Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/france

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

1934 Tour de France


FieldValue
name1934 Tour de France
imageRoute of the 1934 Tour de France.png
image_captionRoute of the 1934 Tour de France followed clockwise, starting in Paris
image_size360px
date3–29 July 1934
stages23, including one split stage
distance4470
unitkm
time147h 13' 58"
firstAntonin Magne
first_natFRA
first_coloryellow
first_teamFrance
secondGiuseppe Martano
second_natITA
second_natvar1861
second_teamItaly
thirdRoger Lapébie
third_natFRA
third_teamFrance
teamFrance
mountainsRené Vietto
mountains_natFRA
mountains_teamFrance
previous[1933](1933-tour-de-france)
next[1935](1935-tour-de-france)

The 1934 Tour de France was the 28th edition of the Tour de France, taking place from 3 to 29 July. It consisted of 23 stages over 4470 km. The race was won by Antonin Magne, who had previously won the 1931 Tour de France. The French team was dominant, holding the yellow jersey for the entire race and winning most of the stages. Every member of the French team won at least one stage.

French cyclist René Vietto rose to prominence by winning the mountains classification, but even more by giving up his own chances for the Tour victory by giving first his front wheel and later his bicycle to his team captain Magne.

The 1934 Tour de France saw the introduction of the split stage and the individual time trial. Stage 21 was split into two parts, and the second part was an individual time trial, the first one in the history of the Tour de France.

Innovations and changes

The major introduction in 1934 was the introduction of the individual time trial (ITT). There had been time-trial like stages before in the Tour de France, but they had been run as a team time trial. Since the format of the Tour de France changed in 1930 from trade teams to national teams, the Tour organisation had to pay for the housing, travel and feeding for the cyclists. The organisation received the money from the sales of l'Auto, the newspaper that organised the Tour. l'Auto was a morning newspaper, while one of its competitors, Paris-Soir, was an evening paper. Paris-Soir was also following the race, and was able to publish the results the same day, while l'Auto had to wait for the next day, publishing old news. To counter this, the stages in the Tour de France had started later, so they would end after Paris-Soir had to print their newspapers. The Paris-Soir sports editor had countered this by starting his own race, the Grand Prix des Nations, run as an ITT. The first edition in 1932 was not received well by the cyclists, but from 1933 on it was a success. The tour director Henri Desgrange saw the success of the French cyclists in the Grand Prix des Nations, and adapted the individual time trial format in the Tour. Not all cyclists were happy with the ITT. René Vietto, a climber, said it was a dull test of horsepower, while a bike race should also test the head. Other cyclists said the ITT would negate the effect of good teamwork.

The bonification system from the 1933 Tour de France was slightly reduced: now the winner of a stage received 90 seconds bonification, and the second cyclist 45 seconds. In addition to this, the winner of the stage received a bonification equal to the difference between him and the second-placed cyclists, with a maximum of two minutes. This same bonification system was applied on mountain summits that counted for the mountains classification.

In 1933, there had been 40 touriste-routiers, cyclist not competing in a national team, but in 1934 this was reduced to 20. In previous years, these touriste-routiers had to supply their own material and arrange their own hotels; in 1934, the conditions improved and touriste-routiers were given the same treatment as the riders in national teams.

Teams

Main article: List of teams and cyclists in the 1934 Tour de France

As was the custom since the 1930 Tour de France, the 1934 Tour de France was contested by national teams. Belgium, Italy, Germany and France each sent teams of 8 cyclists each, while Switzerland and Spain sent a combined team of eight cyclists. In addition, there were 20 individual cyclists; other than in 1933, they were no longer racing under the nomer "touriste-routier" but as "individuel". In total this made 60 cyclists.

Pre-race favourites

The French team of 1934 consisted of all good riders, with the core of the team being the winner of 1933, Georges Speicher, Roger Lapébie, former winner Antonin Magne and Maurice Archambaud, who had performed well in 1933. The French selectors were criticized for selecting René Vietto, a twenty-year-old rider who had only won some small races. The Italian team now included Giuseppe Martano, who had ridden as a touriste-routier in 1933. The Belgian team, which normally included some big contenders, was lackluster.

Route and stages

The highest point of elevation in the race was 2556 m at the summit tunnel of the Col du Galibier mountain pass on stage 7.

