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2018 Tour de France

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Cycling race
2018 Tour de France
2018 UCI World Tour, race 25 of 37
Route of the 2018 Tour de France
Route of the 2018 Tour de France
Race details
Dates7–29 July 2018
Stages21
Distance3,351 km (2,082 mi)
Winning time83h 17' 13"
Results
Winner Geraint Thomas (GBR)(Team Sky)
 Second Tom Dumoulin (NED)(Team Sunweb)
 Third Chris Froome (GBR)(Team Sky)

Points Peter Sagan (SVK)(Bora–Hansgrohe)
Mountains Julian Alaphilippe (FRA)(Quick-Step Floors)
Youth Pierre Latour (FRA)(AG2R La Mondiale)
Combativity Dan Martin (IRL)(UAE Team Emirates)
TeamSpainMovistar Team
← 2017
2019 →

The2018 Tour de France was the 105th edition of theTour de France, one of cycling's threeGrand Tours. The 3,351 km (2,082 mi)-long race consisted of 21stages, starting on 7 July inNoirmoutier-en-l'Île, in western France, and concluding on 29 July with theChamps-Élysées stage in Paris. A total of 176 riders from 22teams participated in the race. The overallgeneral classification was won byGeraint Thomas ofTeam Sky.Tom Dumoulin (Team Sunweb) placed second, with Thomas's teammate and four-time Tour winnerChris Froome coming third.

The opening stage was won byFernando Gaviria ofQuick-Step Floors, who became the Tour's first rider to wear the general classification leader's yellow jersey.Peter Sagan (Bora–Hansgrohe) then took the race lead on the following stage.BMC Racing Team won stage three'steam time trial, putting their riderGreg Van Avermaet in yellow. He held the jersey for eight days until the second stage of the threeAlpine stages, which Thomas won and took the lead in. He successfully defended it from Dumoulin for the rest of the Tour, which included three stages in thePyrenees and the penultimate stage'sindividual time trial, the latter won by Dumoulin.

Sagan, who won three stages, was placed first in thepoints classification for the sixth time.Julian Alaphilippe of Quick-Step Floors, winner of two mountain stages, won themountains classification, andAG2R La Mondiale'sPierre Latour won theyoung rider classification. Theteam classification was won byMovistar Team, andDan Martin ofUAE Team Emirates won thecombativity award.

Teams

[edit]
Main article:List of teams and cyclists in the 2018 Tour de France
ThePlace Napoléon [fr] square inLa Roche-sur-Yon, hosted the team presentation ceremony on 5 July.

The 2018 edition of the Tour de France consisted of 22teams.[1] The race was the 25th of the 37 events in theUCI World Tour,[2] and all of its eighteenUCI WorldTeams were entitled, and obliged, to enter the race.[3] On 6 January 2018, organisers of the Tour, theAmaury Sport Organisation (ASO), announced the four second-tierUCI Professional Continental teams that received awildcard invitation to participate in the event. The four teams wereCofidis,Direct Énergie,Fortuneo–Samsic, from France, and Belgium'sWanty–Groupe Gobert, all of which have participated in the race before.[4] This meant that new French teamVital Concept, with their team leader, sprinterBryan Coquard, missed out on the race.[5] The presentation of the teams – where the members of each team's roster are introduced in front of the media and local dignitaries – took place onPlace Napoleon [fr] in the town ofLa Roche-sur-Yon on 5 July, two days before the openingstage.[6]

New rules by the cycling's governing body, theUnion Cycliste Internationale (UCI), reduced the number of riders per team forGrand Tours from 9 to 8, resulting in a start list total of 176,[7] instead of 198, which had been the number of starters since 2010.[8] Of these, 35 competed in their first Tour de France.[9] The riders came from 30 countries. Seven countries had more than 10 riders in the race: France (35), Belgium (19), the Netherlands (13), Italy (13), Australia (11), Germany (11) and Spain (11).[1] The average age of riders in the race was 29.37 years,[10] ranging from the 21-year-oldEgan Bernal (Team Sky) to the 40-year-oldFranco Pellizotti (Bahrain–Merida).[11][12]Groupama–FDJ had the youngest average age while Bahrain–Merida had the oldest.[13]

The teams entering the race were:[1]

UCI WorldTeams

UCI Professional Continental teams

Pre-race favourites

[edit]
Defending championChris Froome(pictured at the2018 Tour of Britain) had been considered the favourite for thegeneral classification.

In the lead up to the Tour, the favourite for thegeneral classification wasChris Froome of Team Sky.[14][15][16][17][18] Froome had won the2013,2015,2016 and2017 editions of the Tour, and was also the current defending champion at both other Grand Tours, theVuelta a España and theGiro d'Italia.[16] However, Froome's participation was unconfirmed due to an ongoinganti-doping investigation that began in December 2017, when it was announced that he had returned a urine sample taken at the Vuelta (which had taken place two months earlier) which contained twice his allowed amount of the asthma drugsalbutamol. This was considered not as a positive doping result, but as an "Adverse Analytical Finding" (AAF), meaning that he was allowed to continue racing until the case was resolved. He did however face the possibility of losing his Vuelta victory and all subsequent results.[19] The ASO were unhappy with the situation, which was very similar to that of the2011 Tour pre-race favouriteAlberto Contador, who started the tour with his case over a positive test forclenbuterol still unresolved.[20] The UCI conducted an investigation into the AAF, which was still unresolved at the time that Froome won the Giro in May 2018. With an outcome before the start of the Tour unlikely, the ASO attempted to bar Froome from starting the race, citing article 28 of the race's rules, saying that the organiser "expressly reserves the right to refuse participation in – or to exclude from – the event, a team or any of its members whose presence would be such as to damage the image or reputation of ASO or the event".[21] Froome was cleared by the UCI on 2 July, five days before the start of the Tour, with a press statement reading that the authorities had found sufficient evidence "that Mr Froome's sample results do not constitute an AAF".[22] He was thereafter cleared to start the Tour by the ASO as well.[23]

