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1995 Tour de France

1995 Tour de France

FieldValue
name1995 Tour de France
imageRoute of the 1995 Tour de France.png
image_size360px
image_captionRoute of the 1995 Tour de France
date1–23 July 1995
stages20 + Prologue
distance3635
unitkm
time92h 44' 59"
firstMiguel Induráin
first_natESP
first_team
first_coloryellow
secondAlex Zülle
second_natSUI
second_team
thirdBjarne Riis
third_natDEN
third_team
pointsLaurent Jalabert
points_natFRA
points_team
points_colorgreen
mountainsRichard Virenque
mountains_natFRA
mountains_team
mountains_colorpolkadot
youthMarco Pantani
youth_natITA
youth_team
team
combativityHernán Buenahora
combativity_natCOL
combativity_team
previous[1994](1994-tour-de-france)
next[1996](1996-tour-de-france)

The 1995 Tour de France was the 82nd Tour de France, taking place from 1 to 23 July. It was Miguel Induráin's fifth and final victory in the Tour. On the fifteenth stage Italian rider Fabio Casartelli died after an accident on the Col de Portet d'Aspet.

The points classification was won by Laurent Jalabert, while Richard Virenque won the mountains classification. Marco Pantani won the young rider classification, and ONCE won the team classification.

Lance Armstrong's best finish in the Tour de France became his 36th-place finish in this 1995 Tour de France, after his results from 1 August 1998 onward, including his seven Tour victories, were stripped on 24 August 2012 for blood doping.

Teams

Main article: List of teams and cyclists in the 1995 Tour de France

There were 21 teams in the 1995 Tour de France, each composed of 9 cyclists. The teams were selected in two rounds. In May 1995, the first fifteen teams were announced. In June, five wildcards were announced. Shortly before the start, Le Groupement folded because their team leader Luc Leblanc was injured, and because of financial problems. Their spot went to , the first team in the reserve list. Additionally, the organisation decided to invite one extra team: a combined team of and ZG Mobili, with six riders from Telekom and three from ZG Mobili.

The teams entering the race were:

Qualified teams

Invited teams

  • /

Pre-race favourites

's Indurain, the winner of the four previous Tours, was the clear favourite for the overall victory. His main challengers were expected to be Rominger from Mapei, Berzin from Gewiss and Zülle from ONCE.

Route and stages

The 1995 Tour de France started on 1 July, and had two rest days, the first at 10 July when the cyclists were transferred from Seraing to Le Grand-Bornand, and the second on 17 July in Saint-Girons. The highest point of elevation in the race was 2115 m at the summit of the Col du Tourmalet mountain pass on stage 15.