StageDateCourseDistanceTypeWinner[1](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-1)[2](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-2)[3](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-3)[4](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-4)[5](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-5)[6](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-6)[7](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-7)[8](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-8)[9](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-9)[10](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-10)[11](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-11)[12](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-12)[13](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-13)[14](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-14)[15](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-15)[16](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-16)[17](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-17)[18](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-18)[19](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-19)[20](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-20)[21a](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-21a)[21b](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-21b)[22](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-22)[23](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-23)
3 JulyParis to Lille262 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageGeorges Speicher
4 JulyLille to Charleville192 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageRené Le Grevès
5 JulyCharleville to Metz161 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageRoger Lapébie
6 JulyMetz to Belfort220 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Stage with mountain(s)Roger Lapébie
7 JulyBelfort to Evian293 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageRené Le Grevès
Georges Speicher
8 JulyEvianRest day
9 JulyEvian to Aix-les-Bains207 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Stage with mountain(s)Georges Speicher
10 JulyAix-les-Bains to Grenoble229 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Stage with mountain(s)René Vietto
11 JulyGrenoble to Gap102 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Stage with mountain(s)Giuseppe Martano
12 JulyGap to Digne227 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Stage with mountain(s)René Vietto
13 JulyDigne to Nice156 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageRené Le Grevès
14 JulyNiceRest day
15 JulyNice to Cannes126 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Stage with mountain(s)René Vietto
16 JulyCannes to Marseille195 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageRoger Lapébie
17 JulyMarseille to Montpellier172 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageGeorges Speicher
18 JulyMontpellier to Perpignan177 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageRoger Lapébie
19 JulyPerpignanRest day
20 JulyPerpignan to Ax-les-Thermes158 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageRoger Lapébie
21 JulyAx-les-Thermes to Luchon165 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Stage with mountain(s)Adriano Vignoli
22 JulyLuchon to Tarbes91 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Stage with mountain(s)Antonin Magne
23 JulyTarbes to Pau172 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Stage with mountain(s)René Vietto
24 JulyPauRest day
25 JulyPau to Bordeaux215 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageEttore Meini
26 JulyBordeaux to La Rochelle183 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageGeorges Speicher
27 JulyLa Rochelle to La Roche sur Yon81 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageRené Le Grevès
La Roche sur Yon to Nantes90 km[[File:Time Trial.svg20pxalt=link=]]Individual time trialAntonin Magne
28 JulyNantes to Caen275 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageRaymond Louviot
29 JulyCaen to Paris221 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageSylvère Maes
Total4470 km

Race overview

Main article: 1934 Tour de France, Stage 1 to Stage 12, 1934 Tour de France, Stage 13 to Stage 23

The first stage was won by 1933 winner Speicher, and again wore the yellow jersey. In the second stage, he lost his lead as there was a split, with Speicher in the second part and Magne in the leading group, and Magne took over the leading position.

In the fifth stage, Le Grevès and Speicher finished close together. After examining the photo finish, both cyclists shared the time bonus, although Le Grevès was named winner.

After stage six, before the heavy climbing in the alps, Magne was leading with almost 8 minutes on second-placed Martano. In the alps, Vietto was the best. He won stages 7 and 9, and climbed to third place in the general classification, half an hour behind Magne. Had he not lost 40 minutes in the first two stages due to flat tires, he would have been the leader of the race. Martano had been able to reduce the margin to Magne to 125 seconds.

The stages 12 to 14, between the Alps and the Pyrenees, were won by French cyclists, without important changes in the general classification. In the fifteenth stage, Magne attacked on an early climb, but Martano did not drop. The big climb of the day was the Puymorens, and Vietto lead while Magne and Martano followed. On the way down, Magne crashed on a pothole, and broke the wooden rim of his front wheel. Martano saw his chances, and raced away. Magne asked Vietto for his bicycle, but Vietto only gave him his front wheel. Magne's frame had been bent in the crash, so when Speicher, the next French cyclist, showed up, Magne took Speicher's bicycle. Vietto had to wait several minutes to get a replacing front wheel, and lost all chances for the stage victory. A photographer was present to take a picture of Vietto, weeping with a bike without a front wheel. When this picture was published, the cycling world was touched, and newspapers proclaimed him "Le Roi René" (King René).

In the sixteenth stage, things got worse for Vietto. He was first over the first two mountains, with his team leader Magne and Martano closely following. On the descent of the Portet d'Aspet, Magne crashed again, and broke his rear wheel. Vietto was unaware of this, and continued. When he was down, a Tour course marshall informed him that his team leader had crashed. Lapébie was far ahead, and all the other French cyclists were far behind, so Magne was without support. Vietto then turned around, and rode back up the mountain. When he reached Magne, Magne took Vietto's bicycle. Magne rode down, reached Lapébie who had waited for him, and together they caught Martano. Vietto had to wait for the service car to bring him a new bicycle, and finally finished four minutes behind Magne, Martano and Lapébie. Vietto was not happy with what had happened, and he said that Magne did not know how to ride, and that Lapébie should not have been so far ahead. Magne on the other hand was grateful for what Vietto and Lapébie did.