The closest rivals of Froome were thought to beRomain Bardet (AG2R La Mondiale),Tom Dumoulin (Team Sunweb),Mikel Landa (Movistar Team),Vincenzo Nibali (Bahrain–Merida),Richie Porte (BMC Racing Team),Nairo Quintana (Movistar Team) andAdam Yates (Mitchelton–Scott).[15][16][17][18][24][25] Porte's best result in the Tour was fifth overall in 2016. He had shown his form so far in the 2018 season by winning the general classification ofTour de Suisse.[26] Although Quintana had placed twelfth overall in the 2017 Tour, his 2018 season so far had been consistent and he had finished second behind Froome in previous Tours. He came to the Tour with a strong team, which included contender Landa, who in 2018 had moved to Movistar from Sky after being adomestique for Froome.[15][17][27] The2017 Giro winner Dumoulin placed second in the 2018 Giro.[28] Nibali had recently won theclassicMilan–San Remo, one of cycling's five one-day race "monuments". He had however failed to impress in thestage races leading up to the Tour, finishing 24th in theCritérium du Dauphiné after finishing outside the top 10 in the general classifications atDubai Tour,Tour of Oman and theTirreno–Adriatico. He was the only rider on the start list apart from Froome to have won a Tour, the2014 edition.[15][16] Bardet finished second and third overall in the two previous Tours and placed third in theCritérium du Dauphiné leading up to the 2018 Tour.[15] Yates' best overall Tour result was fourth 2016;[16] he had shown his form during the season before the Tour with top-five placings in four stage races, including second in the Dauphiné.[29]

Some of the other riders considered as contenders for the general classification wereDan Martin (UAE Team Emirates),Alejandro Valverde (Movistar Team),Rigoberto Urán (EF Education First–Drapac p/b Cannondale),Geraint Thomas (Team Sky) andPrimož Roglič (LottoNL–Jumbo).[14][15][17][18][30]

Peter Sagan(pictured on stage seventeen) was the pre-race favourite for thepoints classification.

Thesprinters considered favourites for thepoints classification and wins on the flat or hillybunch sprint finishes werePeter Sagan (Bora–Hansgrohe),Michael Matthews (Team Sunweb),Fernando Gaviria (Quick-Step Floors),Marcel Kittel (Team Katusha–Alpecin),Mark Cavendish (Team Dimension Data),Dylan Groenewegen (LottoNL–Jumbo),Arnaud Démare (Groupama–FDJ) andAndré Greipel (Lotto–Soudal). Others expected to contend for sprint finishes includedGreg Van Avermaet (BMC Racing Team),Alexander Kristoff (UAE Team Emirates),Sonny Colbrelli (Bahrain–Merida),Nacer Bouhanni (Groupama–FDJ) andJohn Degenkolb (Trek–Segafredo).[18][25][30][31][32][33][34] Triple reigningworld road race champion Sagan had won the five previous points classifications of the Tour before his 2017 Tour disqualification after race officials judged that he caused Cavendish to crash. Sagan was again aiming to equalErik Zabel's record of six points classifications.[35] He was in good form during the season before the Tour, winning the one-day racesParis–Roubaix andGent–Wevelgem, multiple top ten results one-day races and two points classifications in stage races.[31] Matthews, who won the 2017 Tour's points classification, suffered an early season injury and his sole win for the season was at theTour de Romandie.[32] Kittel had won fourteen Tour stages, five in 2017, gained two wins so far in 2018, both at theTirreno–Adriatico.[31] Debutant Gaviria had been second to Kittel at Quick-Step Floors before the latter moved to Team Katusha–Alpecin for the 2018 season. Gaviria amassed a total of seven wins so far in 2018, and additionally the points classification at theTour of California.[31] The 2011 points classification winner Cavendish's win at theDubai Tour in February was his only of 2018 so far.[33] Winner of the 2017 Tour's final stage Groenewegen had a total of nine victories for the season going into the Tour,[33] with one coming atParis–Nice.[36] Démare, who led the points classification in the 2017 Tour, had gained two wins at Paris–Nice and the Tour de Suisse in 2018 before the Tour.[33] Greipel, who turned 36 during the Tour, had taken six wins at stage races during 2018 before the Tour, as well as the points classification of theTour of Belgium.[31]

Route and stages

[edit]
Thehighest point of elevation in the race was theCol de Portet Pyrenean pass, at 2,215 m (7,267 ft). It was used for the first time in the Tour de France.

On 12 February 2017, at arugby union match between France and Scotland at Paris'sStade de France, race directorChristian Prudhomme announced the opening stages of the 2018 Tour (known as theGrand Départ) would take place in theVendée department, in thePays de la Loire region. Since theinaugural Tour in 1903, the Vendée has hosted theGrand Départ five times, with the last in 2011.[37] Two weeks after the announcement, the ASO revealed that theGrand Départ would take place over three stages, with the third ateam time trial.[38] In June 2017, the UCI's Professional Cycling Council (PCC) moved the start of the Tour a week later than usual and originally planned due to a clash with the2018 FIFA World Cup.[39] The full route was announced on 17 October 2017; it was almost completely within France,[40] with short deviations into Spain in thePyrenees the only exceptions.[41] Two of the Tour's most historic climbs featured,Alpe d'Huez and theCol du Tourmalet, which last featured in 2015 and 2016 respectively.[40] Notable was stage nine's 21.7 km (13.5 mi) ofsett paving, split across fifteen sectors, a feature that was last seen in the 2015 Tour. It finished in Roubaix, home of the "monument" raceParis–Roubaix.[42] For the first time in 60 to 70 years, it included a section of unpaved roads on theGlières Plateau.[40] Overall, the route was thought to offer something for all rider types.[43][44][45]

Stage one began in the village ofNoirmoutier-en-l'Île on the island ofNoirmoutier, before heading along the coast of the Vendée department. The following two stages were loops, with the third taking the route north into theMaine-et-Loire department. The next three stages took place in the region ofBrittany, ending with two laps of the short, but steep, climb inMûr-de-Bretagne. The seventh, eighth and ninth stages headed north-east with finishes inChartres,Amiens and Roubaix, respectively. A long transfer then moved the race to theAlps. Following three stages in the mountains, the Tour descended into theDrôme department and stage thirteen's finish in the city ofValence. TheMassif Central highland region hosted stage fourteen, with the finish inMende. The next two transitional stages took the race south-west to the Pyrenees across a continuous journey betweenMillau,Carcassonne andBagnères-de-Luchon. After two Pyrenean stages, the eighteenth stage took place in the foothills betweenTrie-sur-Baïse toPau. The next stage headed back into the mountains, before the penultimate stage, which took place close to the west coast in theFrench Basque Country. A long transfer took the Tour to its conclusion in Paris with theChamps-Élysées stage.[41][46]