StageDateCourseDistanceTypeWinner[P](1995-tour-de-france-prologue-to-stage-10-prologue)[1](1995-tour-de-france-prologue-to-stage-10-stage-1)[2](1995-tour-de-france-prologue-to-stage-10-stage-2)[3](1995-tour-de-france-prologue-to-stage-10-stage-3)[4](1995-tour-de-france-prologue-to-stage-10-stage-4)[5](1995-tour-de-france-prologue-to-stage-10-stage-5)[6](1995-tour-de-france-prologue-to-stage-10-stage-6)[7](1995-tour-de-france-prologue-to-stage-10-stage-7)[8](1995-tour-de-france-prologue-to-stage-10-stage-8)[9](1995-tour-de-france-prologue-to-stage-10-stage-9)[10](1995-tour-de-france-prologue-to-stage-10-stage-10)[11](1995-tour-de-france-stage-11-to-stage-20-stage-11)[12](1995-tour-de-france-stage-11-to-stage-20-stage-12)[13](1995-tour-de-france-stage-11-to-stage-20-stage-13)[14](1995-tour-de-france-stage-11-to-stage-20-stage-14)[15](1995-tour-de-france-stage-11-to-stage-20-stage-15)[16](1995-tour-de-france-stage-11-to-stage-20-stage-16)[17](1995-tour-de-france-stage-11-to-stage-20-stage-17)[18](1995-tour-de-france-stage-11-to-stage-20-stage-18)[19](1995-tour-de-france-stage-11-to-stage-20-stage-19)[20](1995-tour-de-france-stage-11-to-stage-20-stage-20)
1 JulySaint-Brieuc7.3 km[[File:Time Trial.svg20pxalt=link=]]Individual time trialJacky Durand
2 JulyDinan to Lannion233.5 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageFabio Baldato
3 JulyPerros-Guirec to Vitre235.5 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageMario Cipollini
4 JulyMayenne to Alençon67.0 km[[File:Time Trial.svgalt=link=Team time trial20px]]Team time trialITA
5 JulyAlençon to Le Havre162.0 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageMario Cipollini
6 JulyFécamp to Dunkirk261.0 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageJeroen Blijlevens
7 JulyDunkirk to Charleroi (Belgium)202.0 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageErik Zabel
8 JulyCharleroi (Belgium) to Liège (Belgium)203.0 km[[File:Mediummountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Hilly stageJohan Bruyneel
9 JulyHuy (Belgium) to Seraing (Belgium)54.0 km[[File:Time Trial.svg20pxalt=link=]]Individual time trialMiguel Induráin
10 JulyLe Grand-BornandRest day
11 JulyLe Grand-Bornand to La Plagne160.0 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Stage with mountain(s)Alex Zülle
12 JulyLa Plagne to Alpe d'Huez162.5 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Stage with mountain(s)Marco Pantani
13 JulyLe Bourg-d'Oisans to Saint-Étienne199.0 km[[File:Mediummountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Hilly stageMaximilian Sciandri
14 JulySaint-Étienne to Mende222.5 km[[File:Mediummountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Hilly stageLaurent Jalabert
15 JulyMende to Revel245.0 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageSerhiy Ushakov
16 JulySaint-Orens-de-Gameville to Guzet-Neige164.0 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Stage with mountain(s)Marco Pantani
17 JulySaint-GironsRest day
18 JulySaint-Girons to Cauterets206.0 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Stage with mountain(s)Richard Virenque
19 JulyTarbes to Pau237 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Stage with mountain(s)
20 JulyPau to Bordeaux246.0 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageErik Zabel
21 JulyMontpon-Ménestérol to Limoges166.5 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageLance Armstrong
22 JulyLac de Vassivière46.5 km[[File:Time Trial.svg20pxalt=link=]]Individual time trialMiguel Induráin
23 JulySainte-Geneviève-des-Bois to Paris (Champs-Élysées)155.0 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Plain stageDjamolidine Abdoujaparov
Total3635 km

Race overview

Main article: 1995 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 10, 1995 Tour de France, Stage 11 to Stage 20

general classification

The first riders in the prologue rode in sunny weather, but then it started to rain, and the riders who started late had to ride on slippery roads. Chris Boardman, a big favourite for the prologue and an outsider for the overall classification, crashed during his ride, was then hit by his team's car, and had to abandon due to injury. The winner of the prologue was Jacky Durand, one of the early starters.

Durand stayed in the lead until the third stage, when Laurent Jalabert overtook him due to time bonuses won in intermediate sprints. Jalabert kept the yellow jersey for two stages, losing it due to a crash in the fourth stage. Ivan Gotti, member of the Gewiss-team that had won the team time trial in stage three, became the new leader. A surprising attack from Indurain in stage seven changed the standings. Indurain attacked in the hilly Ardennes, and only Johan Bruyneel was able to follow him. Indurain did all the work, creating a margin of almost one minute, and Bruyneel only followed him, but beat Indurain in the sprint, winning the stage and becoming the new leader. Indurain was now in second place in the general classification, and after winning the time trial in the eighth stage, he became the new leader. His closest rival in the overall classification was Bjarne Riis at 23 seconds, the others were more than two minutes behind.

The Tour then reached the high mountains in stage nine. Zülle escaped, and created a margin of several minutes. Indurain calmly chased him until the final climb, where he sped away from the others. Zülle won the stage and jumped to the second place in the overall classification, but Indurain won minutes on all other cyclists. The tenth stage was again in the high mountains. Pantani, already irrelevant for the overall classification, won the stage; behind him Indurain, Zülle and Riis finished together. Pantani set a new record for the final 13.8 kilometers up to Alpe d'Huez in 36 Minutes and 50 seconds, which remains the record to this day.

