Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/france

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

1949 Tour de France


FieldValue
name1949 Tour de France
imageRoute of the 1949 Tour de France.png
image_captionRoute of the 1949 Tour de France followed counterclockwise, starting and finishing in Paris
image_size360px
date30 June – 24 July 1949
stages21
distance4808
unitkm
time149h 40' 49"
firstFausto Coppi
first_natITA
first_coloryellow
first_teamItaly
secondGino Bartali
second_natITA
second_teamItaly
thirdJacques Marinelli
third_natFRA
third_teamÎle-de-France
teamItaly
mountainsFausto Coppi
mountains_natITA
mountains_teamItaly
previous[1948](1948-tour-de-france)
next[1950](1950-tour-de-france)

The 1949 Tour de France was the 36th edition of the Tour de France, taking place from 30 June to 24 July. It consisted of 21 stages over 4808 km.

The Italian team had internal problems, because Gino Bartali and Fausto Coppi could both be the team leader. During the selection procedure, Coppi almost refused to start the race, but he was convinced to start. During the race, Coppi almost pulled out, because he felt he did not have full support from the team captain. In the Alps, Coppi recovered. The race was won by Coppi, with second place taken by teammate Bartali, the winner of the previous year. Coppi also won the mountains classification, while his Italian team won the team classification.

Innovations and changes

The 1949 Tour de France marked the first time that the Tour de France had a stage finish in Spain, when it stopped in San Sebastian in the ninth stage. While the mountains had been categorised into two categories in 1948, in 1949 the third category was added.

Teams

Main article: List of teams and cyclists in the 1949 Tour de France

As was the custom since the 1930 Tour de France, the 1949 Tour de France was contested by national and regional teams. The three major cycling countries in 1949, Italy, Belgium and France, each sent a team of 12 cyclists. Other countries sent teams of 6 cyclists: Switzerland, Luxembourg, Netherlands and Spain. Italy and Belgium also sent two extra teams of young riders of 6 cyclists each. The French regional cyclists were divided into four teams of 12 cyclists: Île-de-France, West/North, Centre/South-West and South-East. Altogether this made 120 cyclists. There were 57 French cyclists, 22 Italian, 18 Belgian, 6 Dutch, 6 Luxembourg, 6 Spanish, 6 Swiss and 1 Polish cyclist.

The teams entering the race were:

  • Italy
  • Belgium
  • France
  • Switzerland
  • Luxembourg
  • Netherlands
  • Spain
  • Italy Cadets
  • Belgium Aiglons
  • Île-de-France
  • West/North
  • Centre/South-West
  • South-East

Pre-race favourites

In the previous year, Fausto Coppi refused to enter the Tour de France because of personal problems with his teammate Gino Bartali. Bartali had won the previous Tour, and was trying to equal Philippe Thys by winning the Tour three times. Coppi had won the 1949 Giro d'Italia, and wanted to be the first one to achieve the Tour-Giro double in one year. The Italian team manager Alfredo Binda convinced them two weeks before the start of the race to join forces, so both Italians were in the race.

Route and stages

The 1949 Tour de France started on 30 June, and had four rest days, in Les Sables-d'Olonne, Pau, Cannes and Aosta. The highest point of elevation in the race was 2770 m at the summit of the Col de l'Iseran mountain pass on stage 17.