There were 21 stages in the race, covering a total distance of 3,351 km (2,082 mi), the shortest of the 21st century up to that point.[47][8] There were two time trial events, stage three's 35.5 km (22 mi) team time trial and stage twenty's 31 km (19 mi)individual time trial.[47] Of the remaining nineteen stages, eight were officially classified as flat, five as hilly and six as mountainous.[47] The longestmass-start stage was stage seven, at 231 km (144 mi), and the shortest was stage seventeen, at 65 km (40 mi).[47] The aforementioned, a mountain stage, was the shortest since1996 and began with astanding start grid formation, with positions based on riders general classification ranking. The grid formation was an innovation for the Tour, and with shorter distance, was beforehand universally welcomed, but it was thought to have made little effect on the race.[48][49] There were summit finishes on stages stage eleven toLa Rosière, stage twelve to Alpe d'Huez, and stage seventeen to theCol de Portet.[46] Thehighest point of elevation in the race was the 2,215 m (7,267 ft)-high Col de Portet Pyrenean pass, the first time it had been used in the Tour.[50] It was among ninehors catégorie (English: "beyond category") rated climbs in the race.[46] There were nine new stage start or finish locations. The rest days were after stage nine, inAnnecy, and fifteen, in Carcassonne.[47]

Stage characteristics and winners[46][47][51]
StageDateCourseDistanceStage typeWinner
17 JulyNoirmoutier-en-l'Île toFontenay-le-Comte201 km (125 mi)Flat stage Fernando Gaviria (COL)
28 JulyMouilleron-Saint-Germain toLa Roche-sur-Yon182.5 km (113 mi)Flat stage Peter Sagan (SVK)
39 JulyCholet to Cholet35.5 km (22 mi)Team time trial BMC Racing Team
410 JulyLa Baule toSarzeau195 km (121 mi)Flat stage Fernando Gaviria (COL)
511 JulyLorient toQuimper204.5 km (127 mi)Hilly stage Peter Sagan (SVK)
612 JulyBrest toMûr-de-Bretagne181 km (112 mi)Hilly stage Dan Martin (IRL)
713 JulyFougères toChartres231 km (144 mi)Flat stage Dylan Groenewegen (NED)
814 JulyDreux toAmiens181 km (112 mi)Flat stage Dylan Groenewegen (NED)
915 JulyArras toRoubaix156.5 km (97 mi)Hilly stage John Degenkolb (GER)
16 JulyAnnecyRest day
1017 JulyAnnecy toLe Grand-Bornand158.5 km (98 mi)Mountain stage Julian Alaphilippe (FRA)
1118 JulyAlbertville toLa Rosière108.5 km (67 mi)Mountain stage Geraint Thomas (GBR)
1219 JulyBourg-Saint-Maurice toAlpe d'Huez175.5 km (109 mi)Mountain stage Geraint Thomas (GBR)
1320 JulyLe Bourg-d'Oisans toValence169.5 km (105 mi)Flat stage Peter Sagan (SVK)
1421 JulySaint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux toMende188 km (117 mi)Hilly stage Omar Fraile (ESP)
1522 JulyMillau toCarcassonne181.5 km (113 mi)Hilly stage Magnus Cort Nielsen (DEN)
23 JulyCarcassonneRest day
1624 JulyCarcassonne toBagnères-de-Luchon218 km (135 mi)Mountain stage Julian Alaphilippe (FRA)
1725 JulyBagnères-de-Luchon toSaint-Lary-Soulan (Col de Portet)65 km (40 mi)Mountain stage Nairo Quintana (COL)
1826 JulyTrie-sur-Baïse toPau171 km (106 mi)Flat Arnaud Démare (FRA)
1927 JulyLourdes toLaruns200.5 km (125 mi)Mountain stage Primož Roglič (SLO)
2028 JulySaint-Pée-sur-Nivelle toEspelette31 km (19 mi)Individual time trial Tom Dumoulin (NED)
2129 JulyHouilles to Paris (Champs-Élysées)116 km (72 mi)Flat stage Alexander Kristoff (NOR)
Total3,351 km (2,082 mi)

Race overview

[edit]
Main articles:2018 Tour de France, Stage 1 to Stage 11 and2018 Tour de France, Stage 12 to Stage 21

First week: Northern stages

[edit]
Tim Declercq (Quick-Step Floors) was one of the many riders that fell on thesett-paving sections of stage nine.

Stage one's bunch sprint was won by Fernando Gaviria, with Peter Sagan coming in second place and Marcel Kittel in third. Gaviria took the yellow and green jerseys as the leader of the general and points classifications respectively. Breakaway riderKévin Ledanois (Fortuneo–Samsic) collected the mostmountains classification points to take the firstpolka dot jersey as the leader of the classification.[52] Sagan won stage two from a sprint to take the yellow and green jerseys, withDion Smith of Wanty–Groupe Gobert claiming the lead in the mountains classification.[53] Stage three's team time trial was won by BMC Racing Team whose ridersTejay van Garderen and Greg Van Avermaet became tied for the overall lead,[54] with Van Avermaet moving into yellow for the second time in his career due to him crossing the finish line ahead of Van Garderen in the first two stages being as there was not yet an individual time trial to measure their times down to the 1000th of a second.[55] Stage four was won by Gaviria from a bunch sprint.[56] Sagan further extended his lead in the points competition by winning stage five's uphill sprint finish inQuimper. Also in stage five,Toms Skujiņš of Trek–Segafredo won the mountains points which gave him the polka dot jersey, becoming the first fromLatvia to ever lead the mountains classification.[57]

In stage six, which ended atop the Mûr-de-Bretagne climb, Dan Martin attacked with a kilometre remaining and was able to stay away take the victory one second ahead of a large group that the contained the general classification contenders. In the closing kilometres of the stage, Geraint Thomas won a three-second time bonus sprint that brought him to three seconds behind Van Avermaet in the general classification. Overall favourites Romain Bardet and Tom Dumoulin lost time as their tyres punctured late in the stage.[58] The seventh stage was won by Dylan Groenewegen from a bunch sprint.[59] There were multiple crashes in the first week of the Tour with six riders abandoning the race for various reasons, including the 2017 Tour points classification winner Michael Matthews.[60] Groenewegen won a further bunch sprint in the eighth stage. In the sprint, André Greipel and Gaviria were penalised for headbutting each other and lost their stage placing and green jersey points.[61] Stage nine's sett-paving sections caused many issues for the riders, including leading sprinters and two of the classification contenders. Richie Porte abandoned for the second year in a row after crashing in the opening 10 km (6.2 mi).[62] Rigoberto Urán initially tried to continue the race despite injuries sustained during a crash, but was forced to quit the race on the following stage.[63] Chris Froome, his teammate Egan Bernal, Jakob Fuglsang, and Mikel Landa, crashed in the stage along with many other riders; numerous riders had tyre punctures as well, including three for Bardet.[64] His teammate Alexis Vuillermoz was forced to abandon the stage after colliding with a spectator taking photographs.[65] Meanwhile,Yves Lampaert (Quick-Step Floors), John Degenkolb, and Van Avermaet were able escape the remaining riders from thepeloton (main group) and together they contested a sprint finish, which was won by Degenkolb. Van Avermaet gained time, as well winning the time bonus sprint, to extend his lead in the general classification.[66] The following day was the Tour's first rest day.[47]