In the seventeenth stage, Magne was able to get away from Martano who broke his frame, and finished 13 minutes ahead of thim while winning the stage. Magne now lead with almost 20 minutes. In the eighteenth stage, Magne lost four minutes to Martano. It could have been more, had not Vietto and Lapébie collected the time bonuses on the mountains and the finish.

In the next flat stages, nothing really changed the general classification except the individual time trial in stage 21. Magne won there, increasing the margin to Martano by 8 minutes. Vietto had won back enough time to end in fifth place in the general classification, and won the mountains classification. Magne had ridden consistently in the entire Tour, and had benefitted from his team support. He won his second Tour de France, the fifth in a row for France.

Classification leadership and minor prizes

The time that each cyclist required to finish each stage was recorded, and these times were added together for the general classification. If a cyclist had received a time bonus, it was subtracted from this total; all time penalties were added to this total. The cyclist with the least accumulated time was the race leader, identified by the yellow jersey.

For the mountains classification, 14 mountains were selected by the Tour organisation. On the top of these mountains, ten points were given for the first cyclist to pass, nine points to the second cyclist, and so on, until the tenth cyclist who got one point.

For the fifth time, there was a team competition, this time won by the French team. The team classification was calculated in 1934 by adding up the times of the best three cyclists of a team; the team with the least time was the winner. The fifth national team that started, the Belgian team, finished with only two cyclists, so according to the rules in 1934 they were no longer eligible for the team classification.

Fourth-placed Félicien Vervaecke became the winner of the "individuals" category. This classification was calculated in the same way as the general classification, but only the cyclists riding as individuals were eligible.

StageWinnerGeneral classification
[[File:Jersey yellow.svg25pxlink=]]Mountains classificationTeam classificationClassification for individuals[1](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-1)[2](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-2)[3](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-3)[4](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-4)[5](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-5)[6](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-6)[7](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-7)[8](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-8)[9](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-9)[10](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-10)[11](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-11)[12](1934-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-12-stage-12)[13](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-13)[14](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-14)[15](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-15)[16](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-16)[17](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-17)[18](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-18)[19](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-19)[20](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-20)[21a](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-21a)[21b](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-21b)[22](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-22)[23](1934-tour-de-france-stage-13-to-stage-23-stage-23)FinalAntonin MagneRené ViettoFranceFélicien Vervaecke
Georges SpeicherGeorges Speicher*no award*FranceSylvère Maes
René Le GrevèsAntonin MagneYves Le Goff
Roger Lapébie
Roger LapébieFélicien VervaeckeFélicien Vervaecke
René Le Grevès
Georges SpeicherYves Le Goff
Georges SpeicherAmbrogio Morelli
René ViettoFederico Ezquerra
Giuseppe Martano
René Vietto
René Le Grevès
René ViettoFélicien Vervaecke
Roger Lapébie
Georges Speicher
Roger Lapébie
Roger Lapébie
Adriano VignoliRené Vietto
Antonin Magne
René Vietto
Ettore Meini
Georges Speicher
René Le Grevès
Antonin Magne
Raymond Louviot
Sylvère Maes

