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14 Fun Tour de France Facts You Can Use to Impress Your Friends

How do riders pee on the bike? Why is there no women’s Tour? Why is the leader’s jersey yellow? We’ve got the answers.

by Molly Hurford
106th tour de france 2019   stage 19
Tim de Waele//Getty Images

Let’s be honest: Pro cycling is difficult to watch and enjoy without some basic knowledge. But once you’ve figured out the essential logistics (What’s up with the jersey colors? What’s a breakaway? Which channel is this race even on?), a few more nuanced questions still linger. As you get ready to watch the delayed 2020 Tour de France, here are fun facts and answers to 14 questions you’ve likely wondered about the race, which will make you enjoy watching it even more.

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​How do Tour de France Riders pee?

Cycling : 99th Tour de France 2012 / Stage 5
Tim de Waele//Getty Images

Long, hot, July days mean the pros are hydrating a lot on the bike, which also means bathroom breaks are inevitable. In the first five to 10 minutes of a race, when the pace is more leisurely, “riders pull to the side of the road, pull their shorts down just like you would underwear—you know, pull front down, do your business,” says retired pro cyclist Ted King, who’s ridden the Tour de France several times. During this neutral roll out, King says, there’s plenty of time to catch back on to the peloton before the race starts in earnest.

Once the pace picks up, riders still use this tactic to pee while racing. “It’s a lot easier to wait for a lull in the race when a big fraction of the peloton pulls to the side of the road rather than doing it solo, because that solo chase is tough!” King says.

But nature calling doesn’t mean riders even have to slow down. You can also pee off the bike while riding. (Too much information? Maybe, but now you’ll know why riders sometimes look awkward when they’re coasting.) “If peeing to the right, your right leg is in a 6 o’clock position, left at 12. Left hand on the handlebars, right hand holds the shorts down, and coast while relieving yourself,” King advises.

​Who has won the most Tour de France titles?

Anquetil tour de france
Harry Pot via Wikimedia

That depends whether you’re counting titles that have been taken away (coughLancecough). If you’re not, says Christopher Thompson, author of The Tour de France: A Cultural History, the answer is a four-way tie between Jacques Anquetil, Miguel Indurain, Eddy Merckx, and Bernard Hinault. They’re in good company.

​Has the Tour ever not happened since it started in 1903?

wwII tour de france
Risorgimento via Wikipedia Commons

Only the two World Wars caused the race to be put on hold, says Thompson. All in all, battles cost the world 11 editions of the Tour: WWI broke out a few days after the 1914 Tour, he says, and didn’t run again until 1919. It went on hiatus again during WWII from 1940 to 1946, running again in 1947—two years after the end of the war.

“WWI was a war of attrition and the French were fighting the whole time. There were several Tour winners who were killed in the trenches,” he says. “But in WWII, France was defeated and occupied quite early, and that was different. There was a government that went along with the Nazis, so there was some racing to prove that things were normal under the occupation, but the Tour wasn’t held. After, France was so devastated by WWII that it took a while to get restarted.”

And of course, with the COVID-19 pandemic, we nearly lost the Tour this year.

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​Why is the leader’s jersey yellow?

la auto tour de france
JeanBono via Wikipedia Commons

Simple, says Thompson: L’Auto, the newspaper that first started and sponsored the race, was printed on yellow paper, so it was essentially an advertising strategy. (That’s also why the Giro d’Italia leader’s jersey is pink—the newspaper that created the Giro was printed on pink paper.)

Has anyone ever died in the Tour?

tour de france
Getty Images

Sadly, four riders have passed away over the course of the race’s history. In 1910, Adolphe Heliére drowned on a rest day; in 1934, Francisco Cepeda crashed into a ravine on a descent; in 1967, Tom Simpson passed away after a heart attack; and in 1995, Fabio Casartelli was killed after crashing and hitting his head.

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​What do Tour riders do on rest days?

CYCLING-FRA-TDF2018-REST
JEAN-PIERRE CLATOT//Getty Images

They ride! At least, they go for short rides to keep their legs from cramping up. Max Testa, M.D., former team doctor for a variety of Tour teams including Team BMC, 7-Eleven, and Motorola, says that the short rides (which can be up to three hours!) help keep inflammation at bay and keep muscles ready for another hard day in the saddle.

​Why isn’t there a women’s Tour de France?

la course 2016   by le tour de france
Kei Tsuji//Getty Images

“Many Europeans define sport—especially a difficult sport like cycling—as a masculine thing, only something hyper-virile men were capable of,” Thompson says. “So even as women were getting into sport—running, tennis—European cycling remained a male monopoly with rare exceptions.”

