Skip to content
Home » The slowest and the fastest Tour de France

The slowest and the fastest Tour de France

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

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 even the longest ever edition.)

Because the First World War ended only a few months earlier, most of the cyclists had not enough possibility to train. Routine and experience of how to ride a Tour de France mattered, no wonder, that mostly the older riders dominated the race.

On the other handy the international elite peloton suffered devastating personal losses: three of the former Tour de France winners, Lucien Petit-Breton (winner of 1907and 1908), François Faber (1909) and Octave Lapize (1910), also many less successful athletes died during the war.

And of course, the war caused terrible damages in the infrastructure of France,  which made to organize and conduct a multiple-stage race around the country more complicated.

Firmin Lambot, the winner of the Tour de France 1919
Firmin Lambot, winner of Tour de France 1919

When Firmin Lambot, the overall winner of the race crossed the finish line of the last stafe, his average speed during this 5560 km long adventure was

24,1 km/h

Also, it might be worth to mention, that this was the Tour de France when  the yellow jersey was introduced - another consequence of the war. Because most of the French commercial teams joined to the consortium La Sportive, and most of the cyclists competed in  grey jersey, it seemed a great idea to create a very distinguishable jersey for the actual leader of the general classification.

The fastest Tour de France edition ever

comes from a totally different era. And you might have expected it. Yes, it was the first overall victory of Jonas Vingegaard in 2022. His average speed was

42,1 km/h


MORE TOUR DE FRANCE FUN FACTS

Fabian Cancellara and Tom Boonen at Ronde van Vlaanderen Tour of Flanders

Double winners of Ronde van Vlaanderen and Paris-Roubaix

Winners of both Ronde van Vlaanderen and Paris-Roubaix in the same year: Henri Suter 1923… Read More »Double winners of Ronde van Vlaanderen and Paris-Roubaix

montage picture of the five cyclist who won the first editions of the five monuments

The first monument winners

Of course, they weren’t called “monuments” those days, but here are some interesting stuff about… Read More »The first monument winners

Belgian cycling legend Eddy Merkcx sprints for the victory at Milano-Sanremo spring classic race in 1966

Most Milano-Sanremo victories

Eddy Merckx leads the list of cyclists with the most Milano-Sanremo victories with seven occasions. … Read More »Most Milano-Sanremo victories

MORE ROAD CYCLING AND THE GREAT WAR

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… Read More »The slowest and the fastest Tour de France

Francoise Faber, Octave Lapize, Lucien Petit-Breton, Tour de France winners, who lost their life in the First World War

Tour de France winners died in the First World War

As in almost every part of European life, also in the world of cycling races… Read More »Tour de France winners died in the First World War

Cyclists crossing a town during the Tour de France in 1914

28 June 1914 – Last Tour de France before World War I started

On the 28th of June 1914,  Austro-Hungarian Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife were assassinated.… Read More »28 June 1914 – Last Tour de France before World War I started