Tour Climbs: The complete guide to every mountain stage on the Tour de France. Chris Sidwells

Tour Climbs: The complete guide to every mountain stage on the Tour de France - Chris  Sidwells


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the whole of the climb is in the Ariège so is therefore in the Midi-Pyrenées.

      The views from the top over the Hares forest are a delight, and the descent to Ax-les-Thermes is even better. Watch out for the first hairpins. You arrive at them quickly because the descent is steep and straight just before them. There are signs warning you of their existence in good time, so do your braking in good time for them.

      The Port de Pailhères climb from Ax-les-Thermes isn’t quite as hard as from Usson-les-Bains, and that side hasn’t been climbed by the Tour de France yet. However, climbing from Ax-Les-Thermes might be more practical if you are combining this climb with the Plateaux de Beille or Bonascre, or with the Col de Chioula, which shares its first three and a half kilometres with the Pailhères when climbed from Ax-les-Thermes.

       WHICH WAY?

      Usson-les-Bains is on the D118, 19 kilometres southwest of the town of Axat, which is 51 kilometres west of the city of Perpignan on the D117. If approaching from Axat, turn right in Usson-les-Bains onto the D16 in the direction of Mijanès. Turn right onto the D16, still in the direction of Mijanès. In Mijanès turn left onto the D25 and follow this road to the top of the climb.

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      image The first Tour rider over the Port de Pailhères was the Spanish rider Juan-Manuel Mercado in 2003.

      image An Austrian, Georg Totschnig was first on the Pailhères in 2005. He used the climb to distance himself from two breakaway companions, flew down into Ax-les-Thermes and stormed up the Plateau de Bonascre to win the stage. Totschnig’s performance was remarkable in that he held off Lance Armstrong, who was chasing him up the final climb, and because he was the first rider from his country to win since a Tour stage since Max Bulla in 1931.

      image First on the climb in 2007 was a young Spanish rider, Ruben Plaza. He couldn’t hang on, like Totschnig did, to win the stage at Plateau de Beille, but Plaza finished 50th overall in his first Tour, so might be a name for the future.

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      Tour riders in the Pyrenees © Luc Claessen

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      Lake on the descent of the Pailheres

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      All the information you need

      Portet d’Aspet

      ‘CASARTELLI’S MEMORIAL’

      star 2 STARS

      Length: 18.1 km

      Altitude: 1069 metres

      Height gain: 557 metres

      Average gradient: 3%

      Maximum gradient: 10.8%

      WHAT TO EXPECT

      image The worst is last. The last two kilometres of this climb are the hardest.

      image Difficult descent. There are some very steep down gradients on the twisty descent, and the road is not wide. Take extra special care, particularly when you see the 17% signs.

      image Hard the other way. The western side of the Portet d’Aspet is a harder climb than the eastern side. The 17% part is quite long and you will need very low gears for it.

      image Linking up. The Col de Menté starts exactly at the point where the western descent of the Portet d’Aspet ends. Just before the turn there is a stone building and a low stone wall on your right. The road bends sharply right over a bridge and the Menté road is on your left at the apex of this bend.

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      A very tough climb from either side, since 1995 the Portet d’Aspet has been connected with one of the three tragic deaths in Tour de France history, when an Italian rider, Fabio Casartelli crashed and was killed on the descent of the western side of the climb.

      Actually, in an event where men throw themselves into tumultuous sprint finishes, flog their tired bodies up incredible mountains and hurtle down the other sides at impossible speeds, it’s amazing that there haven’t been more deaths than those of Francisco Cepeda in 1935, Tom Simpson in 1967 and Casartelli in 1995.

      Aside from its tragic connection, the Portet d’Aspet is a real Pyrenean gem. It starts easily, even if some short descents on the way up keep loosing you what little height you gain in the first two-thirds of the climb.

      At 12 kilometres you are still only 700 metres above sea level and have only risen about 200 metres, so with 389 metres left to be climbed in only six kilometres you know what is in store for you. The sense of foreboding won’t be lifted by the fact that the next two kilometres only averages a five percent gradient either.

      Yes, you’ve guessed it, the last two kilometres are a brutal slog of ten percent and more as you climb the lacets that spin giddily upwards after the hamlet of Aspet. The one good thing about the top of the climb is that you are still in the shade of the trees that shelter you all the way up and down this climb.

      The descent down the western side is very steep, twisty and has an irregular gradient that shifts between five and nine percent. There is a stretch of 17 percent. It was just after this that Casartelli came to grief in 1995. He crashed and slid across the road, smashing his head against one of the square blocks that are placed to stop vehicles plunging over the edge. Since his death some of the blocks have been replaced, especially close to where he fell, but not all. Be very careful.

       WHICH WAY?

      The eastern side of the climb starts in Audressein, a tiny village that is 12 kilometres southwest of St Girons on the D618. St Girons is 30 kilometres southeast of junction 20 of the A64 Autoroute on the D117. Continue through Audressein on the D618 to the top of the climb.

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      image The Portet d’Aspet was first climbed in the Tour by Octave Lapize in 1910. Since then the race has visited the climb regularly, 27 times since 1947 alone.

      image Two famous Spanish climbers, Frederico Bahamontes and Julio Jiménez share the record by crossing the Portet d’Aspet in first place three times.

      image A beautiful stone and marble memorial to Fabio Casartelli has been built on the spot where he died. It records his Olympic road race title in 1992 and there is a sundial on it. There is also a hole drilled through the base of the stone. Each year, at exactly the time when Casartelli died the sun shines through this hole and illuminates figures engraved


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