1994 Tour de France

81st edition: july 2 - july 24, 1994, results, stage details, map, photos and narrative history.

1993 Tour | 1995 Tour | Tour de France Database | 1994 Tour Quick Facts | 1994 Tour Final GC | Stage results with running GC | The Story of the 1994 Tour de France

Map of the 1994 Tour de France. The race began in Lille.

Paris–Roubaix: The Inside Story

Les Woodland's book Paris-Roubaix: The Inside Story - all the bumps of cycling's cobbled classic is available as an audiobook here .

1994 Tour de France quick facts

The 1994 Tour had 21 stages plus a prologue that totaled 3,978.2 kilometers.

It was ridden at an average speed of 38.383 km/hr.

Two stages (4 & 5) were held in England.

189 riders started and there were 117 classified finishers.

This was Miguel Indurain's fourth consecutive Tour victory.

The Spaniard won the 1994 Tour with a singular dominance that made clear his superiority over the rest of the professional peloton, despite his third place in May's Giro d'Italia.

From the prologue time trial on, he was always the most highly placed rider among the serious contenders.

1994 Tour de France complete final General Classification:

  • Piotr Ugramov (Gewiss-Ballan) @ 5min 39sec
  • Marco Pantani (Carrera) @ 7min 19sec
  • Luc Leblanc (Festina) @ 10min 3sec
  • Richard Virenque (Festina) @ 10min 10sec
  • Roberto Conti (Lampre) @ 12min 29sec
  • Alberto Elli (GB-MG) @ 20min 17sec
  • Alex Zulle (ONCE) @ 20min 35sec
  • Udo Bolts (Telekom) @ 25min 19sec
  • Vladimir Poulnikov (Carrera) @ 25min 28sec
  • Pascal Lino (Festina) @ 30min 1sec
  • Fernando Escartin (Mapei) @ 30min 38sec
  • Gianluca Bortolami (Mapei) @ 32min 35sec
  • Bjarne Riis (Gewiss-Ballan) @ 33min 32sec
  • Oscar Pellicoli (Polti) @ 34min 55sec
  • Nelson Rodriguez (ZG-Mobili) @ 35min 18sec
  • Jean-François Bernard (Banesto) @ 36min 44sec
  • Hernan Buenahora (Kelme) @ 38min
  • Rolf Sorensen (GB-MG) @ 42min 39sec
  • Bo Hamburger (TVM) @ 43min 44sec
  • Thomas Davy (Castorama) @ 46min 41sec
  • Eric Caritoux (Chazal) @ 47min 19sec
  • Federico Muñoz (Kelme) @ 48min 33sec
  • Jim Van De Laer (Lotto) @ 48min 35sec
  • Bruno Cenghialta (Gewiss-Ballan) @ 51min 30sec
  • Charly Mottet (Novemail) @ 51min 44sec
  • Beat Zberg (Carrera) @ 57min 6sec
  • Gerd Audehm (Telekom) @ 57min 44sec
  • Erik Breukink (ONCE) @ 59min 55sec
  • Abraham Olano (Mapei) @ 1hr 1min 29sec
  • Alvaro Mejia (Motorola) @ 1hr 1min 43sec
  • Ramon Gonzalez (Banesto) @ 1hr 2min 40sec
  • Pascal Hervé (Festina) @ 1hr 7min 16sec
  • Federico Echave (Mapei) @ 1hr 7min 16sec
  • Laurent Dufaux (ONCE) @ 1hr 9min 30sec
  • Viatcheslav Ekimov (Wordperfect) @ 1hr 9min 50sec
  • Franco Vona (GB-MG) @ 1hr 10min 41sec
  • Rolf Aldag (Telekom) @ 1hr 10min 59sec
  • Enrico Zaina (Gewiss-Ballan) @ 1hr 12min 16sec
  • Arsenio Gonzalez (Mapei) @ 1hr 12min 41sec
  • Flavio Vanzella (GB-MG) @ 1hr 24min 5sec
  • Franco Chioccioli (Mercatone Uno) @ 1hr 26min 52sec
  • François Simon (Castorama) @ 1hr 30min 50sec
  • Arturas Kaputis (Chazal) @ 1hr 37min 46sec
  • Jesper Skibby (TVM) @ 1hr 41min 21sec
  • Davide Perona (ZG Mobili) @ 1hr 43min 5sec
  • Jean-Claude Bagot (Festina) @ 1hr 44min 6sec
  • Miguel Arroyo (Chazal) @ 1hr 44min 11sec
  • José Ramon Uriarte (Banesto) @ 1hr 44min 51sec
  • Dag Otto Lauritzen (TVM) @ 1hr 45min 54sec
  • Eddy Seigneur (Gan) @ 1hr 47min 15sec
  • Neil Stephens (ONCE) @ 1hr 47min 59sec
  • Thierry Marie (Castorama) @ 1hr 48min 47sec
