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2009 Tour de France


FieldValue
name2009 Tour de France
series[2009 UCI World Ranking](2009-uci-world-ranking)
race_no17
season_no24
imageRoute of the 2009 Tour de France.png
image_size360px
image_captionRoute of the 2009 Tour de France
date4–26 July 2009
stages21
distance3459.5
unitkm
time85h 48' 35"
firstAlberto Contador
first_natESP
first_team
first_coloryellow
secondAndy Schleck
second_natLUX
second_team
thirdLance Armstrong Bradley Wiggins
third_natGBR
third_team
pointsThor Hushovd
points_natNOR
points_team
points_colorgreen
mountainsFranco Pellizotti Egoi Martínez
mountains_natESP
mountains_team
mountains_colorpolkadot
youthAndy Schleck
youth_natLUX
youth_team
youth_colorwhite
team
combativityFranco Pellizotti **none**
combativity_colorred_number
previous[2008](2008-tour-de-france)
next[2010](2010-tour-de-france)

The 2009 Tour de France was the 96th edition of the Tour de France, one of cycling's Grand Tours. It started on 4 July in the principality of Monaco with a 15 km individual time trial which included a section of the Circuit de Monaco. The race visited six countries: Monaco, France, Spain, Andorra, Switzerland and Italy, and finished on 26 July on the Champs-Élysées in Paris.

The total length was 3445 km, including 93 km in time-trials. There were seven mountain stages, three of which had mountaintop finishes, and one medium-mountain stage. |access-date=22 October 2008 | archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20081025060928/http://www.letour.fr/2009/TDF/COURSE/us/le_parcours.html| archive-date= 25 October 2008 | url-status= dead}} The race had a team time trial for the first time since 2005, the shortest distance in individual time trials since 1967, and the first penultimate-day mountain stage in the Tour's history.

2007 winner Alberto Contador won the race by a margin of 4′11″, having won both a mountain and time trial stage. His team also took the team classification. and supplied the initial third-place finisher, Lance Armstrong. Armstrong's achievement was later voided by the UCI in October 2012 following his non-dispute of a doping accusation by USADA, and fourth place Bradley Wiggins was promoted to the podium. Andy Schleck, second overall, won the young riders' competition as he had the previous year. Franco Pellizotti originally won the polka dot jersey as the King of the Mountains, but had that result (along with all his 2009 results) stripped by the Court of Arbitration for Sport in 2011 due to his irregular values in the UCI's biological passport program detected in May 2010. and the King of the Mountains title was retroactively awarded to Egoi Martínez. Mark Cavendish won six stages, including the final stage on the Champs-Élysées, but was beaten in the points classification by Thor Hushovd, who consequently won the green jersey.

Teams

Main article: List of teams and cyclists in the 2009 Tour de France

20 teams were invited to take part in the race. They include 17 of the 18 UCI ProTour teams (all except for ) and three other teams: , and . |access-date=18 March 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120303051352/http://www.letour.fr/2009/TDF/COURSE/docs/cp_2009_03_17_us.pdf |archive-date=3 March 2012

The teams entering the race were:

UCI ProTour teams

Invited teams

Pre-race favourites

Favourites for the race included 2008 winner Carlos Sastre, 2007 winner Alberto Contador, 2009 Giro d'Italia winner Denis Menchov and two-time runner-up Cadel Evans. Lance Armstrong came out of retirement and competed in the race on the same team as Contador. Menchov and Evans performed far below the levels expected of them, finishing 51st and 30th respectively, and Sastre only showed briefly among the leaders on the mountain stages that would have provided his best chance of making a bid for victory, coming 17th overall.

Alejandro Valverde, the team leader of , was not selected by his team for the Tour de France, because the race travelled through Italy on stage 16 and he had received a ban in May 2009 from the Italian Olympic Committee, prohibiting him from competing in Italy. He had finished in the top ten of the general classification of the Tour in the two previous years and was considered one of the favourites for overall victory.

News about a positive retest of a 2007 out-of-competition control concerning Thomas Dekker broke three days before the start; his team immediately withdrew him from the starting list.

Route and stages

The highest point of elevation in the race was 2470 m at the summit of the Col du Grand Saint-Bernard mountain pass on stage 16.

