blanque, Vingegaard made an emphatic early statement by leaving Pogacar 1km from the summit. The defending champion took the yellow jersey the following day on stage six, although Pogacar clawed back 36 seconds of the 64 he lost to Vingegaard in that showdown over the next two days, promising another titanic tussle.
Jasper Philipsen excelled with three wins in the first seven stages to storm clear at the top of the Points Classification. Philipsen edged Marc Cavendish out of what would have been a record-breaking 35th career stage win for the 'Manx Missile'. But there was heartbreak when Cavendish crashed out of his final Tour 60km from the end of stage eight to Limoges.
MORE: Is Mark Cavendish in the 2023 Tour de France? Retirement plans for British cycling great
Philipsen has since taken another stage win to put some more pressure on his points rivals before Michal Kwiatkowski won atop the Grand Colombier. Spainiard Carlos Rodriguez won the next stage, beating Vingegaard and Pogacar on the final descent.
Stages 16 and 17 saw Vingegaard make decisive moves in defence of his title, first by winning the time trial from Passy to Combloux and then by taking almost six minutes out of Pogacar as he dropped him on the final climb of the Queen stage in the Alps.
Following stages won by Kasper Asgreen and Matej Mohoric respectively, Pogacar won Stage 20 – but glory was within sight for runaway leader Vingegaard.
And on Sunday, Vingegaard sealed his second straight Tour de France victory, finishing 7:29 ahead of Pogacar. Vingegaard becomes the third different cyclist to win consecutive Tour de France titles since Lance Armstrong's streak of seven, which have since been vacated. Pogacar won back-to-back in 2020 and 2021, and Chris Froome won three straight from 2015-17.
Here are the latest standings from the Tour de France 2023, including the stages, teams, how to watch and more.
Tour de France 2023 standings
The latest standings in the 2023 Tour de France following the conclusion of the race, after Stage 21 (July 21):
General Classification
Position | Rider | Team | Time |
1 | Jonas Vingegaard | Jumbo-Visma | 82:05:42 |
2 | Tadej Pogacar | UAE Team Emirates | +7:29 |
3 | Adam Yates | UAE Team Emirates | +10:56 |
4 | Simon Yates | Team Jayco-AlUla | +12:23 |
5 | Carlos Rodriguez Cano | INEOS Grenadiers | +13:17 |
6 | Pello Bilbao Lopez | Bahrain Victorious | +13:27 |
7 | Jai Hindley | Bora-Hansgrohe | +14:44 |
8 | Felix Gall | AG2R Citroen Team | +16:09 |
9 | David Gaudu | Groupama-FDJ | +23:08 |
10 | Guillaume Martin | Cofidis | +26:30 |
Points Classification
Position | Rider | Team | Points |
1 | Jasper Philipsen | Alpecin Deceunink | 377 |
2 | Mads Pedersen | Lidl-Trek | 258 |
3 | Bryan Coquard | Cofidis | 203 |
4 | Tadej Pogacar | UAE Team Emirates | 186 |
5 | Jonas Vingegaard | Jumbo-Visma | 128 |
6 | Kasper Asgreen | Soudal Quick-Step | 125 |
7 | Jordi Meeus | Bora-Hansgrohe | 123 |
8 | Matej Mohoric | Bahrain Victorious | 106 |
9 | Pello Bilbao Lopez | Bahrain Victorious | 103 |
10 | Simon Yates | Jayco–AlUla | 95 |
King of the Mountains
Position | Rider | Team | Points |
1 | Giulio Ciccone | Lidl-Trek | 106 |
2 | Felix Gall | AG2R Citroen Team | 92 |
3 | Jonas Vingegaard | Jumbo-Visma | 89 |
4 | Neilson Powless | EF Education–EasyPost | 58 |
5 | Tadej Pogacar | UAE Team Emirates | 55 |
6 | Simon Yates | Team Jayco-AlUla | 44 |
7 | Tobias Halland Johannessen | Uno-X Pro Cycling Team | 38 |
8 | Jai Hindley | Bora-Hansgrohe | 31 |