Second week: Alps and transition west

[edit]
Geraint Thomas during stage twelve's climb ofAlpe d'Huez, wearing thegeneral classification leader's yellow jersey, on his way to winning a second stage in a row

The first stage in the high mountains and first in the Alps, the tenth, was won by Quick-Step Floors riderJulian Alaphilippe, who attacked on his own with 30 km (18.6 mi) to go from a largebreakaway group that included race leader Van Avermaet.[67] The aforementioned retained the yellow jersey and extended his lead to 2 min 22 s, when pundits predicted the first day in the Alps would be his last as overall race leader.[68] Alaphilippe also took lead of the mountains classification.[67] Thomas achieved back-to-back wins both from the group of overall contenders on stages eleven and twelve by pushing the breakaway riders until the very end. In the steep summit finish of the eleventh, Thomas attacked in the final 1 kilometre (0.6 miles), passing lone breakaway riderMikel Nieve (Mitchelton–Scott) and managed to distance himself from Froome and Dumoulin by twenty seconds to take the win.[69] On the twelfth stage, which was the final day in the Alps, Thomas won the sprint on the flat finish after the climb to Alpe d'Huez. LottoNL–Jumbo'sSteven Kruijswijk was caught by the group of overall contenders in the final kilometres after he had launched a solo attack with 70 km (43.5 mi) remaining.[70] Following the stage, the general classification top three was: Thomas in first position, Froome second, 1 min 39 s down, and Dumoulin third, a further 11 seconds behind.[71] General classification contender Vincenzo Nibali, who was fourth overall,[72] was forced to withdraw from the Tour following the stage after an incident near the summit of Alpe d'huez where he fell off his bike fracturing avertebra taking Roglič down with him. It was initially suspected that the crash had been caused by a police motorcycle driving in front of him, but it later emerged that he became caught in a spectator's camera strap.[73][74] Nibali's team management saw the lack of crowd control from thepolice and spectators lightingflares as contributing factors.[74] Following the incident, Christian Prudhomme appealed to fans to show the riders more respect.[75] Many riders left the Tour during the Alpine stages, either being forced to abandon due to fatigue and injury, or were disqualified for finishing outside the cut-off time;[a] riders of note were the sprinters Mark Cavendish, Gaviria, Greipel, Groenewegen, and Kittel.[77][78]

Sagan won stage thirteen with a surprise attack in the closing meters of the bunch sprint finish, while Alexander Kristoff and Arnaud Démare were together sprinting for the finish line.[79] In stage fourteen,Omar Fraile of Astana launched a late move from the large breakaway after the final climb to win at the Mende aerodrome; the breakaway finished eighteen minutes ahead of the peloton.[80] Stage fifteen, the start of the final week, was once again a breakaway victory, withMagnus Cort taking Astana's second win in two days.[81] The next day was the second rest day of the race.[47] Following the stage, controversy arose around Team Sky riderGianni Moscon, who had allegedly punched Fortune-Samsic riderÉlie Gesbert during the opening part of the stage. After reviewing footage of the incident, the race jury disqualified him for 'particularly serious aggression'.[82][83] A non-racing incident occurred during the sixteenth stage when hay bales were placed across the road by local farmers protesting about reductions to their subsidies. The police usedtear gas to disperse them, and as the riders rode past this area, there was still gas in the air. The race was subsequently neutralized for about fifteen minutes because several riders had problems with their eyes and had to rinse them.[84] After the restart, a large breakaway escaped, andPhilippe Gilbert (Quick-Step Floors), while in the lead on a descent, lost control of his bicycle and crashed into and over a wall. Later, Adam Yates, having taken the lead, also fell. Gilbert finished the stage and collected the most combative rider award, but would not start the following day. Yates carried on, but was overtaken by Alaphilippe, who took his second stage victory.[85][86]

Third week: Pyrenees and finale in Paris

[edit]
Julian Alaphilippe(pictured on stage 16) won themountains classification'spolka dot jersey, winning two of the six mountain stages.

The first of three stages in the Pyrenees, the seventeenth, opened with an uneventful grid formation, which saw the customary early formation of a breakaway group. Froome's challenge faded on the approach to the summit of the Col de Portet and he dropped to third position in the general classification, 2 min 31 s behind Thomas. Dumoulin moved into second place, 1 min 59 s off the lead. Nairo Quintana won the stage after attacking at the bottom of the final climb, moving himself up to fifth overall, behind Primož Roglič.[87] The flat stage eighteen was won by Démare from a bunch sprint. By this point of the Tour, most of the top sprinters had left, and Démare had come close to missing the time cut in the previous stage along with Sagan, who had crashed heavily and was suffering with injuries.[88] On the mountainous stage nineteen, Roglič attacked on the descent following the final climb, to a mistyCol d'Aubisque, and soloed to the finish line nineteen seconds ahead of the chasing small group of overall favourites. Roglič took third place from Froome. Thomas was able to consolidate his overall position by picking up six bonus seconds by winning the sprint for second place, thereby extending his lead over Dumoulin to 2 min 5 s.[89] The penultimate stage's 31 km (19.3 mi) individual time trial was won by Dumoulin, who finished one second ahead of Froome. Froome in turn managed to retake third place from Roglič. Thomas came third after surviving a scare when his back wheel locked, but completed the stage successfully, finishing fourteen seconds behind Dumoulin, taking a lead of 1 min 51 s into the final stage.[90]

The final stage in Paris was won by Kristoff in a bunch sprint on the Champs-Élysées.[91] Thomas won the race with no changes in the final stage. Froome came third overall, 2 min 24 s down on Thomas. Sagan won the points classification with a total of 477, 231 ahead of Kristoff in second. Alaphilippe won the mountains classification with 169 points, with the 2017 winner and French compatriotWarren Barguil (Fortuneo–Samsic) second with 80 points. Thebest young rider was thirteenth-placed overallPierre Latour (AG2R La Mondiale), with fifteenth-placed overall Bernal second. Movistar Team finished as the winners of theteam classification, 12 min 33 s ahead of second-placed Team Sky. Of the 176 starters, 145 reached the finish of the last stage in Paris.[92]

