(Lille) Flat, a few hills, but no cobblestones: the first three stages of the Tour de France 2025 departing from Lille, unveiled Thursday, should give pride of place to sprinters and punchers, and already get to work the contenders for the general classification.
Certainly, on July 5, 2025, the Tour will set off for the fifth time in its history from the Nord department, “a land that breathes cycling” in the words of the race director, Christian Prudhomme, during the presentation of the great departure.
“We could not return to France to places that did not viscerally love cycling sport and the Tour de France,” he stressed.
“Cycling is part of our genes,” smiles Martine Aubry, mayor of Lille, to AFP. “It’s going to be great, there’s going to be an incredible atmosphere.”
But the route of the first stages will skilfully bypass the legendary cobbled sectors of Paris-Roubaix, which always make the favorites fear a fall or a puncture, for a smoother start than in previous years.
The cobblestones of the Hell of the North had however been used by the Great Loop in 2010, 2014, 2018 and during the last passage of the Tour de France in the North, in 2022.
After hilly first stages in 2020, 2021, 2023 and next year in 2024, as well as a prologue in 2022, “this will be the first time in half a dozen years that a sprinter will be able to seize the first yellow jersey,” underlined Christian Prudhomme.
“Dreadful” finale
With three listed hills far from the finish and the last 50 flat kilometers, the first stage, a 185 km loop around Lille, will indeed be “a dream opportunity” for straight line specialists, underlines ASO.
But, whoever raises his arms in Lille, he is likely to lose his leadership position the next day between Lauwin-Planque and Boulogne-sur-Mer (209 km), where two climbs in the last 10 kilometers, at Saint-Etienne-au-Mont (900 m at 11%) then Outreau (800 m at 8.8%), should benefit punchers.
Christian Prudhomme hopes to see “the favorites of the Tour de France shoulder to shoulder from the first weekend”, in an “absolutely formidable” finale.
“We will obviously have champions up front,” he added.
As for the third stage, 172 km long between Valenciennes and Dunkirk, it should once again see the best sprinters on the field pitted against each other, with only one difficulty listed on the program, the Cassel hill (2.3 km to 3.8 %).
That day, with stretches exposed to the wind and an arrival at the seaside, “it is the direction of the wind which will decide the scenario: either the peloton will split into several groups, or we will head towards a massive sprint” , specifies ASO.
“It’s going to be terrible, because in the North, we know how to party, we know how to live, we know how to enjoy the little joys of life,” rejoices in advance Christian Poiret, president of the Northern department, to the ‘AFP.
The fourth stage will start from Amiens, in the Somme, for a destination which has not yet been revealed.