Stage twelve was not expected to be relevant for the general classification. But when Laurent Jalabert attacked early in the stage, this changed. Jalabert was a teammate of second-placed Zülle, and he was sixth in the general classification, more than nine minutes behind Indurain. Jalabert was joined by three other cyclists, of which two teammates. One of them, Melcior Mauri, was in eighth place, and was himself also a threat. The teammates worked together well, and when they were more than ten minutes ahead, Jalabert was the virtual leader. At that moment, Indurain's Banesto team and Riis' Gewiss team started to work together to close the gap. They reduced it to almost six minutes, which meant that Jalabert jumped to third place in the general classification. ONCE now had three cyclists in the top five: Zülle in second place, Jalabert in fourth place and Mauri in fifth place.

In stage thirteen Serhiy Utchakov and Lance Armstrong broke clear and were alone heading for the finish where Utchakov won the sprint. Armstrong was asked why he wasn't living up to expectations as far as competing with Indurain to which he replied that Indurain didn't finish his first two Tours and finished in the bottom half of several others before blossoming in to who he is. "They expect you to be with Miguel Induráin all the time and that's just... You just can't do that in a race like this. This is a man's race and it's hard for kid to compete."

The Pyrenées were reached in stage fourteen. Pantani again showed his strengths in the mountains, winning the stage. The other favourites stayed more or less together, so there were no big changes in the general classification.

In the fifteenth stage, Richard Virenque escaped early in the stage, reaching all six tops in the stage first, and won the stage. Behind him, several cyclists crashed on the descent of the Portet d'Aspet, including Fabio Casartelli. Casartelli's head hit a concrete barrier at high speed without wearing a helmet, and he was declared dead in the hospital.

Out of respect for Casartelli, the sixteenth stage was raced non-competitively. Casartelli's teammates from Motorola were allowed to cross the finish line first. The eighteenth stage was won by Lance Armstrong, a teammate of Casartelli. Armstrong dedicated this stage victory to Casartelli. Indurain was still leading firmly, and extended his lead by winning the last time trial.

Classification leadership and minor prizes

There were several classifications in the 1995 Tour de France. The most important was the general classification, calculated by adding each cyclist's finishing times on each stage. The cyclist with the least accumulated time was the race leader, identified by the yellow jersey; the winner of this classification is considered the winner of the Tour.

Additionally, there was a points classification, which awarded a green jersey. In the points classification, cyclists got points for finishing among the best in a stage finish, or in intermediate sprints. The cyclist with the most points lead the classification, and was identified with a green jersey.

There was also a mountains classification. The organisation had categorised some climbs as either hors catégorie, first, second, third, or fourth-category; points for this classification were won by the first cyclists that reached the top of these climbs first, with more points available for the higher-categorised climbs. The cyclist with the most points lead the classification, and wore a white jersey with red polka dots.

The fourth individual classification was the young rider classification, which was not marked by a jersey. This was decided the same way as the general classification, but only riders under 26 years were eligible.

For the team classification, the times of the best three cyclists per team on each stage were added; the leading team was the team with the lowest total time.

In addition, there was a combativity award given after each mass-start stage to the cyclist considered most combative. The decision was made by a jury composed of journalists who gave points. The cyclist with the most points from votes in all stages led the combativity classification. Hernán Buenahora won this classification, and was given overall the super-combativity award. The Souvenir Henri Desgrange was given in honour of Tour founder Henri Desgrange to the first rider to pass the summit of the Col du Tourmalet on stage 15. This prize was won by Richard Virenque.