9 | Michal Kwiatkowski | INEOS Grenadiers | 30 |
10 | Mattias Skjelmose | Lidl-Trek | 29 |
Young Rider Classification
Position | Rider | Team | Time |
1 | Tadej Pogacar | UAE Team Emirates | 82:13:11 |
2 | Carlos Rodriguez Cano | INEOS Grenadiers | +5:48 |
3 | Felix Gall | AG2R Citroen Team | +8:40 |
4 | Tom Pidcock | INEOS Grenadiers | +40:23 |
5 | Skjelmose Jensen | Lidl-Trek | +2:07:58 |
6 | Tobias Halland Johannessen | Uno-X Pro Cycling Team | +2:08:04 |
7 | Mathieu Burgaudeau | Team TotalEnergies | +2:13:37 |
8 | Clement Champoussin | Team Arkea-Samsic | +2:50:38 |
9 | Matthew Dinham | Team DSM | +3:06:03 |
10 | Maxim van Gils | Lotto DSTNY | +3:10:20 |
Team Classification
Position | Team | Time |
1 | Jumbo-Visma | 247:26:17 |
2 | UAE Team Emirates | +7:13 |
3 | Bahrain Victorious | +22:01 |
4 | Ineos Grenadiers | +26:36 |
5 | Groupama-FDJ | +50:44 |
6 | AG2R Citroen | +1:44:24 |
7 | Bora-Hansgrohe | +1:58:32 |
8 | Team Jayco-AlUla | +3:14:57 |
9 | Israel – Premier Tech | +4:27:13 |
10 | Movistar | +4:31:50 |
MORE: Tour de France 2023 prize money: How much will the winner make? Total purse, prize fund, breakdown
Tour de France 2023 schedule and stage winners
This page will be updated with the stage winners after each day of the Tour de France 2023.
# | Date (local time) | Length | Stage | Winner |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | July 1 | 182 km (113.09 miles) | Bilbao (hilly) | Adam Yates |
2 | July 2 | 209 km (129.86 miles) | Vitoria-Gasteiz to San Sebastian (hilly) | Victor Lafay |
3 | July 3 | 185km (114.95 miles) | Amorebieta-Etxano to Bayonne (flat) | Jasper Philipsen |
4 | July 4 | 182 km (113.09 miles) | Dax to Nogaro (flat) | Jasper Philipsen |
5 | July 5 | 165km (102.53 miles) | Pau to Laruns (mountain) | Jai Hindley |
6 | July 6 | 145km (90.1 miles) | Tarbes to Cauterets-Cambasque (mountain) | Tadej Pogacar |
7 | July 7 | 170km (105.63 miles) | Mont-de-Marsan to Bordeaux (flat) | Jasper Philipsen |
8 | July 8 | 201km (124.9 miles) | Libourne to Limoges (hilly) | Mads Pedersen |
9 | July 9 | 184km (114.33 miles) | Saint-Leonard-de-Noblat to Puy de Dome (mountain) | Michael Woods |
— | July 10 | — | Rest | - |
10 | July 11 | 167km (103.77 miles) | Vulcania to Issoire (hilly) | Pello Bilbao |
11 | July 12 | 180km (111.85 miles) | Clermont-ferrand to Moulins (flat) | Jasper Philipsen |
12 | July 13 | 169km (105.01 miles) | Roanne to Belleville-en-Beaujolais (hillly) | Ion Izaguirre |
13 | July 14 | 138km (85.74 miles) | Chatillon-sur-Chalaronne to Grand Colombier (mountain) | Michal Kwiatkowski |
14 | July 15 | 152km (94.45 miles) | Annemasse to Morzine les Portes du Soleil (mountain) | Carlos Rodriguez |
15 | July 16 | 180km (111.85 miles) | Les Gets les Portes du Soleil to Saint-Gervais Mont Blanc (mountain) | Wout Poels |
— | July 17 | — | Rest | - |
16 | July 18 | 22km (13.67 miles) | Passy to Combloux (individual time trial) | Jonas Vingegaard |
17 | July 19 | 166km (103.15 miles) | Saint-Gervais Mont Blanc to Courchevel (mountain) | Felix Gall |
18 | July 20 | 186km (115.58 miles) | Moutiers to Bourg-en-Bresse (hilly) | Kasper Asgreen |
19 | July 21 | 173km (107.5 miles) | Moans-en-Montagne to Poligny (flat) | Matej Mohoric |
20 | July 22 | 133km (82.64 miles) | Belfort to Le Markstein-Fellering (mountain) | Tadej Pogacar |
21 | July 23 | 115km (71.46 miles) | Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines to Paris Champs-Elysees (flat) | Jordi Meeus |
🤩 Here it is, the official route of the #TDF2023!