Classification leadership and minor prizes

[edit]

Four main individual classifications were contested in the 2018 Tour de France, as well as a team competition. The most important was the general classification, calculated by adding each rider's finishing times on each stage.[93] Time bonuses (time subtracted) were awarded at the end of every stage apart from the time trial stages. The first three riders received 10, 6, and 4 seconds, respectively. Time bonuses of three, two and one seconds, were given to the first three riders to cross a "bonus point" in each of the first nine mass-start stages of the race. It would affect the general, but not the points classification.[94] For crashes within the final 3 km (1.9 mi) of a stage, not including time trials and summit finishes, any rider involved received the same time as the group he was in when the crash occurred.[95] The rider with the lowest cumulative time was the winner of the general classification and was considered to be the overall winner of the Tour.[93] The rider leading the classification wore a yellow jersey.[96]

Points classification points for the top 15 positions by type[97]
Type123456789101112131415
Flat stage50302018161412108765432
Hilly stage30252219171513119
Mountain stage201715131110987654321
Individual time trial
Intermediate sprint

The second classification was the points classification. Riders received points for finishing among the highest placed in a stage finish, or inintermediate sprints during the stage. The points available for each stage finish were determined by the stage's type.[97] The leader was identified by a green jersey.[96]

The third classification was the mountains classification. Points were awarded to the riders that reached the summit of the most difficult climbs first. The climbs were categorised, in order of increasing difficulty, as fourth-, third-, second-, and first-category andhors catégorie. Double points were awarded at the top of the last mountains in the three mountain stages in the three Pyreneean stages (theCol du Portillon, the Col de Portet and the Col d'Aubisque).[97] The leader wore a white jersey with red polka dots.[96]

The final individual classification was the young rider classification. This was calculated the same way as the general classification, but was restricted to riders born on or after 1 January 1993.[97] The leader wore a white jersey.[96]

The final classification was a team classification. This was calculated using the finishing times of the best three riders per team on each stage; the leading team was the team with the lowest cumulative time. The number of stage victories and placings per team determined the outcome of a tie.[97] The riders on the team that lead this classification are identified with yellow number bibs on the back of their jerseys and yellowhelmets.[98]

In addition, there was acombativity award given after each stage to the rider considered, by a jury, to have "made the greatest effort and who demonstrated the best qualities of sportsmanship".[94] No combativity awards were given for the time trials and the final stage.[99] The winner wore a red number bib the following stage.[100] At the conclusion of the Tour, Dan Martin won the overall super-combativity award which was, again, awarded by a jury.[92][94]

A total of €2,287,750 was awarded in cash prizes in the race.[99] The overall winner of the general classification received €500,000, with the second and third placed riders getting €200,000 and €100,000 respectively.[101] All finishers in the top 160 were awarded money.[101] The holders of the classifications benefited on each stage they led; the final winners of the points and mountains were given €25,000, while the best young rider and most combative rider got €20,000.[102] The team classification winners were given €50,000.[103] €11,000 was given to the winners of each stage of the race, with smaller amounts given to places 2–20.[101] There were also two special awards each with a prize of €5000.[99] TheSouvenir Henri Desgrange, given to first rider to pass the summit of the highest climb in the Tour, the Col du Portet on stage seventeen,[104] and theSouvenir Jacques Goddet, given to the first rider to passGoddet's memorial at the summit of the Col du Tourmalet in stage nineteen.[99] Nairo Quintana won the Henri Desgrange and Julian Alaphilippe won the Jacques Goddet.[105][106]

Classification leadership by stage[107][108]
StageWinnerGeneral classification
A yellow jersey.
Points classification
A green jersey.
Mountains classification
A white jersey with red polka dots.
Young rider classification
A white jersey.
Team classification
A white jersey with a yellow number bib.
Combativity award
A white jersey with a red number bib.
1Fernando GaviriaFernando GaviriaFernando GaviriaKévin LedanoisFernando GaviriaQuick-Step FloorsYoann Offredo
2Peter SaganPeter SaganPeter SaganDion SmithSylvain Chavanel
3BMC Racing TeamGreg Van AvermaetSøren Kragh Andersenno award
4Fernando GaviriaJérôme Cousin
5Peter SaganToms SkujiņšToms Skujiņš
6Daniel MartinDamien Gaudin
7Dylan GroenewegenLaurent Pichon
8Dylan GroenewegenFabien Grellier
9John DegenkolbDamien Gaudin
10Julian AlaphilippeJulian AlaphilippePierre LatourMovistar TeamGreg Van Avermaet
11Geraint ThomasGeraint ThomasAlejandro Valverde
12Geraint ThomasSteven Kruijswijk
13Peter SaganMichael Schär
14Omar FraileJasper Stuyven
15Magnus Cort NielsenRafał Majka
16Julian AlaphilippeBahrain–MeridaPhilippe Gilbert
17Nairo QuintanaMovistar TeamTanel Kangert
18Arnaud DémareLuke Durbridge
19Primož RogličMikel Landa
20Tom Dumoulinno award
21Alexander Kristoff
FinalGeraint ThomasPeter SaganJulian AlaphilippePierre LatourMovistar TeamDan Martin
  • On stage two,Marcel Kittel, who was third in the points classification, wore the green jersey, because first placedFernando Gaviria wore the yellow jersey as leader of the general classification andPeter Sagan, who was second in the points classification, wore therainbow jersey of the world champion.[109]
  • On stage two,Dylan Groenewegen, who was second in the best young rider classification, wore the white jersey, because first placedFernando Gaviria wore the yellow jersey as leader of the general classification.[109]
  • On stage three,Alexander Kristoff, who was third in the points classification, wore the green jersey, because first placedPeter Sagan wore the yellow jersey as leader of the general classification, and second placedFernando Gaviria wore the white jersey as leader of the young rider classification.[110]
  • On stage seventeenPhilippe Gilbert did not start, so no rider wore the red bib as the most combative rider of previous stage.[111]

Final standings

[edit]
Legend
A yellow jersey.Denotes the winner of thegeneral classification[96]A white jersey with red polka dots.Denotes the winner of themountains classification[96]
A green jersey.Denotes the winner of thepoints classification[96]A white jersey.Denotes the winner of theyoung rider classification[96]
A white jersey with a yellow number bib.Denotes the winner of theteam classification[96]A white jersey with a red number bib.Denotes the winner of thecombativity award[96]