  • Giancarlo Perini (ZG Mobili) @ 1hr 50min 7sec
  • Angel Yesid Camargo (Kelme) @ 1hr 50min 8sec
  • Gerard Rué (Banesto) @ 1hr 51min 28sec
  • Djamolidine Abdoujaparov (Polti) @ 1hr 51min 34sec
  • Giorgio Furlan (Gewiss-Ballan) @ 1hr 52min 19sec
  • Jörg Müller (Mapei) @ 1hr 52min 19sec
  • Jens Heppner (Telekom) @ 1hr 53min 46sec
  • Andrea Peron (Polti) @ 1hr 53min 47sec
  • Vlasislav Bobrik (Gewiss-Ballan) @ 1hr 55min 12sec
  • Serhiy Utchakov (Polti) @ 1hr 57min 31sec
  • Christophe Manin (Chazal) @ 1hr 58min 2sec
  • Mauro-Antonio Santaromita (ZG Mobili) @ 1hr 58min 9sec
  • Ronan Pensec (Novemail) @ 1hr 59min 2sec
  • Vicente Aparicio (Banesto) @ 1hr 59min 34sec
  • Luc Roosen (Lotto) @ 2hr 0min 43sec
  • Phil Anderson (Motorola) @ 2hr 1min 13sec
  • Raúl Alcala (Motorola) @ 2hr 4min 41sec
  • Sean Yates (Motorola) @ 2hr 4min 45sec
  • Dimitri Zhdanov (Polti) @ 2hr 8min 20sec
  • Rolf Järmann (GB-MG) @ 2hr 10min 46sec
  • Philippe Louviot (Novemail) @ 2hr 12min 10sec
  • Massimo Ghirotto (ZG Mobili) @ 2hr 12min 49sec
  • Carlo Bomans (GB-MG) @ 2hr 12min 55sec
  • Gerrit de Vries (Novemail) @ 2hr 14min 53sec
  • Thierry Gouvenou (Gan) @ 2hr 15min 23sec
  • Atle Kvalsvoll (Wordperfect) @ 2hr 15min 23sec
  • Johan Museeuw (GB-MG) @ 2hr 17min 26sec
  • Pascal Chanteur (Chazal) @ 2hr 17min 36sec
  • Peter De Clercq (Lotto) @ 2hr 21min 43sec
  • Stephen Hodge (Festina) @ 2hr 23min 50sec
  • Uwe Raab (Telekom) @ 2hr 24min 38sec
  • Julio César Cadena (Kelme) @ 2hr 24min 52sec
  • Marco Zen (Lampre) @ 2hr 25min 13sec
  • Francisco Cabello (Kelme) @ 2hr 25min 35sec
  • Guy Nulens (Novemail) @ 2hr 25min 52sec
  • Frankie Andreu (Motorola) @ 2hr 26min 24sec
  • Guido Bontempi (Gewiss-Ballan) @ 2hr 26min 27sec
  • Bruno Thibout (Castorama) @ 2hr 26min 42sec
  • Marc Wauters (Wordperfect) @ 2hr 28min 38sec
  • Hendrik Redant (ZG Mobili) @ 2hr 28min 57sec
  • Silvio Martinello (Mercatone Uno) @ 2hr 29min 4sec
  • Melchior Mauri (Banesto) @ 2hr 30min 20sec
  • Ángel Edo (Kelme) @ 2hr 31min 1sec
  • Mario Kummer (Telekom) @ 2hr 31min 42sec
  • Rudy Verdonck (Lotto) @ 2hr 32min 24sec
  • Erwin Nijboer (Banesto) @ 2hr 34min 27sec
  • Cezary Zamana (Kelme) @ 2hr 34min 43sec
  • Erik Dekker (Wordperfect) @ 2hr 34min 52sec
  • Alberto Leanizbarrutia (ONCE) @ 2hr 36min 5sec
  • Jan Svorada (Lampre) @ 2hr 36min 25sec
  • Michel Dernies (Motorola) @ 2hr 36min 31sec
  • Olaf Ludwig (Telekom) @ 2hr 37min 37sec
  • Christian Henn (Telekom) @ 2hr 37min 48sec
  • Dario Bottaro (Gewiss-Ballan) @ 2hr 39min 17sec
  • Davide Cassani (GB-MG) @ 2hr 41min 32sec
  • Herminio Diaz (ONCE) @ 2hr 42min 6sec
  • Giovanni Fidanza (Polti) @ 2hr 42min 47sec
  • Remi Rossi (Carrera) @ 2hr 43min 51sec
  • Stephen Swart (Motorola) @ 2hr 44min 38sec
  • Francis Moreau (Gan) @ 2hr 51min 13sec
  • Mario Chiesa (Carrera) @ 2hr 52min 2sec
  • Eros Poli (Mercatone Uno) @ 2hr 52min 41sec
  • Rob Mulders (Wordperfect) @ 3hr 8min 32sec
  • John Talen (Mercatone Uno) @ 3hr 39min 3sec

Climbers Competition:

Points Competition:

Team Classification:

  • Festina: 311hr 28min 53sec
  • Gewiss-Ballan @ 42min 57sec
  • Mapei @ 44min 38sec
  • Marco Pantani (Carrera) 103hr 45min 57sec
  • Richard Virenque (Festina) @ 2min 51sec
  • Bo Hamburger (TVM) @ 36min 25sec

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1994 Tour de France stages and results with running GC

Prologue: Saturday, July 2, Lille 7.2 km Individual Time Trial. Stage and GC places and times are the same.

