Classroom lesson 路 Sport馃嚝馃嚪 France

The Tour de France

A 3,500 km bike race that takes three whole weeks

What is it?

The Tour de France is the biggest bicycle race on Earth. Every July, about 180 of the world's best cyclists race around France for three weeks - covering around 3,500 kilometres in total. The route changes every year, but it always finishes in Paris.

Tell me more

The race is split into 21 days of racing, called stages. Each stage is its own mini-race, between roughly 150 and 230 kilometres long. The cyclists race over flat farmland, up huge mountains in the Alps and Pyrenees, and along seaside roads. At the end of each day, all their times are added up.

The rider with the lowest total time wears a special bright yellow shirt called the maillot jaune ('yellow jersey'). Whoever is wearing it at the end of the last day, on the famous Champs-脡lys茅es in Paris, is the winner of the whole Tour.

Cyclists ride in big groups called the peloton (French for 'little ball'). Riding tucked in close behind another cyclist saves a huge amount of energy, because the rider in front pushes the air aside for everyone behind. Teams help their best rider by taking turns at the front.

Millions of people line the roads to watch, often with funny costumes and big flags. Around 12 million people go to see the race live each year, making it one of the most-watched sport events in the world. And unlike most big sports - it is completely free to watch from the side of the road.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why do you think cyclists ride so close together in a peloton, even though it looks dangerous?
  2. 02Cyclists need to eat a huge amount of food to race for three weeks. What do you think they choose, and why?
  3. 03Where is the longest journey you have ever made? How does it compare to 3,500 km?
Try this

Classroom activity

On a map of France, plot a route that starts in one city, goes through the Alps and the Pyrenees, and finishes in Paris. Measure how long your route is. How many days would your route take if a stage averages 170 km a day?

More about France

Other things that make France special

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