There was a women’s Tour in the 80s, but it was short-lived. Today, there is a women’s race during the Tour called La Course, but it’s a one-day only event. Will this event ever expand in the future? Never say never.

[5 Misconceptions About Women Cyclists Preventing Them from Having a Full Tour]

​How many people watch the Tour?

tour de france
Getty Images

According to the organizers, around 3.5 billion people tune in to watch the Tour each year during the weeks of coverage, in 190 countries, making it the third largest sporting event in the world. (To put that into perspective, the Super Bowl is only watched by about 114.4 million viewers.)

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​How old was the oldest Tour de France racer, and how young was the youngest?

cornet tour de france
Jules Beau/National Library of France via Wikimedia

Both distinctions occurred in 1904: Henri Paret was the oldest competitor at age 50 when he competed in 1904, while 20-year-old Henri Cornet was the youngest. Cornet was also the youngest winner. The oldest winner was in 1922, when 36-year-old Belgian Firmin Lambot took the yellow jersey.

How much prize money does the Tour de France winner get?

106th tour de france 2019   stage 21
Jean Catuffe//Getty Images

The current prize money for winning the final individual general classification (GC) is 500,000 Euros, or roughly $560,000 (USD). Second place GC is awarded 200,000 Euros, third place GC walks away with 100,000 Euros, and so on. Traditionally, winners share their prize money with their teammates. Other top prizes go to stage winners, who get 11,000 Euros, and the winners of the points classification and mountains classification, both of whom receive 25,000 Euros. Riders can also win money during intermediate sprints and certain climbs. There’s even prizes for the five best teams and the four best young riders.

Do racers make their stage data public?

Laurens tour
strava.com

Sometimes—but don’t count on all of them to spend their evenings uploading. Still, you can keep an eye on some top pros’ Strava accounts: Here are the ones associated with Egan Bernal, Taylor Phinney, Laurens ten Dam, Thibaut Pinot, and Andre Greipel.

[Cool Things We Learned from Tour de France Strava Files]

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What tire pressure do the pros run at the Tour?

Cycling: 104th Tour de France 2017 / Stage 14
LB//Getty Images

Every racer and mechanic has a specific (usually top-secret) tire pressure that he or she considers to be the best, but there are some general guidelines.

“In general, with all of those variables [like weather and riders’ personal preference], that tire pressure is 8 to 8.5 bar for the road stages, and then 9.5 to 10 bar for the time-trial stages. Around 115 psi in the front and 125 psi in the back for the road stages and 130-135 psi for time-trial stages. And we drop that by 10 or 15 for rainy days,” veteran mechanic for teams like Garmin-Sharp and EF Education First Geoff Brown told us.

They run about 10 psi lower in the front for more control as well, and with tubular tires, they tend to run slightly lower pressures. Clinchers need to be kept around 110 to 120 psi in order to avoid pinch-flatting.

​How much do Tour de France bikes weigh?

tour de france
Getty Images

In the 1900s, the bikes that Tour de France cyclists pedaled up and down mountains weighed in at a whopping 40 pounds each. In fact, Fiets, a Dutch cycling magazine, showcased a bike from the 1903 race weighing in at 39.7 pounds...with a fixed gear. Today, bikes weigh in at just under 15 pounds—but not any lower, since the UCI’s minimum bike weight is 6.8kg, which translates to 14.99 pounds.

[The Fastest Bikes at the Tour de France]

​Why aren’t there more Americans in the Tour?

tee jay van garderen
THOMAS LUI Courtesy of EF Education First

While there isn’t a definitive answer to this, Thompson believes that, in part, there are fewer Americans in the Tour because for the U.S., cycling has historically been more of a pastime than a competitive endeavor. Compared to Europe, where children are groomed for competitive racing from a young age, it’s hard for American racers to compete. Added to that, the cost of competing for an American is higher: Racers need to go where the big races are, and that almost always means moving to Europe.

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Molly Hurford

Molly writes about cycling, nutrition and training, with an emphasis on women in sport. Her new middle-grade series, Shred Girls, debuts with Rodale Kids/Random House in 2019 with "Lindsay's Joyride." Her other books include "Mud, Snow and Cyclocross," "Saddle, Sore" and "Fuel Your Ride." Her work has been published in magazines like Bicycling, Outside and Nylon. She co-hosts The Consummate Athlete Podcast.

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