General classification

[edit]
Final general classification (1–10)[92]
RankRiderTeamTime
1 Geraint Thomas (GBR)A yellow jersey.Team Sky83h 17' 13"
2 Tom Dumoulin (NED)Team Sunweb+ 1' 51"
3 Chris Froome (GBR)Team Sky+ 2' 24"
4 Primož Roglič (SVN)LottoNL–Jumbo+ 3' 22"
5 Steven Kruijswijk (NED)LottoNL–Jumbo+ 6' 08"
6 Romain Bardet (FRA)AG2R La Mondiale+ 6' 57"
7 Mikel Landa (ESP)A white jersey with a yellow background on the number bib.Movistar Team+ 7' 37"
8 Dan Martin (IRL)A white jersey with a red number bib.UAE Team Emirates+ 9' 05"
9 Ilnur Zakarin (RUS)Team Katusha–Alpecin+ 12' 37"
10 Nairo Quintana (COL)A white jersey with a yellow background on the number bib.Movistar Team+ 14' 18"
Final general classification (11–145)[92]
RankRiderTeamTime
11 Bob Jungels (LUX)Quick-Step Floors+ 16' 32"
12 Jakob Fuglsang (DEN)Astana+ 19' 46"
13 Pierre Latour (FRA)A white jersey.AG2R La Mondiale+ 22' 13"
14 Alejandro Valverde (ESP)A white jersey with a yellow background on the number bib.Movistar Team+ 27' 26"
15 Egan Bernal (COL)Team Sky+ 27' 52"
16 Tanel Kangert (EST)Astana+ 34' 52"
17 Warren Barguil (FRA)Fortuneo–Samsic+ 37' 06"
18 Domenico Pozzovivo (ITA)Bahrain–Merida+ 39' 08"
19 Rafał Majka (POL)Bora–Hansgrohe+ 39' 57"
20 Damiano Caruso (ITA)BMC Racing Team+ 42' 31"
21 Guillaume Martin (FRA)Wanty–Groupe Gobert+ 44' 39"
22 Ion Izagirre (ESP)Bahrain–Merida+ 46' 36"
23 Mikel Nieve (ESP)Mitchelton–Scott+ 49' 19"
24 Gorka Izagirre (ESP)Bahrain–Merida+ 50' 02"
25 Simon Geschke (GER)Team Sunweb+ 50' 15"
26 Bauke Mollema (NED)Trek–Segafredo+ 1h 06' 33"
27 Pierre Rolland (FRA)EF Education First–Drapac p/b Cannondale+ 1h 09' 09"
28 Greg Van Avermaet (BEL)BMC Racing Team+ 1h 10' 14"
29 Adam Yates (GBR)Mitchelton–Scott+ 1h 17' 35"
30 Lilian Calmejane (FRA)Direct Énergie+ 1h 18' 09"
31 Robert Gesink (NED)LottoNL–Jumbo+ 1h 21' 13"
32 Tejay van Garderen (USA)BMC Racing Team+ 1h 23' 05"
33 Julian Alaphilippe (FRA)A white jersey with red polka dots.Quick-Step Floors+ 1h 28' 08"
34 David Gaudu (FRA)Groupama–FDJ+ 1h 30' 01"
35 Julien Bernard (FRA)Trek–Segafredo+ 1h 34' 12"
36 Daniel Martínez (COL)EF Education First–Drapac p/b Cannondale+ 1h 38' 38"
37 Antwan Tolhoek (NED)LottoNL–Jumbo+ 1h 39' 01"
38 Rudy Molard (FRA)Groupama–FDJ+ 1h 47' 36"
39 Sylvain Chavanel (FRA)Direct Énergie+ 1h 47' 47"
40 Kristijan Đurasek (CRO)UAE Team Emirates+ 1h 48' 06"
41 Arthur Vichot (FRA)Groupama–FDJ+ 1h 51' 19"
42 Maxime Bouet (FRA)Fortuneo–Samsic+ 1h 58' 08"
43 Nicolas Edet (FRA)Cofidis+ 1h 58' 54"
44 Michael Valgren (DEN)Astana+ 1h 59' 20"
45 Daniel Navarro (ESP)Cofidis+ 2h 00' 32"
46 Daryl Impey (RSA)Mitchelton–Scott+ 2h 00' 53"
47 Jesús Herrada (ESP)Cofidis+ 2h 01' 52"
48 Amaël Moinard (FRA)Fortuneo–Samsic+ 2h 03' 20"
49 Michał Kwiatkowski (POL)Team Sky+ 2h 05' 29"
50 Andrey Amador (CRC)A white jersey with a yellow background on the number bib.Movistar Team+ 2h 05' 38"
51 Laurens ten Dam (NED)Team Sunweb+ 2h 06' 22"
52 Søren Kragh Andersen (DEN)Team Sunweb+ 2h 06' 23"
53 Stefan Küng (SUI)BMC Racing Team+ 2h 07' 14"
54 Thomas Degand (BEL)Wanty–Groupe Gobert+ 2h 09' 54"
55 Mathias Frank (SUI)AG2R La Mondiale+ 2h 10' 29"
56 Jesper Hansen (DEN)Astana+ 2h 10' 33"
57 Omar Fraile (ESP)Astana+ 2h 10' 59"
58 Wout Poels (NED)Team Sky+ 2h 13' 23"
59 Tom-Jelte Slagter (NED)Team Dimension Data+ 2h 13' 58"
60 Franco Pellizotti (ITA)Bahrain–Merida+ 2h 17' 32"
61 Pavel Kochetkov (RUS)Team Katusha–Alpecin+ 2h 17' 52"
62 Marc Soler (ESP)A white jersey with a yellow background on the number bib.Movistar Team+ 2h 18' 51"
63 Jasper Stuyven (BEL)Trek–Segafredo+ 2h 20' 24"
64 Marco Minnaard (NED)Wanty–Groupe Gobert+ 2h 20' 31"
65 Thomas De Gendt (BEL)Lotto–Soudal+ 2h 24' 41"
66 Oliver Naesen (BEL)AG2R La Mondiale+ 2h 29' 36"
67 Nikias Arndt (GER)Team Sunweb+ 2h 32' 02"
68 Magnus Cort (DEN)Astana+ 2h 32' 26"
69 Darwin Atapuma (COL)UAE Team Emirates+ 2h 35' 47"
70 Jonathan Castroviejo (ESP)Team Sky+ 2h 36' 06"
71 Peter Sagan (SVK)A green jersey.Bora–Hansgrohe+ 2h 38' 08"
72 Chad Haga (USA)Team Sunweb+ 2h 39' 40"