StageWinnerGeneral classification
[[File:Jersey yellow.svg25pxlink=General classification in the Tour de Francealt=A yellow jersey.]]Points classification
[[File:Jersey green.svg25pxlink=Points classification in the Tour de Francealt=A green jersey]]Mountains classification
[[File:Jersey polkadot.svg25pxlink=Mountains classification in the Tour de Francealt=A white jersey with red polka dots.]]Young rider classificationTeam classificationCombativityAwardClassification[P](1995-tour-de-france-prologue-to-stage-10-prologue)[1](1995-tour-de-france-prologue-to-stage-10-stage-1)[2](1995-tour-de-france-prologue-to-stage-10-stage-2)[3](1995-tour-de-france-prologue-to-stage-10-stage-3)[4](1995-tour-de-france-prologue-to-stage-10-stage-4)[5](1995-tour-de-france-prologue-to-stage-10-stage-5)[6](1995-tour-de-france-prologue-to-stage-10-stage-6)[7](1995-tour-de-france-prologue-to-stage-10-stage-7)[8](1995-tour-de-france-prologue-to-stage-10-stage-8)[9](1995-tour-de-france-prologue-to-stage-10-stage-9)[10](1995-tour-de-france-prologue-to-stage-10-stage-10)[11](1995-tour-de-france-stage-11-to-stage-20-stage-11)[12](1995-tour-de-france-stage-11-to-stage-20-stage-12)[13](1995-tour-de-france-stage-11-to-stage-20-stage-13)[14](1995-tour-de-france-stage-11-to-stage-20-stage-14)[15](1995-tour-de-france-stage-11-to-stage-20-stage-15)[16](1995-tour-de-france-stage-11-to-stage-20-stage-16)[17](1995-tour-de-france-stage-11-to-stage-20-stage-17)[18](1995-tour-de-france-stage-11-to-stage-20-stage-18)[19](1995-tour-de-france-stage-11-to-stage-20-stage-19)[20](1995-tour-de-france-stage-11-to-stage-20-stage-20)FinalMiguel InduráinLaurent JalabertMarco PantaniHernán Buenahora
Jacky DurandJacky DurandJacky DurandArsenio GonzalezGabriele Colombo*no award*
Fabio BaldatoFabio BaldatoFrançois SimonErik DekkerErik Dekker
Mario CipolliniLaurent JalabertDjamolidine AbdoujaparovDirk BaldingerEric Vanderaerden
Gabriele Colombo*no award*
Mario CipolliniIvan GottiMario CipolliniEvgeni BerzinFrancisco Cabello
Jeroen BlijlevensDimitri KonyshevRolf JärmannRolf Järmann
Erik ZabelBjarne RiisDjamolidine AbdoujaparovHerman Frison
Johan BruyneelJohan BruyneelLaurent JalabertRichard VirenqueMiguel InduráinMiguel Induráin
Miguel InduráinMiguel Induráin*no award*
Alex ZülleMarco PantaniAlex ZülleAlex Zülle
Marco PantaniLaurent Brochard
Max SciandriHernán Buenahora
Laurent JalabertLaurent JalabertLaurent Jalabert
Serguei OutschakovSerguei Outschakov
Marco PantaniMarco Pantani
Richard VirenqueRichard VirenqueHernán Buenahora
*no award*
Erik ZabelThierry Marie
Lance ArmstrongLance Armstrong
Miguel Induráin*no award*
Djamolidine AbdoujaparovSerhiy Utchakov
  • In stage 1, Thierry Laurent wore the green jersey.
  • Stage 16 was annulled after Fabio Casartelli died during stage 15. The peloton rode the stage slowly and allowed Casartelli's teammates, riding side-by-side, to cross the finish line first.

Final standings

Legend
[[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxlink=General classification in the Tour de Francealt=A yellow jersey.]]
[[File:Jersey polkadot.svg20pxlink=Mountains classification in the Tour de Francealt=A white jersey with red polka dots.]]