Final standings

General classification

RankRiderTeamTime12345678910
Antonin MagneFrance147h 13' 58"
Giuseppe MartanoItaly+ 27' 31"
Roger LapébieFrance+ 52' 15"
Félicien VervaeckeIndividual+ 57' 40"
René ViettoFrance+ 59' 02"
Ambrogio MorelliIndividual+ 1h 12' 02"
Ludwig GeyerGermany+ 1h 12' 51"
Sylvère MaesIndividual+ 1h 20' 56"
Mariano CañardoSwitzerland/Spain+ 1h 29' 02"
Vicente TruebaSwitzerland/Spain+ 1h 40' 39"
Final general classification (11–39)RankRiderTeamTime1112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839
Georges SpeicherFrance+ 1h 52' 21"
Raymond LouviotFrance+ 2h 03' 21"
Edoardo MolinarIndividual+ 2h 16' 52"
Eugenio GestriItaly+ 2h 21' 09"
Adriano VignoliItaly+ 2h 21' 58"
Giovanni CazzulaniItaly+ 2h 32' 38"
Albert BüchiSwitzerland/Spain+ 2h 35' 17"
Frans BonduelBelgium+ 2h 44' 47"
Federico EzquerraSwitzerland/Spain+ 2h 53' 03"
August ErneSwitzerland/Spain+ 2h 55' 26"
Léon LevelIndividual+ 2h 57' 51"
Kurt StoepelGermany+ 3h 01' 13"
Dante FranzilIndividual+ 3h 01' 48"
Giovanni GottiItaly+ 3h 22' 40"
René Le GrevèsFrance+ 3h 26' 26"
Theo HerckenrathIndividual+ 3h 30' 51"
Vincent SalazardIndividual+ 3h 55' 39"
Marcel RenaudIndividual+ 3h 57' 54"
Ettore MeiniIndividual+ 4h 00' 09"
Luciano MonteroSwitzerland/Spain+ 4h 03' 25"
Jean WautersIndividual+ 4h 27' 07"
Romain GijsselsBelgium+ 4h 28' 12"
Yves Le GoffIndividual+ 4h 29' 40"
Sylvain MarcaillouIndividual+ 4h 38' 57"
Jean BidotIndividual+ 4h 39' 37"
Fabien GalateauIndividual+ 5h 00' 50"
Willi KutschbachGermany+ 5h 46' 38"
Rudolf RischGermany+ 6h 37' 55"
Antonio FolcoItaly+ 7h 15' 36"

Mountains classification

StageRiderHeightMountain rangeWinner4678991111161617171818
Ballon d'Alsace1178 mVosgesFélicien Vervaecke
Aravis1498 mAlpsFélicien Vervaecke
Galibier2556 mAlpsFederico Ezquerra
Côte de Laffrey900 mAlpsVicente Trueba
Vars2110 mAlpsRené Vietto
Allos2250 mAlpsRené Vietto
Braus1002 mAlps-MaritimesRené Vietto
Castillon706 mAlps-MaritimesRené Vietto
Col de Port1249 mPyreneesRené Vietto
Portet d'Aspet1069 mPyreneesAdriano Vignoli
Peyresourde1569 mPyreneesRené Vietto
Aspin1489 mPyreneesAntonin Magne
Tourmalet2115 mPyreneesRené Vietto
Aubisque1709 mPyreneesRené Vietto
RankRiderTeamPoints12345678910
René ViettoFrance111
Vicente TruebaSwitzerland/Spain93 or 95
Giuseppe MartanoItaly78
Félicien VervaeckeIndividual76
Federico EzquerraSwitzerland/Spain75
Antonin MagneFrance69
Sylvère MaesIndividual54
Edoardo MolinarIndividual43
Ambrogio MorelliIndividual36
Mariano CañardoSwitzerland/Spain21

Team classification

RankTeamTime1234
France443h 42' 41"
Italy+ 3h 09' 51"
Switzerland/Spain+ 3h 44' 24"
Germany+ 8h 09' 55"

Aftermath

The individual time trial that was introduced in 1934 was a success, and has been used since then in almost every year.

René Vietto, who had sacrificed his Tour chances for his team leader Magne, was convinced that he could have won the Tour instead.

Notes

References

Bibliography

References

  1. (8 September 1933). "Des modifications au réglement". l'Ouest-Eclair.
  2. (6 September 1933). "Nieuwe plannen van Desgrange". Delpher.
  3. "The history of the Tour de France – Year 1934 – The starters". [[Amaury Sport Organisation]].
  4. "28ème Tour de France 1934". Mémoire du cyclisme.
  5. Arian Zwegers. "Tour de France GC top ten". CVCC.
  6. "The history of the Tour de France – Year 1934 – The stage winners". [[Amaury Sport Organisation]].
  7. Barry Boyce. (2004). "1934: "Roi" Rene's Regal Sacrifice". Cycling revealed.
  8. (19 March 2003). "1934: Antonin Magne wint dankzij de opoffering van René Vietto". tourdefrance.nl.
  9. "l'Historique du Tour - Année 1934". [[Amaury Sport Organisation]].
  10. (30 July 1934). "Il "Tour" si è concluso con una brillante tappa - Classifica degl'isolati". Biblioteca digitale.
  11. van den Akker, Pieter. "Informatie over de Tour de France van 1934".
  12. "The history of the Tour de France – Year 1934 – Stage 23 Caen > Paris". [[Amaury Sport Organisation]].
  13. Tom James. (15 August 2003). "1934: Vietto's great sacrifice". VeloArchive.
  14. (30 July 1934). "Ayer terminó la Vuelta a Francia con el previsto y magnífico del francés Antonin Magne". [[Mundo Deportivo]].
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 1934 Tour de France — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report