73 Romain Sicard (FRA)Direct Énergie+ 2h 42' 53"
74 Tobias Ludvigsson (SWE)Groupama–FDJ+ 2h 45' 40"
75 Julien Vermote (BEL)Team Dimension Data+ 2h 45' 57"
76 Gregor Mühlberger (AUT)Bora–Hansgrohe+ 2h 46' 13"
77 Imanol Erviti (ESP)A white jersey with a yellow background on the number bib.Movistar Team+ 2h 47' 46"
78 Koen de Kort (NED)Trek–Segafredo+ 2h 48' 29"
79 Ian Boswell (USA)Team Katusha–Alpecin+ 2h 51' 47"
80 Yves Lampaert (BEL)Quick-Step Floors+ 2h 52' 37"
81 Paul Martens (GER)LottoNL–Jumbo+ 2h 52' 46"
82 Toms Skujiņš (LAT)Trek–Segafredo+ 2h 53' 41"
83 Silvan Dillier (SUI)AG2R La Mondiale+ 2h 55' 15"
84 Edvald Boasson Hagen (NOR)Team Dimension Data+ 2h 57' 00"
85 Anthony Perez (FRA)Cofidis+ 2h 58' 56"
86 Élie Gesbert (FRA)Fortuneo–Samsic+ 3h 00' 48"
87 Nils Politt (GER)Team Katusha–Alpecin+ 3h 00' 54"
88 Edward Theuns (BEL)Team Sunweb+ 3h 02' 15"
89 Thomas Boudat (FRA)Direct Énergie+ 3h 04' 07"
90 Michael Schär (SUI)BMC Racing Team+ 3h 04' 14"
91 Yoann Offredo (FRA)Wanty–Groupe Gobert+ 3h 04' 27"
92 Marcus Burghardt (GER)Bora–Hansgrohe+ 3h 04' 48"
93 Jérôme Cousin (FRA)Direct Énergie+ 3h 05' 34"
94 Paweł Poljański (POL)Bora–Hansgrohe+ 3h 07' 14"
95 Andrea Pasqualon (ITA)Wanty–Groupe Gobert+ 3h 09' 34"
96 Kévin Ledanois (FRA)Fortuneo–Samsic+ 3h 11' 55"
97 Dion Smith (NZL)Wanty–Groupe Gobert+ 3h 12' 24"
98 Laurent Pichon (FRA)Fortuneo–Samsic+ 3h 12' 46"
99 Florian Vachon (FRA)Fortuneo–Samsic+ 3h 13' 47"
100 Simon Clarke (AUS)EF Education First–Drapac p/b Cannondale+ 3h 15' 40"
101 Julien Simon (FRA)Cofidis+ 3h 15' 55"
102 Kristijan Koren (SLO)Bahrain–Merida+ 3h 16' 54"
103 Tomasz Marczyński (POL)Lotto–Soudal+ 3h 19' 10"
104 Daniele Bennati (ITA)A white jersey with a yellow background on the number bib.Movistar Team+ 3h 19' 22"
105 Romain Hardy (FRA)Fortuneo–Samsic+ 3h 19' 49"
106 Rory Sutherland (AUS)UAE Team Emirates+ 3h 21' 22"
107 Simon Gerrans (AUS)BMC Racing Team+ 3h 21' 37"
108 Mathew Hayman (AUS)Mitchelton–Scott+ 3h 21' 55"
109 Sonny Colbrelli (ITA)Bahrain–Merida+ 3h 21' 55"
110 Reinardt Janse van Rensburg (RSA)Team Dimension Data+ 3h 24' 25"
111 John Degenkolb (GER)Trek–Segafredo+ 3h 26' 35"
112 Daniel Oss (ITA)Bora–Hansgrohe+ 3h 32' 29"
113 Michael Gogl (AUT)Trek–Segafredo+ 3h 32' 54"
114 Alexander Kristoff (NOR)UAE Team Emirates+ 3h 33' 33"
115 Sep Vanmarcke (BEL)EF Education First–Drapac p/b Cannondale+ 3h 34' 17"
116 Anthony Turgis (FRA)Cofidis+ 3h 36' 11"
117 Michael Hepburn (AUS)Mitchelton–Scott+ 3h 36' 30"
118 Luke Durbridge (AUS)Mitchelton–Scott+ 3h 37' 21"
119 Niki Terpstra (NED)Quick-Step Floors+ 3h 37' 31"
120 Fabien Grellier (FRA)Direct Énergie+ 3h 37' 56"
121 Jack Bauer (NZL)Mitchelton–Scott+ 3h 39' 02"
122 Maciej Bodnar (POL)Bora–Hansgrohe+ 3h 39' 20"
123 Guillaume Van Keirsbulck (BEL)Wanty–Groupe Gobert+ 3h 40' 30"
124 Christophe Laporte (FRA)Cofidis+ 3h 41' 55"
125 Heinrich Haussler (AUS)Bahrain–Merida+ 3h 42' 24"
126 Marco Marcato (ITA)UAE Team Emirates+ 3h 42' 54"
127 Olivier Le Gac (FRA)Groupama–FDJ+ 3h 49' 03"
128 Luke Rowe (GBR)Team Sky+ 3h 50' 55"
129 Tom Scully (NZL)EF Education First–Drapac p/b Cannondale+ 3h 50' 59"
130 Dimitri Claeys (BEL)Cofidis+ 3h 51' 15"
131 Timothy Dupont (BEL)Wanty–Groupe Gobert+ 3h 51' 16"
132 Lukas Pöstlberger (AUT)Bora–Hansgrohe+ 3h 56' 53"
133 Oliviero Troia (ITA)UAE Team Emirates+ 3h 57' 02"
134 Ramon Sinkeldam (NED)Groupama–FDJ+ 3h 58' 01"
135 Maximiliano Richeze (ARG)Quick-Step Floors+ 3h 58' 58"
136 Taylor Phinney (USA)EF Education First–Drapac p/b Cannondale+ 3h 59' 07"
137 Timo Roosen (NED)LottoNL–Jumbo+ 4h 01' 05"
138 Roberto Ferrari (ITA)UAE Team Emirates+ 4h 01' 34"
139 Amund Grøndahl Jansen (NOR)LottoNL–Jumbo+ 4h 02' 04"
140 Damien Gaudin (FRA)Direct Énergie+ 4h 02' 07"
141 Arnaud Démare (FRA)Groupama–FDJ+ 4h 08' 18"
142 Jasper De Buyst (BEL)Lotto–Soudal+ 4h 08' 54"
143 Jay Thomson (RSA)Team Dimension Data+ 4h 09' 49"
144 Jacopo Guarnieri (ITA)Groupama–FDJ+ 4h 12' 29"
145 Lawson Craddock (USA)EF Education First–Drapac p/b Cannondale+ 4h 34' 19"