StageDateCourseDistanceTypeWinner[1](2009-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-1)[2](2009-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-2)[3](2009-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-3)[4](2009-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-4)[5](2009-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-5)[6](2009-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-6)[7](2009-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-7)[8](2009-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-8)[9](2009-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-9)[10](2009-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-10)[11](2009-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-11)[12](2009-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-12)[13](2009-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-13)[14](2009-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-14)[15](2009-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-15)[16](2009-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-16)[17](2009-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-17)[18](2009-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-18)[19](2009-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-19)[20](2009-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-20)[21](2009-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-21)
4 JulyMonaco15.5 km[[File:Time Trial.svg20pxlink=Individual time trial]]Individual time trialFabian Cancellara
5 JulyMonaco to Brignoles187 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Flat stageMark Cavendish
6 JulyMarseille to La Grande-Motte196.5 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Flat stageMark Cavendish
7 JulyMontpellier39 km[[File:Time Trial.svg20pxlink=Team time trial]]Team time trial
8 JulyCap d'Agde to Perpignan196.5 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Flat stageThomas Voeckler
9 JulyGirona (Spain) to Barcelona (Spain)181.5 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Flat stageThor Hushovd
10 JulyBarcelona to Andorra-Arcalis (Andorra)224 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Mountain stageBrice Feillu
11 JulyAndorra la Vella to Saint-Girons176.5 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Mountain stageLuis León Sánchez
12 JulySaint-Gaudens to Tarbes160.5 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Mountain stagePierrick Fédrigo
13 JulyLimogesRest day
14 JulyLimoges to Issoudun194.5 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Flat stageMark Cavendish
15 JulyVatan to Saint-Fargeau192 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Flat stageMark Cavendish
16 JulyTonnerre to Vittel211.5 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Flat stageNicki Sørensen
17 JulyVittel to Colmar200 km[[File:Mediummountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Medium mountain stageHeinrich Haussler
18 JulyColmar to Besançon199 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Flat stageSergei Ivanov
19 JulyPontarlier to Verbier (Switzerland)207.5 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Mountain StageAlberto Contador
20 JulyVerbier (Switzerland)Rest day
21 JulyMartigny (Switzerland) to Bourg-Saint-Maurice159 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Mountain StageSandy Casar
22 JulyBourg-Saint-Maurice to Le Grand-Bornand169.5 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Mountain StageFränk Schleck
23 JulyAnnecy40.5 km[[File:Time Trial.svg20pxlink=Individual Time Trial]]Individual time trialAlberto Contador
24 JulyBourgoin-Jallieu to Aubenas178 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Flat stageMark Cavendish
25 JulyMontélimar to Mont Ventoux167 km[[File:Mountainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Mountain stageJuan Manuel Gárate
26 JulyMontereau-Fault-Yonne to Paris (Champs-Élysées)164 km[[File:Plainstage.svg20pxalt=link=]]Flat stageMark Cavendish
Total3459.5 km

Race overview

Main article: 2009 Tour de France, Stage 1 to Stage 11, 2009 Tour de France, Stage 12 to Stage 21

The race started in Monaco with a 15 km individual time trial, won by Olympic time trial champion Fabian Cancellara, who retained the yellow jersey as leader of the general classification throughout the first week, which was dominated by stages suited primarily to sprinters, with Mark Cavendish establishing himself as the strongest finisher. The significant action of the first week in relation to the overall classification was restricted to a split in the field on stage 3, and a team time trial the following day.

The second weekend saw the Tour in the Pyrenees, and the first attack on the field by eventual winner Alberto Contador, while the leadership was taken over by Rinaldo Nocentini. Thor Hushovd showed an ability to take points in stages that did not include flat sprint finishes that would be key to the contest for the points classification, and the main contenders for the mountains classification emerged. The journey towards the Alps the following week had a second pair of successive stage wins for Cavendish and a series of wins from riders in breakaways that held no threat to the general classification. An infringement in the sprint finish to stage 14 saw Cavendish relegated in finishing position, and Hushovd gaining the upper hand in the points classification.

The first alpine stage was the occasion of Contador's assumption of the race leadership, and the emergence of Andy Schleck as the only rider likely to challenge him in the mountains, and as the top young rider, giving Schleck the right to wear the white jersey. Franco Pellizotti focussed on collecting points on the climbs early in stages to overhaul Egoi Martínez in the race for the mountains classification, without threatening the race leaders. By the end of the three stages in the Alps, and after Contador's victory in the final time trial, it was only the minor placings that were realistically under question in the last mountain stage, held for the first time on the penultimate day of the tour on Mont Ventoux.

