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Tour de France 2011

Stage 17 - Gap > > > Pinerolo (Italy) - 179 km

Wednesday, July 20, 2011


Départ

Gap

The market in Gap© Serge Moro

• Stage town on 20 previous occasions
• 37, 785 inhabitants
• Prefecture of Hautes Alpes (05)

This stage of the Tour provides Gap with the perfect opportunity to further reinforce its links with Pinerolo – the day’s finish town – with which Gap has been a twin town for almost 40 years. From the start, the riders will head through the northern-most area of the Hautes-Alpes, tackling some of the race’s most mythical climbs. Thanks to these climbs, and to the Tour, the Hautes-Alpes has perhaps encouraged cycling more than any other department through well-executed town planning which takes the needs of the cyclist into consideration. The tourism committee has created 20 shared and signposted paths to encourage the sport and, during the summer, you can enjoy some of cycling’s best known climbs in complete safety due to them being closed to motor vehicles. Along the way, you can enjoy views of the Serre-Ponçon lake, Europe’s biggest man-made reservoir, the town of Embrun, perched up on the cliff, and the fortifications at Vauban de Briançon, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

The Grand Boucle (Big Loop) has visited Gap 20 times and has witnessed the victories of the leading cyclists Raphaël Géminiani, Gastone Nencini, Jean-François Bernard, Erik Zabel, Alexandre Vinokourov and Pierrick Fédrigo. But the prefecture town of Hautes-Alpes was also the start for legendary stages to Briançon, which were successively won by Louison Bobet, Fausto Coppi and Federico Bahamontes. Since then, the stage leaving from Gap generally finishes in L’Alpe du Huez, which was the case in 1991, (with the victory of Gianni Bugno) or in 2006 (Fränk Schleck).


Arrivée

Pinerolo (Italy)

The Acaja main street and the senate building© Remo Caffaro

• Stage town for the first time
• 36, 000 inhabitants
• Town of the Province of Turin (Italy)

Before becoming part of Italy, Pinerolo, located around 40 kilometres south-west of Turin, was, at different times, both French and Savoyard. This toing and froing made at the discretion of history manifest in the town’s different names: Pinerolo in Italian, of course, but also Pignerol in French, Pinareul in Piedmontese and even Pineirol in Occitan-Alpin. In addition, the town also gave its name to Penarol, a neighbourhood of Montevideo, the capital city of Uruguay, perhaps best known for its football team. The town’s fortress was where Nicolas Fouquet, a superintendant of finances to Louis XIV, was imprisoned in the Iron Mask, and for which Pinerolo is best known. Arriving in 1669, the legendary and enigmatic prisoner would remain secretly locked for 12 years. Since 1999, Pinerolo has put on a historical reconstruction each October – La Maschera di Ferro – which this year attracted some 70,000 visitors. At the end of the show, the identity of the masked man is revealed.

Surrounded by mountains and valleys and steeped in history, Pinerolo is just waiting to be explored. Following the example of Saumur’s Cadre Noir national riding school in France, Pinerolo is home to Italy’s cavalry, and upholds its traditions. Pinerolo can also claim its place as an Olympic town having held the curling here as part of the 2006 Turin Winter Olympics. It’s also a cultural town full of museums: Le Museo Nazionale de l’Arma di Cavalleria, la Collezione Civica d’Arte di Palazzo Vittone, le Museo Diocesano, le Museo Storico del Mutuo Soccorso et la Casa del Senato. The San Donato cathedral, the San Maurizio basilica – one of the town’s landmarks – and Pinerolo’s old town, with its squares and picturesque mediaeval streets, are also all well worth a visit. All year round, Pinerolo also holds a number of cultural events: la Rassegna dell’Artigianato, la Maschera di Ferro, and international equestrian competitions. Pinerolo is all this and more: a smiling, welcoming town.

The Tour will be stopping for the first time in Pinerolo, which hosted a stage of the Giro d’Italia from Cueno to Pinerolo, in 1949, which became historic. “The Maddalena Pass would already have been enough to exhaust a bull. But it was just the beginning,» wrote Dino Buzatti, the special correspondent of the Corriere della Sera to describe the dual between Coppi and Bartali. On that day, Coppi, the younger of the two, gave the deathblow to the elder rider: «Today Bartali understood that he had reached decline. And for the first time he smiled.”


(letour.com)
339 posted on 07/20/2011 2:11:27 AM PDT by Ready4Freddy (I fight gangs for local charities and stuff.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 338 | View Replies ]


To: Ready4Freddy

GC after Stage 16 yesterday:

1. VOECKLER Thomas 181 TEAM EUROPCAR 69h 00’ 56”
2. EVANS Cadel 141 BMC RACING TEAM 69h 02’ 41” + 01’ 45”
3. SCHLECK Frank 18 TEAM LEOPARD-TREK 69h 02’ 45” + 01’ 49”
4. SCHLECK Andy 11 TEAM LEOPARD-TREK 69h 03’ 59” + 03’ 03”
5. SANCHEZ Samuel 21 EUSKALTEL - EUSKADI 69h 04’ 22” + 03’ 26”
6. CONTADOR Alberto 1 SAXO BANK SUNGARD 69h 04’ 38” + 03’ 42”
7. BASSO Ivan 91 LIQUIGAS-CANNONDALE 69h 04’ 45” + 03’ 49”
8. CUNEGO Damiano 161 LAMPRE - ISD 69h 04’ 57” + 04’ 01”
9. DANIELSON Tom 52 TEAM GARMIN - CERVELO 69h 07’ 00” + 06’ 04”
10. URAN Rigoberto 118 SKY PROCYCLING 69h 08’ 51” + 07’ 55”


340 posted on 07/20/2011 4:39:58 AM PDT by Ready4Freddy (I fight gangs for local charities and stuff.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 339 | View Replies ]

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