General classification

RankRiderTeamTime12345678910
Miguel Induráin [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxlink=General classification in the Tour de Francealt=A yellow jersey.]]92h 44' 59"
Alex Zülle+ 4' 35"
Bjarne Riis+ 6' 47"
Laurent Jalabert [[File:Jersey green.svg20pxlink=Points classification in the Tour de Francealt=A green jersey.]]+ 8' 24"
Ivan Gotti+ 11' 33"
Melcior Mauri+ 15' 20"
Fernando Escartín+ 15' 49"
Tony Rominger+ 16' 46"
Richard Virenque [[File:Jersey polkadot.svg20pxlink=Mountains classification in the Tour de Francealt=A white jersey with red polka dots.]]+ 17' 31"
Hernán Buenahora+ 18' 50"
Final general classification (11–115)RankRiderTeamTime1112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115
Claudio Chiappucci+ 18' 55"
Laurent Madouas+ 20' 37"
Marco Pantani+ 26' 20"
Paolo Lanfranchi+ 29' 41"
Bruno Cenghialta+ 29' 55"
Alvaro Mejia+ 33' 40"
Bo Hamburger+ 34' 49"
Viatcheslav Ekimov+ 39' 51"
Laurent Dufaux+ 45' 55"
Erik Breukink+ 47' 27"
Vicente Aparicio+ 52' 54"
Jean-Cyril Robin+ 56' 01"
Arsenio Gonzalez+ 56' 18"
Federico Muñoz+ 1h 01' 03"
Vladimir Poulnikov/+ 1h 01' 31"
Massimo Podenzana+ 1h 01' 54"
Laudelino Cubino+ 1h 02' 27"
Laurent Brochard+ 1h 02' 45"
Beat Zberg+ 1h 07' 08"
Yvon Ledanois+ 1h 14' 04"
Johan Bruyneel+ 1h 18' 14"
Oscar Pelliccioli+ 1h 20' 13"
Alberto Elli+ 1h 21' 34"
Jean-François Bernard+ 1h 23' 11"
Herminio Diaz+ 1h 23' 27"
Lance Armstrong+ 1h 28' 06"
Georg Totschnig+ 1h 30' 47"
Udo Bölts/+ 1h 31' 16"
Andrea Tafi+ 1h 36' 49"
Ramon González+ 1h 38' 04"
Gérard Rué+ 1h 38' 11"
Enrico Zaina+ 1h 38' 28"
Massimiliano Lelli+ 1h 39' 43"
Andrea Peron+ 1h 42' 18"
Eddy Bouwmans+ 1h 44' 09"
Zenon Jaskuła+ 1h 53' 46"
Maximilian Sciandri+ 1h 55' 10"
Franco Vona+ 1h 55' 35"
Jesper Skibby+ 1h 55' 43"
Leonardo Sierra+ 1h 56' 17"
Gabriele Colombo+ 1h 57' 14"
Maarten den Bakker+ 1h 58' 25"
Gianni Bugno+ 1h 58' 47"
Andrea Ferrigato/+ 2h 04' 51"
Didier Rous+ 2h 07' 39"
Djamolidine Abdoujaparov+ 2h 08' 55"
Carmelo Miranda+ 2h 08' 57"
Rolf Aldag/+ 2h 13' 41"
François Simon+ 2h 15' 16"
Neil Stephens+ 2h 16' 01"
Miguel Arroyo+ 2h 19' 06"
Armand de Las Cuevas+ 2h 19' 23"
Gilles Bouvard+ 2h 24' 18"
Stephen Hodge+ 2h 28' 17"
Alberto Volpi+ 2h 28' 43"
Jens Heppner/+ 2h 30' 47"
Rolf Järmann+ 2h 32' 14"
Fabian Jeker+ 2h 38' 21"
José Ramon Uriarte+ 2h 38' 22"
Erik Dekker+ 2h 38' 28"
Andrei Tchmil+ 2h 39' 02"
Massimo Donati+ 2h 40' 04"
Johan Museeuw+ 2h 41' 54"
Serhiy Utchakov+ 2h 42' 07"
Artūras Kasputis+ 2h 45' 50"
Jim Van De Laer+ 2h 45' 52"
Francesco Frattini+ 2h 46' 11"
Marino Alonso+ 2h 47' 25"
Dario Bottaro+ 2h 47' 26"
Thomas Davy+ 2h 49' 17"
Davide Perona+ 2h 51' 34"
Frankie Andreu+ 2h 52' 15"
Alessio Galletti+ 2h 52' 22"
Marcello Siboni+ 2h 53' 16"
Marco Milesi+ 2h 54' 10"
Flavio Vanzella+ 2h 54' 10"
Giancarlo Perini+ 2h 54' 18"
Wilfried Peeters+ 2h 54' 38"
Guido Bontempi+ 2h 55' 28"
Erik Zabel/+ 2h 56' 48"
Arvis Piziks+ 2h 57' 55"
François Lemarchand+ 2h 58' 26"
José Angel Vidal+ 2h 58' 38"
Thierry Marie+ 2h 58' 54"
Aitor Garmendia+ 2h 59' 43"
Alexander Gontchenkov+ 3h 00' 25"
Frans Maassen+ 3h 01' 43"
Mario Scirea+ 3h 01' 55"
Mauro Bettin+ 3h 04' 00"
Nicola Loda+ 3h 04' 45"
Steve Bauer+ 3h 05' 33"
Rossano Brasi+ 3h 06' 23"
Giovanni Lombardi+ 3h 06' 40"
Gilles Talmant+ 3h 07' 19"
Peter Farazijn+ 3h 09' 32"
Stefano Colagè/+ 3h 10' 04"
Gian Matteo Fagnini+ 3h 12' 11"
Giovanni Fidanza+ 3h 12' 20"
Stephen Swart+ 3h 14' 15"
Gianluca Gorini+ 3h 14' 20"
Marco Serpellini+ 3h 16' 05"
Davide Cassani+ 3h 16' 51"
Bart Voskamp+ 3h 17' 41"
Eros Poli+ 3h 21' 26"
Bruno Cornillet+ 3h 36' 26"