The UCI introduced a ban on radio communication between team management and riders on stage 10, but the riders responded with a conservative style of racing for most of the stage and the intended repetition of the experiment on stage 13 was abandoned.{{cite news |access-date = 30 June 2009 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20101205080840/http://sports.yahoo.com/sc/news?slug=reu-tourearpieces_brief |archive-date = 5 December 2010 |url-status = live

Mark Cavendish claimed his sixth Champs-Élysées stage win on the final day of the Tour. At the victory ceremony, the national anthem of Denmark was mistakenly played instead of that of Spain. At the victory ceremony for teams, the anthem of Spain was yet played, because Contador was part of the winning team, Astana.

Doping

In the 2009 Tour, Doping controls were conducted by the UCI, with the French body AFLD shadowing the process. Officials targeted top riders like Lance Armstrong and Alberto Contador with an unprecedented number of tests. While the Armstrong-Contador conflict ruled the headlines, reporting on doping rather took a back seat during the race. The news that Giro runner-up Danilo Di Luca had a positive A probe in the Giro did not change that. Five days after the race finished the UCI announced that the initial Stage 16 winner Mikel Astarloza tested positive for EPO in an out-of-competition test on 26 June, eight days before the race started. Later, Astarloza was removed from the results, and the stage win transferred to Sandy Casar.

Just days before the 2010 Giro d'Italia, 2009 Giro podium finisher and King of the Mountains winner in this Tour Franco Pellizotti was announced by the UCI as a rider of interest in their biological passport program. He was sidelined by his team, and did not race again in 2010. The case was not fully resolved until March 2011, at which time the Court of Arbitration for Sport ordered Pellizotti banned for two years, to pay a fine and court costs, and have all his 2009 results vacated.

In October 2012, Lance Armstrong had all his results post 1998, including the 2009 Tour, voided by the UCI following the USADA investigation into systematic doping.

On 10 July 2014, a UCI press release detailing various athlete sanctions specified that Menchov had been banned (for a period of two years) until 9 April 2015 due to adverse biological passport findings. Due to this, he has been disqualified from the 2009, 2010 and 2012 Tours de France.

Classification leadership and minor prizes

There were four main individual classifications contested in the 2009 Tour de France, as well as a team competition. The most important was the general classification, which was calculated by adding each rider's finishing times on each stage. There were no time bonuses given at the end of stages for this edition of the Tour. If a crash had happened within the final 3 km of a stage, not including time trials and summit finishes, the riders involved would have received the same time as the group they were in when the crash occurred. The rider with the lowest cumulative time was the winner of the general classification and was considered the overall winner of the Tour. The rider leading the classification wore a yellow jersey.

The second classification was the points classification. Riders received points for finishing in the highest positions in a stage finish, or in intermediate sprints during the stage. The points available for each stage finish were determined by the stage's type. The leader was identified by a green jersey.

The third classification was the mountains classification. Most stages of the race included one or more categorised climbs, in which points were awarded to the riders that reached the summit first. The climbs were categorised as fourth-, third-, second- or first-category and hors catégorie, with the more difficult climbs rated lower. The leader wore a white jersey with red polka dots.

The final individual classification was the young rider classification. This was calculated the same way as the general classification, but the classification was restricted to riders who were born on or after 1 January 1984. The leader wore a white jersey.

The final classification was a team classification. This was calculated using the finishing times of the best three riders per team on each stage; the leading team was the team with the lowest cumulative time. The number of stage victories and placings per team determined the outcome of a tie. The riders in the team that lead this classification were identified with yellow number bibs on the back of their jerseys.

In addition, there was a combativity award given after each mass start stage to the rider considered, by a jury, to have "made the greatest effort and who has demonstrated the best qualities of sportsmanship". The winner wore a red number bib the following stage. At the conclusion of the Tour, Franco Pellizotti was given the overall super-combativity award.

There were also two special awards each with a prize of €5000, the Souvenir Henri Desgrange, given in honour of Tour founder and first race director Henri Desgrange to the first rider to pass the summit of the Col du Grand-Saint-Bernard on stage 16, and the Souvenir Jacques Goddet, given in honour of the second director Jacques Goddet to the first rider to pass the summit of the Col du Tourmalet on stage 9. Franco Pellizotti won both the Henri Desgrange and the Jacques Goddet.