— Tour de France™ (@LeTour) October 27, 2022
🤩 Voici le parcours officiel du #TDF2023 ! pic.twitter.com/QPwvs91Ar6
How to watch Tour de France 2023: Live stream, TV
- In the UK, the Tour de France will be live on GCN+, Discovery+, Eurosport and ITV, as well as S4C in Wales.
In Australia, the Tour de France is once again being telecast live and exclusively by SBS on free-to-air and digital television.
- In the USA, the Tour de France is being shown on TV on USA Network and NBC, with live streaming on NBC Sports, Peacock and Fubo.
Tour de France 2023 confirmed teams
Team | Country |
---|---|
AG2R Citroen Team | France |
Alpecin Deceuninck | Belgium |
Astana Qazaqstan Team | Kazakhstan |
Bahrain Victorious | Bahrain |
Bora-Hansgrohe | Germany |
Cofidis | France |
Ef Educations - Easypost | United States |
Groupama - FDJ | France |
Ineos Grenadiers | Great Britain |
Intermarche - Circus - Wanty | Belgium |
Israel-Premier Tech | Israel |
Jayco AlUla | Australia |
Jumbo-Visma | Netherlands |
Lotto DSTNY | Belgium |
Movistar Team | Spain |
Soudal Quick-Step | Belgium |
Team Arkea-Samsic | France |
Team DSM | Germany |
Team TotalEnergies | France |
Trek - Segafredo | United States |
UAE Team Emirates | United Arab Emirates |
Uno-X Pro Cycling Team | Norway |
Recent Tour de France winners
Year | Winner | Nationality |
---|---|---|
2022 | Jonas Vingegaard | Denmark |
2021 | Tadej Pogacar | Slovenia |
2020 | Tadej Pogacar | Slovenia |
2019 | Egan Bernal | Colombia |
2018 | Geraint Thomas | Great Britain |
2017 | Chris Froome | Great Britain |
2016 | Chris Froome | Great Britain |
2015 | Chris Froome | Great Britain |
2014 | Vincenzo Nibali | Italy |
2013 | Chris Froome | Great Britain |
2012 | Bradley Wiggins | Great Britain |
2011 | Cadel Evans | Australia |
2010 | Andy Schleck* | Luxembourg |
2009 | Alberto Contador | Spain |
2008 | Carlos Sastre | Spain |
2007 | Alberto Contador | Spain |
2006 | Oscar Pereiro** | Spain |
2005 | Lance Armstrong*** | USA |
2004 | Lance Armstrong*** | USA |
2003 | Lance Armstrong*** | USA |
2002 | Lance Armstrong*** | USA |
2001 | Lance Armstrong*** | USA |
2000 | Lance Armstrong*** | USA |
1999 | Lance Armstrong*** | USA |
1998 | Marco Pantani | Italy |
*Alberto Contador won the race, but failed a drug test later
**Floyd Landis won the race, but failed a drug test later
***Lance Armstrong has had all his titles vacated due to doping. No winner was named in his place.