Stage 1: Sunday, July 3, Lille - Armentières, 234 km

GC after Stage 1:

Stage 2: Monday, July 4, Roubaix - Boulogne Sur Mer, 203.5 km

GC after Stage 2:

Stage 3: Tuesday, July 5, Calais - Eurotunnel 66.5 km Team Time Trial. Riders got their team's real GC times, but rules limited a rider's time loss to 5 minutes.

GC after Stage 3:

Stage 4: Wednesday, July 6, Dover - Brighton, 204.5 km

GC after Stage 4:

Stage 5: Thursday, July 7, Portsmouth - Portsmouth, 187 km

GC after stage 5:

Stage 6: Friday, July 8, Cherbourg - Rennes, 270.5 km

GC after Stage 6:

Stage 7: Saturday, July 9, Rennes - Futuroscope, 259.5 km

GC after Stage 7:

Stage 8: Sunday, July 10, Poitiers - Trélissac, 218.5 km

GC after Stage 8:

Stage 9: Monday, July 11, Périgueux - Bergerac 64 km Individual Time Trial

GC after stage 9:

Stage 10: Tuesday, July 12, Bergerac - Cahors, 160.5 km

GC after Stage 10:

Stage 11: Wednesday, July 13, Cahors - Lourdes (Hautacam), 263.5 km

GC after Stage 11:

Stage 12: Friday, July 15, Lourdes - Luz Ardiden, 204.5 km

GC after Stage 12:

Stage 13: Saturday, July 16, Bagnères de Bigorre - Albi, 223 km

Tony Rominger abandoned.

GC after Stage 13:

Stage 14: Sunday, July 17, Castres - Montpellier, 202 km

GC after Stage 14:

Stage 15: Monday, July 18, Montpellier - Carpentras, 231 km

GC after Stage 15:

Stage 16: Tuesday, July 19, Valréas - L'Alpe d'Huez, 224.5 km

GC after Stage 16:

Stage 17: Wednesday, July 20, Bourg d'Oisans - Val Thorens, 149 km.

GC after Stage 17

Stage 18: Thursday, July 21, Moutiers - Cluses, 174.5 km

GC after Stage 18:

Stage 19: Friday, July 22, Cluses - Morzine Avoriaz 47.5 km Individual Time Trial.

GC after stage 19:

Stage 20: Saturday, July 23, Morzine - Lac St. Point, 208.5 km

GC after Stage 20:

21st and final stage: Sunday, July 24, Disneyland Paris- Paris (Champs Elysées), 175 km

Complete Final 1994 Tour de France General Classification

The Story of the 1994 Tour de France:

This excerpt is from "The Story of the Tour de France", Volume 2. If you enjoy it we hope you will consider purchasing the book, either print, eBook or audiobook. The Amazon link here will make the purchase easy.

In the 1994 Giro d'Italia, cracks in the impenetrable wall of Indurain's invulnerability started to show. Or at least seemed to. There were 3 time trials and Indurain did not win any of them. In the stage 1b 7-kilometer individual time trial, eventual Giro winner Evgeni Berzin beat Indurain by 3 seconds. Stage 8 was a fairer contest at 44 kilometers. This time Berzin beat the Spaniard by 2 minutes, 34 seconds. In the final time trial, stage 18, Berzin was 20 seconds faster over the 35 kilometers. Counting the final time trial in the 1993 Tour de France, this made 4 successive time trial losses for Indurain.

Moreover, Marco Pantani, a true pure climber, was able to get away on 2 consecutive days and gain enough time on Indurain to finish ahead of him in the General Classification. This put a dagger in the heart of the Indurain strategy: contain the climbers in the hills, letting them gain only insignificant amounts of time. Then, as Frankie Andreu said, kill them in the time trial. In the 1994 Giro, he could do neither.

The final podium for the 1994 Giro:

Was this a portent for the Tour or just a careful training ride crafted so that Indurain would not be too tired to contest the final days of the Tour? In the 1993 Tour he ran out of gas. He was not the "extra-terrestrial" he had been called. He was instead, just a gifted athlete at the top of his game.

Owen Mulholland has noted that this Tour had a particularly large crop of good climbers. Given Indurain's past inability to ride in the mountains with the very best mountain goats, riders such as Richard Virenque, Marco Pantani and Piotr Ugrumov were eagerly looking forward to contesting the Tour.

The Tour's 7.2-kilometer prologue in Lille was Chris Boardman's first day in his first Tour de France. What a spectacular result for him when he won the prologue, beating Indurain by 15 seconds and Rominger by 19. He was now the Yellow Jersey, the first Englishman to own it since Tommy Simpson, 32 years before. Simpson's last day in Yellow was 4 years before Boardman was born.