StageDateCourseDistanceTypeWinner[1](1949-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-1)[2](1949-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-2)[3](1949-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-3)[4](1949-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-4)[5](1949-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-5)[6](1949-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-6)[7](1949-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-7)[8](1949-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-8)[9](1949-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-9)[10](1949-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-10)[11](1949-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-11)[12](1949-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-12)[13](1949-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-13)[14](1949-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-14)[15](1949-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-15)[16](1949-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-16)[17](1949-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-17)[18](1949-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-18)[19](1949-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-19)[20](1949-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-20)[21](1949-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-21)
30 JuneParis to Reims182 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageMarcel Dussault
1 JulyReims to Brussels (Belgium)273 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageRoger Lambrecht
2 JulyBrussels (Belgium) to Boulogne-sur-Mer211 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageNorbert Callens
3 JulyBoulogne-sur-Mer to Rouen185 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageLucien Teisseire
4 JulyRouen to Saint-Malo293 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageFerdinand Kübler
5 JulySaint-Malo to Les Sables-d'Olonne305 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageAdolphe Deledda
6 JulyLes Sables-d'OlonneRest day
7 JulyLes Sables-d'Olonne to La Rochelle92 km[[File:Time Trial.svg20pxalt=link=]]Individual time trialFausto Coppi
8 JulyLa Rochelle to Bordeaux262 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageGuy Lapébie
9 JulyBordeaux to San Sebastián (Spain)228 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageLouis Caput
10 JulySan Sebastián (Spain) to Pau192 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageFiorenzo Magni
11 JulyPauRest day
12 JulyPau to Luchon193 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Stage with mountain(s)Jean Robic
13 JulyLuchon to Toulouse134 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageRik Van Steenbergen
14 JulyToulouse to Nîmes289 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageEmile Idée
15 JulyNîmes to Marseille199 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageJean Goldschmidt
16 JulyMarseille to Cannes215 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageDésiré Keteleer
17 JulyCannesRest day
18 JulyCannes to Briançon275 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Stage with mountain(s)Gino Bartali
19 JulyBriançon to Aosta257 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Stage with mountain(s)Fausto Coppi
20 JulyAostaRest day
21 JulyAosta to Lausanne265 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Stage with mountain(s)Vincenzo Rossello
22 JulyLausanne to Colmar283 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Stage with mountain(s)Raphaël Géminiani
23 JulyColmar to Nancy137 km[[File:Mountain Time Trial Stage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Mountain time trialFausto Coppi
24 JulyNancy to Paris340 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageRik Van Steenbergen
Total4808 km

Race overview

In the early stages, Bartali and Coppi both lost time. Before the fifth stage, Coppi and Bartali both were not in the top fifteen of the general classification.

In that fifth stage, Coppi escaped together with the leader of the general classification, Jacques Marinelli. When they were leading by 6 minutes, Coppi and Marinelli fell in Mouen. Marinelli was not hurt and could continue, but Coppi's bike was broken. The Italian team car offered him a new one, but Coppi refused because he wanted his personal spare bike, and threatened to quit the race.

When Bartali reached Coppi, he saw the problem, and waited. Even later, the Italian team captain Binda arrived with Coppi's spare bike, and Bartali and Coppi started to ride. Coppi started to slow down, complaining he was hungry and exhausted. Bartali decided he could not wait anymore, and rode away from Coppi. Coppi came in 18 minutes late that stage. Later that night, it became clear that Coppi had been angry because the team leader had not been following him, even though he was in the leading group. Coppi did not want to race in a team where Bartali and not he was the leader. Binda tried to convince Coppi that he had been delayed, and he succeeded in keeping Coppi in the race. Also in that fifth stage, the Spanish team left the race, after constant insults from Spanish exiles who were against Francoist Spain.

In the Alps, Coppi recovered. In the sixteenth stage, Coppi escaped, and only Bartali followed him. It was Bartali's 35th birthday, and Coppi gave Bartali the stage victory. After that stage, Bartali was first in the general classification, with Coppi in second place, 82 seconds behind. In stage 17, Bartali and Coppi again were leading together. Around 40 km into the stage, Bartali punctured. Coppi waited for Bartali, but when Bartali later fell and twisted his ankle, team leader Binda allowed Coppi to take off alone. Coppi did so, won the stage, and decided the race.

That seventeenth stage finished in the Italian town Aosta. Many Italians had come to see the Tour de France, to cheer on their Italian heroes Coppi and Bartali but also to express their anger against the French cyclists, specifically Jean Robic, who had said in an interview that he could beat those Italians easily. Insults were shouted against non-Italians in the Tour, and some windows of French cars were smashed. For safety, and because there were not enough telephone connections for the journalists, most Tour officials and journalists decided to spend the night in Switzerland.

When the Tour returned to France in the nineteenth stage to Colmar, some French spectators took revenge by throwing tomatoes and rocks towards the Italian cyclists and followers. The organisation apologised for this behavior, and the Italian cyclists accepted this apology.

In the rest of the race, Coppi's lead was not endangered; Coppi won the mountain time trial in stage 20, and won the Tour with a margin of more than ten minutes over Bartali.

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. Of the 120 cyclists, 55 finished the race.

