Col du Granon

Col du Granon
Col du Granon
Elevation2,413 m (7,917 ft)
Traversed byD234T
LocationHautes-Alpes, France
RangeMassif des Cerces (Alps)
Coordinates44°57′46″N 06°36′40″E / 44.96278°N 6.61111°E / 44.96278; 6.61111
Col du Granon is located in Alps
Col du Granon
Col du Granon
Location of Col du Granon

Col du Granon (el. 2,413 m or 7,917 ft) is a high mountain pass in the Alps in the department of Hautes-Alpes in France. A narrow tarmac road winds steeply up the southern approach. Gravel roads continue beyond the pass, in a military training zone.[citation needed]

It hosted the highest ever mountain-top stage finish in the Tour de France—once only—in 1986, until the 2011 Tour de France, that had a finish in the Col du Galibier, at 2,645 m (8,678 ft) of altitude. Eduardo Chozas of Spain won the stage after a long lone breakaway.

During the 2022 Tour de France Team Jumbo-Visma launched a relentless attack against two-time defending champion Tadej Pogačar, using Wout van Aert, Christophe Laporte and Primož Roglič, which allowed Jonas Vingegaard to seize the yellow jersey. Like LeMond in 1986, Vingegaard would defend his lead for the rest of the race.[1]

Description

Two roads lead to the pass at 2,645 m (8,678 ft). The D234T climbs 11.5 kilometres (7.1 mi) with a 9% average gradient from Saint-Chaffrey at an altitude of 1,364 metres (4,475 ft). From the east a dirt road to the military pass at Val-des-Prés climbs 15.3 kilometres (9.5 mi) at almost 7% gradient.

Tour de France – stage finishes

The road crossing the pass, with the Grand Aréa on the background
Year Stage Category Start of stage Distance (km) Stage Winner Leader in general classification
2022 11 H Albertville 152  Jonas Vingegaard (DEN)  Jonas Vingegaard (DEN)
1986 17 H Gap 190  Eduardo Chozas (ESP)  Greg LeMond (USA)

See also

References

  1. ^ Publishing, McGann (13 July 2022). "TDF 2022 Stage 11". bikeraceinfo.com. Retrieved 22 July 2022.

External links

  • Cycling Col du Granon - Elevation Profile, Map, Photos
  • Le col du Granon dans le Tour de France (in French)


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