The next day, a 234-kilometer sprinter's stage from Lille to Armentieres, saw one of the most spectacular crashes in Tour history. A policeman leaned out into the road to take a picture of the final sprint. Wilfried Nelissen slammed into him, breaking his collarbone and taking down Laurent Jalabert. Jalabert, who had won 7 stages and the points competition in the Vuelta earlier that year, was looking forward to repeating the process in his home country. Instead, after receiving terrible wounds to his face, he was taken to the hospital. Jalabert said that the crash changed his way of riding. Apparently under pressure from his devoted wife, Sylvie, for the remainder of his career he no longer sought out the dangerous bunch sprints. Marguerite Lazell says that although Nelissen returned to racing, he was never again the racer he was before that crash.

Boardman was able to keep his Yellow Jersey until the stage 3 team time trial, 66.5 kilometers contested at Calais. MG-GB won the stage with Motorola just missing the win by 6 seconds. That must have deeply pained the team's manager Jim Ochowicz, who had dreamed of winning this event for years.

The MG-GB win gave Johan Museeuw the lead. Boardman, desperate to get the Yellow Jersey back for the next day's stage in England had hammered his team. Being a fairly inexperienced professional with extraordinary power (he had only turned pro in August 1993), he, as Armstrong did in his early team time trials, took such hard pulls that his teammates struggled to stay with him. I remember watching this stage on TV, yelling at Boardman on the television screen to take slower, longer pulls. Didn't do any good.

The Tour made another crossing of the English Channel, the first time since that less than successful journey in 1974. Back in 1974, the crowds were sparse and the racing was uninteresting, being held on an unopened expressway. This time, with 2 stages in England, the crowds were huge and the racers rode as if it was the Tour de France. Boardman did manage a fourth place in 1 of the stages, but he had lost too much time (1 minute, 17 seconds) in the team time trial to get back in Yellow. Ironically, Sean Yates, also a British rider, donned the Yellow Jersey on the Tour's first day back in France.

The Tour really started on stage 9, a 64-kilometer individual time trial. Was Indurain faltering? Was his Giro performance a guide to his Tour? Look at the times.

With the exception of Rominger, Indurain had humiliated the field. Boardman was the reigning Olympic Pursuit Champion and would go on that year to become the World Time Trial Champion. For all of his ability, he was over 5 minutes slower than Indurain. Almost half the field finished over 12 minutes behind than the Spaniard. The General Classification after the time trial:

The time gaps were already beyond what could ever be recaptured from an in-form Indurain unless misfortune took him down.

Stage 11 would reveal all with its new climb up the Hautacam to Lourdes. Different measurements rate the climb slightly differently. Some call it a 17.3 kilometer climb with 1,170 meters of elevation gain and an average gradient of 6.8%. Others start the true climb further up the road and make it a 13.6 kilometer run up 1,000 meters of elevation gain. Either way, it's rated hors category and has a patch in the center that's 10% before relaxing to a leg-breaking 8%+ gradient. This is what the small, specialist climbers live for with their high power-to-weight ratio. Indurain may kill them in the time trials, but this was a chance to take the time back.

The first to take off up the mountain was Marco Pantani, second in the Giro earlier this year. Jean-François Bernard, who a few years earlier had been expected to inherit the mantle of Bernard Hinault as France's and the world's next great stage racer, was riding as a domestique for Indurain. Maybe he wasn't Hinault, but Bernard set a fiery pace up the Hautacam that shed most of the peloton. Halfway up the mountain, exhausted, he pulled off to let Indurain and the others take over. In past years Indurain would not let his climbing domestiques go all out in the high mountains because he couldn't match their pace. This year he could take what they could dish out and still be ready to hand out heaping helpings of suffering to those still on his wheel.

Indurain took over from Bernard and rode in his steady, smooth style with a high cadence that was so surprising in such a large man. He was finally left with only 2 riders, both Frenchmen. Luc Leblanc and Richard Virenque were the only men who could match Indurain that day. Then, after another couple of kilometers even Virenque couldn't take it. It was down to Leblanc and Indurain. The duo caught and passed Pantani. Leblanc tried to shed Indurain but could only gain a temporary gap that Indurain, with extreme effort, was able to close. At the summit Leblanc sprinted ahead for a close win.

This was a new Indurain. In the past, the mountains posed a threat, a manageable threat, but a danger to him nonetheless. Now Indurain could attack the field in the mountains and beat the best climbers at their own game. Look at the times for the stage:

The General Classification:

The peloton was in tatters after the first real climb of the Tour.

The next day was another Pyrenean stage with the Peyresourde, the Aspin, Tourmalet and the final climb to Luz-Ardiden. With the field put in its place, Indurain let a group of non-contenders get away. Richard Virenque led over the last 3 climbs and won the stage with a lead of over 4½ minutes on Marco Pantani. Rominger, not well, withdrew from the Tour.