StageWinnerGeneral classification
[[File:Jersey yellow.svg25pxlink=General classification in the Tour de Francealt=Yellow jersey]]Points classification
[[File:Jersey green.svg25pxlink=Points classification in the Tour de Francealt=Green jersey]]Mountains classification
[[File:Jersey polkadot.svg25pxlink=Mountains classification in the Tour de Francealt=Polkadot jersey]]Young rider classification
[[File:Jersey white.svg25pxlink=Young rider classification in the Tour de Francealt=White jersey]]Team classification
[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg25pxlink=Team classification in the Tour de Francealt=Jersey with yellow number]]Combativity award
[[File:Jersey red number.svg25pxlink=Combativity award in the Tour de Francealt=Jersey with red number]][1](2009-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-1)[2](2009-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-2)[3](2009-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-3)[4](2009-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-4)[5](2009-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-5)[6](2009-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-6)[7](2009-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-7)[8](2009-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-8)[9](2009-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-9)[10](2009-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-10)[11](2009-tour-de-france-stage-1-to-stage-11-stage-11)[12](2009-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-12)[13](2009-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-13)[14](2009-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-14)[15](2009-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-15)[16](2009-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-16)[17](2009-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-17)[18](2009-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-18)[19](2009-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-19)[20](2009-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-20)[21](2009-tour-de-france-stage-12-to-stage-21-stage-21)FinalAlberto ContadorThor HushovdAndy Schleck
Fabian CancellaraFabian CancellaraFabian CancellaraAlberto ContadorRoman Kreuziger*no award*
Mark CavendishMark CavendishJussi VeikkanenStef Clement
Mark CavendishTony MartinSamuel Dumoulin
*no award*
Thomas VoecklerMikhail Ignatiev
Thor HushovdStéphane AugéDavid Millar
Brice FeilluRinaldo NocentiniBrice FeilluChristophe Riblon
Luis León SánchezThor HushovdChristophe KernSandy Casar
Pierrick FédrigoEgoi MartínezFranco Pellizotti
Mark CavendishThierry Hupond
Mark CavendishMark CavendishJohan Van Summeren
Nicki SørensenNicki Sørensen
Heinrich HausslerThor HushovdFranco PellizottiHeinrich Haussler
Sergei IvanovMartijn Maaskant
Alberto ContadorAlberto ContadorAndy SchleckSimon Špilak
Sandy Casar*Franco Pellizotti
Fränk SchleckThor Hushovd
Alberto Contador*no award*
Mark CavendishLeonardo Duque
Juan Manuel GárateTony Martin
Mark CavendishFumiyuki Beppu
  • After stage 1, Fabian Cancellara was leading both the general and the points classifications. In stage 2, he wore the yellow jersey. Alberto Contador was placed second at the time in the green jersey points classification, but was the leader in the king of the mountains classification, and so forfeited the right to wear the green jersey. As a result, the third placed rider in the opening time trial, Bradley Wiggins wore the green jersey on stage 2.{{cite web |access-date=6 July 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090711000954/http://www.letour.fr/2009/TDF/COURSE/docs/reglement_fr_us.pdf |archive-date=11 July 2009
  • Stage 16 was originally won by Mikel Astarloza, who was found after the Tour to have tested positive for EPO before the race had started.{{cite web |access-date=6 July 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090803190623/http://www.velonews.com/article/96245/astarloza-tests-positive-for-epo-uci-says |archive-date=3 August 2009 |url-status=live

Final standings

Legend
[[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxlink=General classification in the Tour de Francealt=A yellow jersey.]]
[[File:Jersey white.svg20pxlink=Young rider classification in the Tour de Francealt=A white jersey.]]
[[File:Jersey red number.svg20pxlink=Combativity award in the Tour de Francealt=A white jersey with a red number bib.]]