Points classification

[edit]
Final points classification (1–10)[92]
RankRiderTeamPoints
1 Peter Sagan (SVK)A green jersey.Bora–Hansgrohe477
2 Alexander Kristoff (NOR)UAE Team Emirates246
3 Arnaud Démare (FRA)Groupama–FDJ203
4 John Degenkolb (GER)Trek–Segafredo178
5 Julian Alaphilippe (FRA)A white jersey with red polka dots.Quick-Step Floors143
6 Greg Van Avermaet (BEL)BMC Racing Team134
7 Andrea Pasqualon (ITA)Wanty–Groupe Gobert115
8 Geraint Thomas (GBR)A yellow jersey.Team Sky110
9 Sonny Colbrelli (ITA)Bahrain–Merida104
10 Dan Martin (IRL)A white jersey with a red number bib.UAE Team Emirates98

Mountains classification

[edit]
Final mountains classification (1–10)[92]
RankRiderTeamPoints
1 Julian Alaphilippe (FRA)A white jersey with red polka dots.Quick-Step Floors170
2 Warren Barguil (FRA)Fortuneo–Samsic91
3 Rafał Majka (POL)Bora–Hansgrohe76
4 Geraint Thomas (GBR)A yellow jersey.Team Sky74
5 Tom Dumoulin (NED)Team Sunweb63
6 Primož Roglič (SVN)LottoNL–Jumbo56
7 Dan Martin (IRL)A white jersey with a red number bib.UAE Team Emirates41
8 Nairo Quintana (COL)A white jersey with a yellow background on the number bib.Movistar Team40
9 Tanel Kangert (EST)Astana39
10 Steven Kruijswijk (NED)LottoNL–Jumbo36

Young rider classification

[edit]
Final young rider classification (1–10)[92]
RankRiderTeamTime
1 Pierre Latour (FRA)A white jersey.AG2R La Mondiale83h 39' 26"
2 Egan Bernal (COL)Team Sky+ 5' 39"
3 Guillaume Martin (FRA)Wanty–Groupe Gobert+ 22' 05"
4 David Gaudu (FRA)Groupama–FDJ+ 1h 07' 18"
5 Daniel Martínez (COL)EF Education First–Drapac p/b Cannondale+ 1h 16' 01"
6 Antwan Tolhoek (NED)LottoNL–Jumbo+ 1h 16' 48"
7 Søren Kragh Andersen (DEN)Team Sunweb+ 1h 44' 10"
8 Stefan Küng (SUI)BMC Racing Team+ 1h 45' 01"
9 Marc Soler (ESP)A white jersey with a yellow background on the number bib.Movistar Team+ 1h 56' 14"
10 Magnus Cort (DEN)Astana+ 2h 10' 13"

Team classification

[edit]
Final team classification (1–10)[92]
RankTeamTime
1SpainMovistar TeamA white jersey with a yellow background on the number bib.250h 24' 53"
2BahrainBahrain–Merida+ 12' 33"
3United KingdomTeam Sky+ 31' 14"
4NetherlandsLottoNL–Jumbo+ 47' 24"
5KazakhstanAstana+ 1h 15' 32"
6GermanyTeam Sunweb+ 1h 58' 54"
7FranceAG2R La Mondiale+ 2h 15' 49"
8United StatesBMC Racing Team+ 2h 35' 45"
9BelgiumQuick-Step Floors+ 3h 06' 17"
10AustraliaMitchelton–Scott+ 3h 13' 41"

UCI rankings

[edit]

Riders from the WorldTeams competed individually and for their teams for points that contributed towards the World Tour rankings.[112] Riders from both the WorldTeams and Professional Continental teams also competed individually and for their nations for points that contributed towards theUCI World Ranking, which included allUCI road races.[113] Both rankings used the same points scale, awarding points to the top sixty in the general classification, each yellow jersey given at the end of a stage, the top five finishers in each stage and for the top three in the final points and mountains classifications.[114] The points accrued by Thomas moved him from 20th to second in the World Tour individual ranking and from 41st to fourth in the individual World Ranking. Sagan kept his position at the top of both rankings, with Quick-Step Floors and Belgium also holding the lead of the World Tour team ranking and World Ranking nation ranking respectively.[115][116][117][118]

UCI World Tour individual ranking on 29 July 2018 (1–10)[117]
RankPrev.NameTeamPoints
11 Peter Sagan (SVK)Bora–Hansgrohe2684.00
220 Geraint Thomas (GBR)Team Sky2534.25
310 Chris Froome (GBR)Team Sky1976.68
418 Tom Dumoulin (NED)Team Sunweb1975.62
59 Primož Roglič (SVN)LottoNL–Jumbo1921.00
62 Alejandro Valverde (ESP)Movistar Team1807.00
76 Julian Alaphilippe (FRA)Quick-Step Floors1761.12
84 Elia Viviani (ITA)Quick-Step Floors1647.00
911 Romain Bardet (FRA)AG2R La Mondiale1530.00
103 Simon Yates (GBR)Mitchelton–Scott1472.00
UCI World Ranking individual ranking on 29 July 2018 (1–10)[118]
RankPrev.NameTeamPoints
11 Peter Sagan (SVK)Bora–Hansgrohe4358.00
23 Chris Froome (GBR)Team Sky3939.68
32 Elia Viviani (ITA)Quick-Step Floors3746.00
441 Geraint Thomas (GBR)Team Sky2834.25
511 Tom Dumoulin (NED)Team Sunweb2828.19
64 Alexander Kristoff (NOR)UAE Team Emirates2706.00
79 Julian Alaphilippe (FRA)Quick-Step Floors2668.12
85 Alejandro Valverde (ESP)Movistar Team2631.00
98 Greg Van Avermaet (BEL)BMC Racing Team2623.47
106 Tim Wellens (BEL)Lotto–Soudal2458.00

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Riders were required to finish stages within a set time based on the stage winner's time and the difficulty coefficient of the stage. Reasons for exceptions to this rule could have been the average stage speed, the occurrence of an incident or accident, and impassable roads.[76]

References

[edit]
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