The Tour headed towards the Alps. On the way, there was stage 15, 231 kilometers from Montpellier to Carpentras with Mont Ventoux in the way. Early in the day the biggest man in the peloton, Eros Poli, took off. I clearly remember seeing this stage on TV. Back then, the weekend network coverage was spotty, spending infuriating amounts of time explaining the basics of bicycle racing and other needless garbage. But this stage and this adventure they covered.

The big man pedaled away from a completely indifferent peloton. Before he reached Mont Ventoux he had a lead of nearly half an hour. He couldn't get that big a lead without drawing down his stores of energy. The climb up Mont Ventoux seemed to be almost beyond him. Exhausted, he could barely turn over the cranks, looking terribly overgeared. He cleared the summit with several minutes in hand and sped down the other side. His big mass may have slowed him to a near standstill going up the hill, but going down, being big came in good stead. He won the stage 3 minutes, 39 seconds ahead of the first chasers. The contenders, Indurain, Pantani, Ugrumov, Virenque, and others came in together 4 minutes later. While Poli's ride was epic, nothing changed in the General Classification.

The first day in the Alps with the climb up L'Alpe d'Huez didn't change much either. Riders with no General Classification hopes were allowed to escape while Indurain stayed close enough to Leblanc and Virenque to keep them from becoming dangerous.

Stage 17 with its ascents of the Glandon, the Madeleine and an hors category finish at Val Thorens was the day Piotr Ugrumov finally came out and tried for a real shot at glory. On a long break he dragged Colombian Nelson Rodriguez to the finish where the Colombian sprinted ahead of Ugrumov for the win. Ugrumov was now up to sixth in the General Classification at a little over 11 minutes behind Indurain. Note that the interesting story of this Tour is the race for the minor placings. No one believed that the 1994 Indurain could be shaken from his place at the top of the standings.

The next day with the Saisies, Croix-Fry and the Colombière, all tough climbs, Ugrumov again escaped and this time achieved his solo victory. Indurain, unworried, came in second, 2 minutes, 39 seconds later. Ugrumov's solo adventure allowed him to leap past Pantani and others to make it to the podium. Now he was sitting third at 8 minutes, 55 seconds to Virenque's second place at 7 minutes, 22 seconds in the overall.

Stage 19 was the clincher for the 1994 Tour. It was a 47.5-kilometer individual time trial that climbed the second category Les Gets and the first category Avoriaz. Ugrumov turned in a stunning performance. Here are the stage results:

Virenque came in eighteenth at 6 minutes, 4 seconds. With that stunning collapse, he lost his place on the podium. Ugrumov moved up to second place and Marco Pantani dropped to third.

The final stage on the Champs Elysées was a fantastic, exciting race with Eddy Seigneur riding like a man possessed to take a solo win. Frankie Andreu was right on his heels, second at only 3 seconds.

The final 1994 Tour de France General Classification:

Climbers' Competition:

That made four sequential Tours for Miguel Indurain. Clearly, he was better than ever.

© McGann Publishing

1994 Tour de France: results and classification

General classification of the 1994 tour de france, jerseys of the 1994 tour de france, stages of the 1994 tour de france.

Prologue (Lille - Lille, 7.2 km in Individual Time Trial)

Stage 1 (Lille - Armentières, 234 km)

Stage 2 (Roubaix - Boulogne-sur-Mer, 203.5 km)

Stage 3 (Calais - Eurotunnel, 66.5 km in Team Time Trial)

Stage 4 (Dover - Brighton, 204.5 km)

Stage 5 (Portsmouth - Portsmouth, 187 km)

Stage 6 (Cherbourg - Rennes, 270.5 km)

Stage 7 (Rennes - Futuroscope, 259.5 km)

Stage 8 (Poitiers - Trélissac, 218.5 km)

Stage 9 (Périgueux - Bergerac, 64 km)

Stage 10 (Bergerac - Cahors, 160.5 km)

Stage 11 (Cahors - Lourdes/Hautacam, 263.5 km)

Stage 12 (Lourdes - Luz Ardiden, 204.5 km)

Stage 13 (Bagnères-de-Bigorre - Albi, 223 km)

Stage 14 (Castres - Montpellier, 202 km)

Stage 15 (Montpellier - Carpentras, 231 km)

Stage 16 (Valréas - Alpe d'Huez, 224.5 km)

Stage 17 (Le Bourg-d'Oisans - Val Thorens, 149 km)

Stage 18 (Moutiers - Cluses, 174.5 km)

Stage 19 (Cluses - Avoriaz, 47.5 km)

Stage 20 (Morzine - Lac St Point, 208.5 km)

Stage 21 (Disneyland-Paris - Paris/Champs Elysées, 175 km)

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Cycling - Tour de France - 1994 - Startlist

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Tour de France - Information

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  • First edition : 1903
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1994 tour de france start list

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81st edition 2 July 1994 - 24 July 1994
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'94 Tour de France Saves Best for Last

By Samuel Abt, International Herald Tribune

  • Oct. 21, 1993

Joop Zoetemelk described it as "a true Tour de France," Stephen Roche predicted it would be more interesting, Bernard Thévenet said it would favor climbers and Miguel Indurain said it would be different. All of them, winners of the Tour de France, agreed that the 81st edition of the bicycle race would be difficult.

