Skip to content
Home » Col de Joux Plane at the Tour de France

Col de Joux Plane at the Tour de France

Stephen Roche and Pedro Felgado fighting on the Vol de Joux Plane at Tour de France 1987

Col de Joux Plane was introduced to Tour de France in 1978.  Since then the race returned to the climb several times.

No stage ended at the top, the cyclists always had to ride down, right into Morzine.

1978 Christian Seznec (FRA)
1980 Mariano Martínez (FRA)
1981 Robert Alban (FRA)
1982 Peter Winnen (NLD)
1983 Jacques Michaud (FRA)
1984 Ángel Arroyo (ESP)
1987 Eduardo Chozas (ESP)
1991 Thierry Claveyrolat (FRA)
1997 Marco Pantani (ITA)
2000 Richard Virenque (FRA)
2006 Floyd Landis (USA)
2016 Jarlinson Pantano (COL)

(Leadpicture: Stephen Roche and Pedro Delgado on Col du Joux Plane in 1987) 

MORE TOURNDE FRANCE IN THE ALPS

Miguel Angel Lopez on the Col de la Loze,Tour de France 2020 Stage 17. A.S.O Ashley Gruber Jered Gruber

Miguel Angel Lopez conquers Col de la Loze (Tour de France retrospective -TDF 2020)

Col de la Loze was introduced to Tour de France in the 17th stage in 2020. The day delivered a Pog&Rog Show, a Lopez solo and a suddenly disappearing Bahrain-McLaren “suicide squad”. The 2 minutes gap between the three breakaway riders (Julian Alaphilippe, Richard Carapaz, Gorka Izagirre) and the peloton at foot of the 21… Read More »Miguel Angel Lopez conquers Col de la Loze (Tour de France retrospective -TDF 2020)

Fédérico Ezquerra on the Galibier (Tour de France 1936)

Col du Galibier is one of the oldest participats among the ascents the peloton of Tour de France used to climb in the Alps. It was already part the program of the 1911 edition when the race visited the Alps for the very first time.     In 1936, Col du Galibier, alongside with Thélégraphe… Read More »Fédérico Ezquerra on the Galibier (Tour de France 1936)

20 July 1986 Tour de France visits Col du Granon

The 190 km long stage between Gap and Serre Chevalier included Col du Vars, Col d’Izoard and it was the first time the race visited Col du Granon. Before the stage  Bernard Hinault (La Vie Claire) led the general classification, but he dropped on the Col d’Izoard. He was suffering from an old knee injury.… Read More »20 July 1986 Tour de France visits Col du Granon

19 July 1977 Lucien Van Impe ‘s crash on Alpe d’Huez

Thank you for being a devoted reader of PelotonTales. You are the reason why it’s worth spending so many hours to create new content and trying to improve this website. If you would show appreciation to my work, please consider supporting the blog with a small donation. Thank you! One of the oddest images from… Read More »19 July 1977 Lucien Van Impe ‘s crash on Alpe d’Huez

MORE TOUR DE FRANCE FUN FACTS

Fausto Coppi celebrating his Tour de France victory in 1949

Giro d’ Italia -Tour de France doubles

Fausto Coppi was the first rider to win the Giro d’Italia and the Tour de France in the same year (1949) In 2024, 26 years after Marco Pantani’s double victory, Tadej Pogacar managed to win both Giro d’Italia and Tour de France in the same year. The list of the riders Fausto Coppi (ITA) 1949… Read More »Giro d’ Italia -Tour de France doubles

Danish cyclist Jonas Vingegaard celebrating his first Tour de France victory in Paris in 2022

The slowest and the fastest Tour de France

You might wonder which Tour de France edition was the slowest and wich one the fastest. Here you have the answer. The slowest Tour de France was the 13th edition, held between 29th June and 27 July in 1919. The 5560 km long route of the race was  divided into 15 stages. (And it wasn’t… Read More »The slowest and the fastest Tour de France

Nicolas Frantz on the Col d'Allos at the Tour de France in 1927

Tour de France editions without previous winners in the peloton

During its 120-year long history, it happened only three times, when the peloton of Tour de France did not includ any previous winner. Obviously, in 1903 there couldn’t be any, because it was the very first edition. In 1927, it seems to have been a generational change in the peloton of Tour de France. Several… Read More »Tour de France editions without previous winners in the peloton

Vintage cycling image from the 1920s, two cyclists with the socalled laterne rouge, the prize for the last placed rider of the race

Lanterne rouge – list of the last cyclists of every Tour de France

They used to say history remembers only the winners. Fortunately this is not the case of Tour de France history. The last ones, the receivers of the famous lanterne rouge get enough attention too. Lanterne rouge is an actual red lamp used to be served to the last rider of the race as some of… Read More »Lanterne rouge – list of the last cyclists of every Tour de France