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| July 15, 2011 |
2011 Tour de France, Part 1
The world's most beautiful stadium - the entire country of France - annually hosts the most important bike race of the year: the Tour de France. Upwards of 12 million fans line the roads to watch the race. For free. No tickets needed. The race traverses over 2000 miles in 21 days of racing. Every year the route changes, but the mountains are a constant: racers must scale absurdly steep peaks in both the Pyrenees and the Alps before a victory race onto the Champs Elysees in Paris. This year's tour may be remembered most for the spate of horrible crashes that have eliminated many of the top riders. Most outrageously, a media car hit a cyclist at speed, causing a horrific crash that sent another rider cartwheeling into a barbed-wire fence. Both riders remounted and finished the stage. The race goes on through July 24. -- Lane Turner (35 photos total)

One of the breakaway men, Netherland's Johnny Hoogerland, is caught in a barbed wire fence during the ninth stage between Issoire and Saint-Flour on July 10, 2011. Spain's Juan Antonio Flecha and Hoogerland survived being hit at speed by a car which bore the marking of France Television. (Lionel Bonaventure/AFP/Getty Images) #
More links and information
Le Tour de France official site - letour.fr
Latest Tour de France news - velonews.com
Tour de France - Wikipedia entry

