The big unanswered question was whether the difficulties of the 1994 route will help or hinder Indurain as the Spaniard seeks to win the Tour for a fourth successive year.

"Anybody hoping to win the Tour better be strong the last week, better keep something in reserve for then," warned Thévenet, the Frenchman who won the Tour in 1975 and 1977. "The least weakness in that last week will be catastrophic."

He spoke Wednesday after the route of the 1994 Tour, which will cover 3,970 kilometers (2,467 miles) in 23 days, was made public. The race will start July 2 in Lille in the north of France, go to southern England for two days for the first time in 20 years, then hop back across the Channel and proceed counterclockwise around the mother country until the finish in Paris on July 24.

Excluding the short prologue and a day off on July 14, the Tour will comprise 12 daily stages over flat country, 6 stages in the high mountains and 3 time trials - two on an individual basis and one by teams. Sprinters should dominate the first half of the race, climbers and all-arounders the second half.

Once again 20 teams of 9 riders each will compete but the teams will no longer be chosen primarily on their computerized rankings. Fifteen teams will be named in May and five more in June.

Although there will be such novelties as train passage through the Channel tunnel and a stage starting at the Euro Disney amusement park, the Tour will be different from recent editions mainly in packing decisive stages - on paper anyway - into a short period near the finish.

"The final stretch will be hard," said Indurain. That stretch will last five days and culminate in an uphill time trial after four days of climbing, mainly in the Alps.

"It will be very hard," said Zoetemelk, the Dutchman who won the 1980 Tour. "This is a course for really tough guys, for Rominger, for Indurain too, of course."

The name of Tony Rominger, the Swiss who finished second to Indurain by nearly five minutes this year, came up often after the Tour route was presented. He is considered to be a stronger climber than the Spaniard and nearly his equal as a rider in time trials, or races against the clock.

"Rominger, Chiappucci," said Roche, the Irishman who won the 1987 Tour, naming two of his favorites in addition to the defending champion. Claudio Chiappucci, the fine Italian climber, has been campaigning for an uphill time trial since that traditional stage was dropped a few years ago.

"The new Tour will be much better for climbers than this year's Tour," said Thévenet. "People like Rominger, certainly, Chiappucci, Mejia. Indurain too, but that goes without saying."

Alvaro Mejia, the Colombian who finished fourth this year, was also touted by officials of his Motorola team.

"It's a good course for our climbers," said Sheila Griffin, who represents the U.S. sponsors. "Mejia, Andy Hampsten and our newest rider, Raul Alcala, are all a little older and have more endurance."

Jim Ochowicz, the team's general manager, agreed. "The Pyrenees don't seem like much next year but the Alps are hard, very hard," he said. "That ought to favor our climbers."

Like most people at the presentation in Issy les Moulineaux, a suburb of Paris, Ochowicz thought the 45-kilometer uphill time trial two days before the finish could decide the race. A climb over two hills will precede a long ascent to the resort of Avoriaz.

"It's a strong man's time trial," judged Roche, "a long drive up but not really a mountain climb."

Will it suit Indurain, who habitually dominates the Tour's flat time trials?

"Any time trial course is a good one for him," Ochowicz admitted. "But the uphill course brings the odds together a little bit more."

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Porn Star Rocco Siffredi’s Netflix Bio-Series ‘Supersex’ Is More Tedious Than Sexy: TV Review

By Aramide Tinubu

Aramide Tinubu

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  • Porn Star Rocco Siffredi’s Netflix Bio-Series ‘Supersex’ Is More Tedious Than Sexy: TV Review 7 days ago

Supersex. (L to R) Alessandro Borghi as Rocco, Gaia Messerklinger as Moana in episode 104 of Supersex. Cr. Lucia Iuorio/Netflix © 2024

Loosely based on the experiences of real-life porn sensation Rocco Siffredi , known as the “Italian Stallion,” Netflix ’s “ Supersex ” isn’t actually very sexy at all. Instead, the seven-part series, created by Francesca Manieri, is a tale about family, masculinity and toxic bonds. While the show, which stars Alessandro Borghi in the lead role, has some interesting chapters, the surrealist elements — including some hallucinatory moments and the bizarre way some of the sex scenes are filmed — make it more than a biographical account. Instead, it’s an overly complex examination of relationships and the vices people indulge in to escape their emotional turmoil.

Series opener “Superpower” acts mainly as a coming-of-age story. Following Rocco’s retirement news, the show zips back to 1974. Ten-year-old Rocco Tano feels trapped in the impoverished rural town of Ortona and lost in the chaos of his family life. His mother is devoted to his mentally disabled brother Claudio, and Rocco lives in the shadow of his charismatic older half-brother, Tommaso (Adriano Giannini). Tommaso is Rocco’s North Star. He represents a type of freedom and hypermasculinity that appears out of reach for the men of Ortona. Tommaso also has the love of the town’s most stunning woman, Lucia (Jasmine Trinca), which only endears Rocco to him further.