Points for the mountains classification were earned by reaching the mountain tops first. There were two types of mountain tops: the hardest ones, in category 1, gave 10 points to the first cyclist, the easier ones, in category 2, gave 5 points to the first cyclist, and the easiest ones, in category 3, gave 3 points.

The team classification was calculated by adding the times in the general classification of the best three cyclists per team. The Italy Cadets and Switzerland finished with two cyclists each, so they were not eligible for this classification.

The Souvenir Henri Desgrange was given in honour of Tour founder Henri Desgrange to the first rider to pass a point by his final residence, the "Villa Mia" in Beauvallon, Grimaud, on the French Riviera on stage 15. This prize was won by Paul Giguet. The special award for the best regional rider was won by third-placed Jacques Marinelli.

StageWinnerGeneral classification
[[File:Jersey yellow.svg25pxalt=link=]]Mountains classificationTeam classification123456789101112131415161718192021FinalFausto CoppiFausto CoppiItaly
Marcel DussaultMarcel Dussault*no award*Belgium
Roger LambrechtRoger Lambrecht
Norbert CallensNorbert Callens
Lucien TeisseireJacques MarinelliFrance
Ferdinand KüblerÎle-de-France
Adolphe Deledda
Fausto Coppi
Guy Lapébie
Louis Caput
Fiorenzo MagniFiorenzo Magni
Jean RobicFausto CoppiItaly
Rik Van Steenbergen
Emile Idée
Jean Goldschmidt
Désiré KeteleerÎle-de-France
Gino BartaliGino BartaliItaly
Fausto CoppiFausto Coppi
Vincenzo Rossello
Raphaël Géminiani
Fausto Coppi
Rik Van Steenbergen

Final standings

General classification

RankRiderTeamTime12345678910
Fausto CoppiItaly149h 40' 49"
Gino BartaliItaly+ 10' 55"
Jacques MarinelliÎle-de-France+ 25' 13"
Jean RobicWest/North+ 34' 28"
Marcel DupontBelgium Aiglons+ 38' 59"
Fiorenzo MagniItaly Cadets+ 42' 10"
Stan OckersBelgium+ 44' 35"
Jean GoldschmitLuxembourg+ 47' 24"
Apo LazaridèsFrance+ 52' 28"
Pierre CoganWest/North+ 1h 08' 55"
Final general classification (11–55)RankRiderTeamTime111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334353637383940414243444546474849505152535455
Roger LambrechtBelgium+ 1h 17' 21"
Gino SciardisItaly+ 1h 22' 01"
Jean KirchenLuxembourg+ 1h 28' 14"
Lucien TeisseireFrance+ 1h 34' 56"
Bim DiederichLuxembourg+ 1h 35' 54"
Robert ChapatteFrance+ 1h 38' 40"
Serafino BiagioniItaly+ 1h 38' 47"
Nello LaurediSouth-East+ 1h 43' 22"
Georges AeschlimannSwitzerland+ 1h 47' 52"
Giuseppe TaccaÎle-de-France+ 1h 48' 01"
Marcel De MulderBelgium Aiglons+ 1h 49' 16"
Jean-Marie GoasmatWest/North+ 2h 00' 14"
André BruléÎle-de-France+ 2h 01' 18"
Bruno PasquiniItaly+ 2h 08' 44"
Raphaël GéminianiFrance+ 2h 10' 09"
Pierre BrambillaSouth-East+ 2h 22' 33"
Jacques GeusBelgium Aiglons+ 2h 26' 06"
René ViettoFrance+ 2h 30' 11"
Rik Van SteenbergenBelgium+ 2h 31' 13"
Louis DeprezFrance+ 2h 32' 56"
Roger LévêqueCentre/South-West+ 2h 33' 29"
Lucien LazaridèsFrance+ 2h 48' 35"
Brik SchotteBelgium+ 2h 50' 29"
Désiré KeteleerBelgium+ 3h 01' 40"
Georges MartinSouth-East+ 3h 16' 26"
Vincenzo RosselloItaly+ 3h 17' 43"
Florent MathieuBelgium+ 3h 21' 41"
Tino AusendaItaly Cadets+ 3h 30' 32"
Paul PineauCentre/South-West+ 3h 31' 19"
Gottfried WeilenmannSwitzerland+ 3h 40' 13"
Mario RicciItaly+ 3h 40' 51"
Albert DolhatsCentre/South-West+ 3h 43' 38"
Marcel HendrickxBelgium Aiglons+ 3h 44' 03"
Édouard MullerÎle-de-France+ 3h 50' 18"
Antonin RollandSouth-East+ 3h 50' 46"
Georges RamouluxCentre/South-West+ 3h 56' 13"
Paul GiguetSouth-East+ 4h 21' 26"
Jean BlancCentre/South-West+ 4h 39' 51"
André MahéWest/North+ 4h 48' 40"
Luciano PezziItaly+ 4h 53' 35"
Ettore MilanoItaly+ 5h 03' 51"
Giovanni CorrieriItaly+ 5h 11' 57"
Angelo BrignoleItaly+ 5h 38' 28"
Custodio Dos ReisCentre/South-West+ 5h 50' 09"
Guido De SantiItaly+ 6h 06' 51"