Points classification

RankRiderTeamPoints12345678910
Laurent Jalabert [[File:Jersey green.svg20pxlink=Points classification in the Tour de Francealt=A green jersey.]]333
Djamolidine Abdoujaparov271
Miguel Induráin [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxlink=General classification in the Tour de Francealt=A yellow jersey.]]180
Bjarne Riis175
Erik Zabel/168
Giovanni Lombardi144
Bo Hamburger103
Maximilian Sciandri102
Andrea Ferrigato/97
Andrei Tchmil95

Mountains classification

RankRiderTeamPoints12345678910
Richard Virenque [[File:Jersey polkadot.svg20pxlink=Mountains classification in the Tour de Francealt=A white jersey with red polka dots.]]438
Claudio Chiappucci214
Alex Zülle205
Miguel Induráin [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxlink=General classification in the Tour de Francealt=A yellow jersey.]]198
Hernán Buenahora177
Marco Pantani142
Laurent Dufaux132
Fernando Escartín121
Laurent Brochard104
Federico Muñoz101

Young rider classification

RankRiderTeamTime12345678910
Marco Pantani93h 11' 19"
Bo Hamburger+ 8' 29"
Beat Zberg+ 40' 48"
Lance Armstrong+ 1h 01' 46"
Georg Totschnig+ 1h 03' 27"
Andrea Peron+ 1h 15' 58"
Gabriele Colombo+ 1h 30' 54"
Didier Rous+ 1h 41' 19"
Erik Dekker+ 2h 12' 08"
Marco Milesi+ 2h 27' 50"

Team classification

RankTeamTime12345678910
278h 29' 35"
+ 13' 23"
+ 55' 53"
+ 1h 17' 05"
+ 1h 23' 31"
+ 1h 54' 11"
+ 2h 01' 09"
+ 3h 03' 39"
+ 3h 17' 31"
+ 3h 28' 02"

Combativity classification

RankRiderTeamPoints123
Hernán Buenahora36
Richard Virenque [[File:Jersey polkadot.svg20pxlink=Mountains classification in the Tour de Francealt=A white jersey with red polka dots.]]30
Laurent Jalabert [[File:Jersey green.svg20pxlink=Points classification in the Tour de Francealt=A green jersey.]]30

Notes

References

Bibliography

References

  1. Walsh, David. (22 October 2012). "Covering Lance Armstrong was a wild ride, but the truth came out".
  2. (24 August 2012). "Lance Armstrong Receives Lifetime Ban And Disqualification Of Competitive Results For Doping Violations Stemming From His Involvement In The United States Postal Service Pro-Cycling Team Doping Conspiracy – U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA)".
  3. "The history of the Tour de France – Year 1999 – The starters". [[Amaury Sport Organisation]].
  4. (19 May 1995). "Deelname TVM aan Tour is nog onzeker". De krant van toen.
  5. (13 June 1995). "Ploeg TVM naar Tour de France". De krant van toen.
  6. (29 June 1995). "21 equipos, 189 hombres". [[Mundo Deportivo]].
  7. (17 June 1995). "Tourdirectie komt ZG en Telekom tegemoet". [[Volkskrant]].
  8. (1995). "Startlist for the 1995 Tour de France". Cyclingnews.
  9. (1 July 1995). "Bergetappes". [[de Volkskrant]].
  10. "82ème Tour de France 1995". Mémoire du cyclisme.
  11. "The history of the Tour de France – Year 1995 – The stage winners". [[Amaury Sport Organisation]].
  12. [https://www.chronoswatts.com/watts/19/ ChronosWatts Alpe d'Huez]
  13. "82ème Tour de France 1995". Mémoire du cyclisme.
  14. "Tour de France 1995 – Leaders overview".
  15. van den Akker, Pieter. "Informatie over de Tour de France van 1995".
  16. "Tour de France 1995 – Le Classement général". [[Amaury Sport Organisation]].
  17. Culot, Jacques. (24 July 1995). "Le rouleur au lac et le sprinter auxh Champs (19e et 20e étapes)". Le Soir.
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