In addition to examining Rocco’s family dynamic, “Supersex” zooms in on his fixation on sex, which begins at a very young age. The series unpacks his crush on Lucia and later his discovery of “Supersex,” a pornography magazine starring Gabriel Pontello. The euphoria from observing and later engaging in sex is a feeling Rocco chases across the next three decades. But his sex work comes at the expense of his mental health. It also destroys the romances and familial bonds he tries to form and maintain.

Despite a lifelong admiration of Tommaso’s machismo, his brother’s treatment of Lucia, who funds their lifestyle through her sex work on the streets of Paris, slowly shifts Rocco’s point of view. An invitation to a sex club awakens previously unknown desires. Becoming a porn star gives him financial security, but his inner turmoil stems from trying to live up to the expectations his family places on him.

“Supersex” dwells far too long on Rocco’s dysfunctional brotherhood with Tommaso, giving the toxic and exhausting connection unneeded exposition. Fewer episodes and less time spent on the self-destructive café manager would have kept the storyline squarely on Rocco’s psyche. Moreover, Manieri positions Lucia’s life as a counternarrative to Rocco’s. As with Rocco’s female co-stars, she isn’t allowed the same agency and status he obtains. Women are sexualized and then vilified for being sexual in the same breath. While Lucia eventually finds herself on a new path, it’s not without suffering and sacrifice, difficulties Rocco never contends with. The pair are an intriguing juxtaposition, but this mirroring gets muddled under their dark pull toward Tommaso. Similarly, Rocco’s enthusiasm for rough sex acts is never fully explored.

Still, “Supersex” makes some smart choices. Intercourse and other types of sex are showcased, of course, but these scenes aren’t gratuitous. Instead, they illustrate Rocco’s emotional state as he deals with loss and yearning or even demonstrate his self-worth.

The penultimate episode, “Resurrection of the Bodies,” is the standout and centers on Rocco’s return to Ortona amid his mother’s illness and one of the biggest highlights of his career, winning best European actor at the Hot d’Or Awards. In 53 minutes, Rocco confronts the effects of shame and how so-called family members react to him when he’s no longer playing by their rules.

Though Rocco’s story is solidly depicted, audiences hoping for a bio-series-type narrative won’t find it here. It’s also worth noting that Netflix offers a dubbed English version, but the show is best viewed in Italian with subtitles. Overall, “Supersex” isn’t just an examination of one man’s life and career but a look at the lives people create, however unconventional, when they dare to move through the world as their most authentic selves.

“Supersex” premieres March 6 on Netflix .

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IMAGES

  1. 1994 Tour de France results by BikeRaceInfo

    1994 tour de france start list

  2. Motorola

    1994 tour de france start list

  3. Eurodisney, final stage start of the Tour de France 1994 Cycling Tour

    1994 tour de france start list

  4. Tour de France 1994

    1994 tour de france start list

  5. CYCLISME. En 1994, le Tour arrivait pour la première fois à Val Thorens

    1994 tour de france start list

  6. Le Tour de France 1994

    1994 tour de france start list

COMMENTS

  1. Startlist for Tour de France 1994

    GB-MG Maglificio - Bianchi () 21 MUSEEUW Johan. 22 BOMANS Carlo. 23 CASSANI Davide. 24 ELLI Alberto. 25 JÄRMANN Rolf. 26 PEETERS Wilfried (DNF #16) 27 SØRENSEN Rolf. 28 VANZELLA Flavio.

  2. 1994 Tour de France

    The 1994 Tour de France was the 81st edition of the Tour de France, one of cycling's Grand Tours.The Tour began on 2 July with a 7.2 km (4.5 mi) prologue around the French city Lille.After 21 more days of racing, the Tour came to a close on the street of the Champs-Élysées.Twenty-one teams entered the race that was won by Miguel Induráin of the Banesto team.

  3. Startlist for Tour de France 1994

    Competing teams and riders for Tour de France 1994. Top competitors are Laurent Jalabert, Erik Zabel and Tony Rominger.

  4. List of teams and cyclists in the 1994 Tour de France

    A total of 21 teams were invited to participate in the 1994 Tour de France. Fifteen teams were announced in May, based on their UCI ranking: [1] The Jolly -team of Zenon Jaskuła, who had finished in third place in the 1993 Tour de France, was not selected. [2] Each team sent a squad of nine riders, so the Tour began with a peloton of 189 cyclists.

  5. Cycling

    Cycling - Tour de France 1994 - Results. Sport Betting; ... Results 1994; Start list; Information; Prize list; Archives; Statistics; Results 1994. Tour de France 1994. France - 2 July 1994 - 25 July 1994. General Classification - 25 July 1994. 1: Miguel Indurain Larraya (SPA) Banesto - Pinarello:

  6. 1994 Tour de France results by BikeRaceInfo

    1994 Tour de France quick facts. The 1994 Tour had 21 stages plus a prologue that totaled 3,978.2 kilometers. It was ridden at an average speed of 38.383 km/hr. Two stages (4 & 5) were held in England. ... Others start the true climb further up the road and make it a 13.6 kilometer run up 1,000 meters of elevation gain.