General classification

RankRiderTeamTime12DSQ345678910
Alberto Contador [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxContador was awarded the final yellow jersey as general classification winner]] [[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxlink=Team classification in the Tour de Francealt=A white jersey with a yellow number bib.]]85h 48' 35"
Andy Schleck [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxSchleck was awarded the final white jersey as highest placed young rider winner]]+ 4' 11"
Lance Armstrong+5' 24"
Bradley Wiggins+ 6' 01"
Fränk Schleck+ 6' 04"
Andreas Klöden [[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxlink=Team classification in the Tour de Francealt=A white jersey with a yellow number bib.]]+ 6' 42"
Vincenzo Nibali+ 7' 35"
Christian Vande Velde+ 12' 04"
Roman Kreuziger+ 14' 16"
Christophe Le Mével+ 14' 25"
Sandy Casar+ 17' 19"
Final general classification (11–152)RankRiderTeamTime111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334DSQ35363738394041424344454647DSQ495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151DSQ152
Vladimir Karpets+ 18' 34"
Rinaldo Nocentini+ 20' 45"
Jurgen Van den Broeck+ 20' 50"
Stéphane Goubert+ 22' 29"
Carlos Sastre+ 26' 21"
Alexander Bocharov+ 29' 33"
George Hincapie+ 33' 27"
Sylvain Chavanel+ 34' 09"
Christian Knees+ 34' 48"
Pierre Rolland+ 37' 44"
Nicolas Roche+ 38' 20"
Linus Gerdemann+ 38' 35"
Brice Feillu+ 41' 14"
Luis León Sánchez+ 41' 27"
Haimar Zubeldia [[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxlink=Team classification in the Tour de Francealt=A white jersey with a yellow number bib.]]+ 43' 34"
Maxime Monfort+ 43' 54"
Christophe Moreau+ 44' 33"
Cadel Evans+ 45' 24"
Nicki Sørensen+ 46' 34"
Peter Velits+ 46' 35"
Hubert Dupont+ 49' 43"
Chris Anker Sørensen+ 49' 47"
Sérgio Paulinho [[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxlink=Team classification in the Tour de Francealt=A white jersey with a yellow number bib.]]+ 54' 00"
Tony Martin+ 55' 04"
Franco Pellizotti+56' 19"
Sébastien Minard+ 57' 37"
Luis Pasamontes+ 57' 47"
Serguei Ivanov+ 1h 00' 21"
Yaroslav Popovych [[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxlink=Team classification in the Tour de Francealt=A white jersey with a yellow number bib.]]+ 1h 01' 08"
Laurent Lefèvre+ 1h 01' 29"
Rémi Pauriol+ 1h 03' 04"
Egoi Martínez+ 1h 07' 20"
Volodymir Gustov+ 1h 08' 15"
Matthew Lloyd+ 1h 09' 05"
Yuri Trofimov+ 1h 09' 23"
Jérémy Roy+ 1h 09' 23"
Ryder Hesjedal+ 1h 14' 03"
Gustav Larsson+ 1h 15' 22"
Denis Menchov+1h 17' 04"
Rigoberto Urán+ 1h 20' 20"
David Loosli+ 1h 21' 56"
Grischa Niermann+ 1h 21' 59"
Sylvain Calzati+ 1h 25' 47"
Pierrick Fédrigo+ 1h 26' 07"
Kim Kirchen+ 1h 26' 52"
David Moncoutié+ 1h 28' 35"
Charly Wegelius+ 1h 29' 37"
Laurens ten Dam+ 1h 34' 57"
Gorka Verdugo+ 1h 35' 49"
Juan Manuel Gárate+ 1h 37' 19"
Carlos Barredo+ 1h 38' 30"
Geoffroy Lequatre+ 1h 40' 09"
Amaël Moinard+ 1h 42' 28"
Igor Antón+ 1h 44' 39"
Thomas Voeckler+ 1h 47' 40"
Nicolas Vogondy+ 1h 51' 09"
David Arroyo+ 1h 51' 52"
Maxime Bouet+ 1h 53' 04"
Iván Gutiérrez+ 1h 54' 08"
Rubén Pérez+ 1h 57' 29"
Joost Posthuma+ 1h 58' 25"
Joan Horrach+ 1h 58' 52"
Christophe Kern+ 1h 59' 20"
Sebastian Lang+ 2h 00' 52"
David Zabriskie+ 2h 02' 36"
Johannes Fröhlinger+ 2h 04' 53"
Hayden Roulston+ 2h 07' 58"
Marzio Bruseghin+ 2h 08' 42"
José Luis Arrieta+ 2h 11' 29"
Christophe Riblon+ 2h 12' 43"
Stijn Devolder+ 2h 13' 56"
José Joaquín Rojas+ 2h 14' 16"
David Millar+ 2h 15' 04"
Frederik Willems+ 2h 16' 11"
Íñigo Cuesta+ 2h 16' 39"
Jérôme Pineau+ 2h 17' 36"