Mountains classification

RankRiderTeamPoints12345679
Fausto CoppiItaly81
Gino BartaliItaly68
Jean RobicWest/North64
Apo LazaridèsFrance48
Lucien LazaridèsFrance29
Stan OckersBelgium22
Giuseppe TaccaÎle-de-France16
Jacques MarinelliÎle-de-France
Raphaël GéminianiFrance14
André BruléÎle-de-France

Team classification

RankTeamTime123456789
Italy450h 35' 23"
West/North+ 2h 10' 21"
Luxembourg+ 2h 18' 16"
France+ 2h 33' 08"
Île-de-France+ 2h 41' 36"
Belgium+ 3h 00' 13"
Belgium Aiglons+ 3h 21' 25"
South-East+ 5h 49' 25"
Centre/South-West+ 8h 15' 30"

Aftermath

As Coppi had also won the 1949 Giro d'Italia, he became the first person to achieve the Giro-Tour double.

After the unrest in Aosta and Colmar, there were doubts if the Italian cyclists would return in 1950, and if that Tour should pass through Italy again. At the start of the 1950 Tour de France, the Italian team was present and the Tour was scheduled to go through Italy, but after further incidents the Italian team left the race, and the stage through Italy was rerouted.

Coppi would go on to repeat the Giro-Tour double in 1952.

Notes

References

Bibliography

References

  1. "The history of the Tour de France – Year 1939 – The starters". [[Amaury Sport Organisation]].
  2. (30 June 1949). "Bartali-Coppi onweerwolk boven Tour de France". [[de Volkskrant]].
  3. "36ème Tour de France 1949". Mémoire du cyclisme.
  4. Zwegers, Arian. "Tour de France GC top ten". CVCC.
  5. "The history of the Tour de France – Year 1939 – The stage winners". [[Amaury Sport Organisation]].
  6. Fotheringham, Alasdair. "Bernardo Ruiz: The Vuelta's accidental pioneer". Rouleur magazine.
  7. Wilcockson, John. (1 September 2023). "Meet Bernardo Ruiz: The Vuelta a España’s longest living champion". Outside Interactive, Inc..
  8. "Rider biographies - Fausto Coppi". Cycling hall of fame.
  9. (2009). "The Tour - Year 1949". [[Amaury Sport Organisation]].
  10. (21 July 1949). "De ronde van Frankrijk: wanorderlijke taferelen". Delpher.
  11. (23 July 1949). "De Fransen: oog om oog, tand om tand". [[De Gooi- en Eemlander]].
  12. (18 July 1949). "Apo Lazaridès verovert 12 minuten op Bartali en Coppi". [[De Volkskrant]].
  13. van den Akker, Pieter. "Informatie over de Tour de France van 1949".
  14. "The history of the Tour de France – Year 1949 – Stage 21 Nancy > Paris". [[Amaury Sport Organisation]].
  15. (25 July 1949). "Coppi è il drappo svettante di una baniera impugnata da Bartali". [[Corriere dello Sport]].
  16. James, Tom. (14 August 2003). "1949: Coppi's double". Veloarchive.
  17. (25 July 1947). "Terminó la Vuelta a Francia". [[Mundo Deportivo]].
  18. (23 July 1949). "Geminiani en Goasmat brachten vuur in etappe naar Colmar". [[De Gooi- en Eemlander]].
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 1949 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