  7. 1994 Tour de France

    The 1994 Tour de France was the 81st edition of the Tour de France, one of cycling's Grand Tours. The Tour began on 2 July with a 7.2 km prologue around the French city Lille. After 21 more days of racing, the Tour came to a close on the street of the Champs-Élysées. Twenty-one teams entered the race that was won by Miguel Induráin of the Banesto team.

  8. Results of the 1994 Tour de France

    Jerseys of the 1994 Tour de France. Yellow jersey (winner of the Tour de France) : Miguel Indurain in 103h38'38". Polka dot jersey (best climber) : Richard Virenque with 392 points. Green jersey (best sprinter) : Djamolidine Abdoujaparov with 322 points. White jersey (best young rider) : Marco Pantani in 100h45'57".

  9. Cycling

    Test, ODI and Twenty20 Championships. ICC Test Championship; ICC ODI Championship; Twenty20 Internationals

  10. Stage Overview Tour de France

    Tour de France. × Search Rider. × Search Team. × Search Race. Tour de France 1994 | Stage Overview 81st edition. 2 July 1994 - 24 July 1994. Date Stage Winner Distance; 02/07: Prologue. Lille-Euralille - Lille-Euralille: Chris BOARDMAN: 7.2 km: 03/07: Stage 1. Lille-Euralille - Armentières

  11. Category:1994 Tour de France

    1994 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 10; 1994 Tour de France, Stage 11 to Stage 21; L. List of teams and cyclists in the 1994 Tour de France This page was last edited on 12 September 2020, at 21:08 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike ...

  12. 1994 Tour de France: Some Hellos and a Ciao

    On stages 14, 15 and 16 of the 1991 Tour, Bruno Cenghialta, Argentin and Marco Lietti finished first for Ariostea, and Pederzoli exulted. "I felt like a Napoleon of France, a lion, a conquistadore ...

  13. Tour de France 1994 Stage 21 results

    Miguel Indurain is the winner of Tour de France 1994, before Piotr Ugrumov and Marco Pantani. Eddy Seigneur is the winner of the final stage. ... DNF=Did not finish / DNS=Did not start / OTL = Outside time limit / DF=Did finish, no result / NR=No result Rider wearing the jersey >50% of race distance in group before peloton.

  14. CYCLING; Course Gets Tougher In '94 Tour de France

    Excluding the short prologue and a day off on July 14, the Tour will comprise 12 daily stages over flat country, 6 stages in the high mountains and 3 time trials -- two on an individual basis and ...

  15. '94 Tour de France Saves Best for Last

    The race will start July 2 in Lille in the north of France, go to southern England for two days for the first time in 20 years, then hop back across the Channel and proceed counterclockwise around ...

  16. 1994 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 10

    Route of the 1994 Tour de France. The 1994 Tour de France was the 81st edition of Tour de France, one of cycling's Grand Tours.The Tour began in Lille with a prologue individual time trial on 2 July and Stage 10 occurred on 12 July with a flat stage to Cahors.The race finished on the Champs-Élysées in Paris on 24 July.

  17. 1994 Tour de France, Stage 11 to Stage 21

    Route of the 1994 Tour de France. The 1994 Tour de France was the 81st edition of Tour de France, one of cycling's Grand Tours.The Tour began in Lille with a prologue individual time trial on 2 July and Stage 11 occurred on 13 July with a mountainous stage from Cahors.The race finished on the Champs-Élysées in Paris on 24 July.

  18. Talk : List of teams and cyclists in the 1994 Tour de France

    Language links are at the top of the page across from the title.

  19. List of teams and cyclists in the 2024 Tour de France

    Legend No. Starting number worn by the rider during the Tour Pos. Position in the general classification: Time Deficit to the winner of the general classification: Denotes riders born on or after 1 January 1999 eligible for the young rider classification: Denotes the winner of the general classification: Denotes the winner of the points classification ...

  20. 'Supersex' Review: Rocco Siffredi's True Porn Story Doesn't Shine

    The euphoria from observing and later engaging in sex is a feeling Rocco chases across the next three decades. But his sex work comes at the expense of his mental health. It also destroys the ...

  21. Talk : List of teams and cyclists in the 1994 Tour de France

    What links here; Related changes; Upload file; Special pages; Permanent link; Page information

  22. Startlist for Tour de France 1997

    11 VIRENQUE Richard. 12 BORTOLAMI Gianluca. 13 BROCHARD Laurent. 14 DUFAUX Laurent. 15 HERVÉ Pascal. 16 LAUKKA Joona *. 17 MOREAU Christophe. 18 ROUS Didier. 19 STEPHENS Neil.

  23. List of teams and cyclists in the 1984 Tour de France

    The 1984 Tour started with 170 cyclists, divided into 17 teams of 10 cyclists: [2] Renault-Elf. Reynolds. Panasonic-Raleigh. La Redoute. Système U. Skil-Reydel-Sem. Peugeot-Shell-Michelin.