Greg Van Avermaet+ 2h 20' 14"
Thierry Hupond+ 2h 22' 58"
Fabian Cancellara+ 2h 23' 55"
Aleksandr Kuschynski+ 2h 23' 58"
Johan Vansummeren+ 2h 25' 38"
Leonardo Duque+ 2h 25' 52"
Alessandro Ballan+ 2h 26' 22"
Stijn Vandenbergh+ 2h 26' 34"
Heinrich Haussler+ 2h 28' 35"
Martijn Maaskant+ 2h 29' 53"
Óscar Freire+ 2h 39' 25"
Filippo Pozzato+ 2h 39' 39"
Mickaël Delage+ 2h 42' 20"
Juan Antonio Flecha+ 2h 42' 45"
Michael Rogers+ 2h 42' 57"
Sébastien Rosseler+ 2h 43' 22"
Bingen Fernández+ 2h 45' 28"
Thor Hushovd [[File:Jersey green.svg20pxHushovd was awarded the final green jersey as points classification winner]]+ 2h 46' 00"
Juan José Oroz+ 2h 46' 17"
Jussi Veikkanen+ 2h 47' 21"
Simon Špilak+ 2h 52' 24"
Daniele Righi+ 2h 52' 44"
Koen de Kort+ 2h 53' 25"
Fumiyuki Beppu+ 2h 55' 21"
Simon Geschke+ 2h 55' 28"
Matteo Tosatto+ 2h 58' 28"
Arnaud Coyot+ 2h 59' 10"
Brian Vandborg+ 2h 59' 57"
Alexandre Pichot+ 3h 02' 01"
Stef Clement+ 3h 02' 11"
Anthony Geslin+ 3h 02' 26"
Alessandro Vanotti+ 3h 04' 00"
Julian Dean+ 3h 04' 41"
Nikolai Troussov+ 3h 05' 10"
Staf Scheirlinckx+ 3h 05' 11"
Stuart O'Grady+ 3h 08' 39"
Markus Fothen+ 3h 12' 45"
Gerald Ciolek+ 3h 15' 12"
Brett Lancaster+ 3h 15' 33"
William Bonnet+ 3h 16' 29"
Yukiya Arashiro+ 3h 16' 44"
Albert Timmer+ 3h 16' 50"
Mark Cavendish+ 3h 21' 54"
Mauro Santambrogio+ 3h 23' 29"
Lloyd Mondory+ 3h 25' 39"
Bert Grabsch+ 3h 27' 06"
Daniele Bennati+ 3h 27' 14"
Stéphane Augé+ 3h 27' 18"
Fabian Wegmann+ 3h 29' 54"
Grégory Rast [[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxlink=Team classification in the Tour de Francealt=A white jersey with a yellow number bib.]]+ 3h 30' 07"
Samuel Dumoulin+ 3h 30' 23"
Mikhail Ignatiev+ 3h 32' 09"
Danny Pate+ 3h 32' 39"
Benoît Vaugrenard+ 3h 34' 35"
Saïd Haddou+ 3h 34' 55"
Cyril Lemoine+ 3h 36' 14"
Marco Bandiera+ 3h 39' 14"
Marcin Sapa+ 3h 41' 46"
Fabio Sabatini+ 3h 42' 11"
Dmitriy Muravyev [[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxlink=Team classification in the Tour de Francealt=A white jersey with a yellow number bib.]]+ 3h 43' 15"
Mark Renshaw+ 3h 46' 20"
Bernhard Eisel+ 3h 47' 43"
Tyler Farrar+ 3h 48' 13"
Niki Terpstra+ 3h 48' 38"
Steven de Jongh+ 3h 49' 21"
Jonathan Hivert+ 3h 49' 39"
Andreas Klier+3h 54' 08"
Yauheni Hutarovich+ 4h 16' 27"

Points classification

RankRiderTeamPoints1234567DSQ910
Thor Hushovd [[File:Jersey green.svg20pxHushovd was awarded the final green jersey as points classification winner]]280
Mark Cavendish270
Gerald Ciolek148
José Joaquín Rojas126
Nicolas Roche122
Óscar Freire119
Tyler Farrar110
Franco Pellizotti104
Alberto Contador [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxContador was awarded the final yellow jersey as general classification winner]] [[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded the final yellow numbers as team classification winners]]101
Andreas Klöden [[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded the final yellow numbers as team classification winners]]89

Mountains classification

RankRiderTeamPointsDSQ134567DSQ910
Franco Pellizotti210
Egoi Martínez135
Alberto Contador [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxContador was awarded the final yellow jersey as general classification winner]] [[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded the final yellow numbers as team classification winners]]126
Andy Schleck [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxSchleck was awarded the final white jersey as best young rider winner]]111
Pierrick Fédrigo99
Christophe Kern89
Fränk Schleck88
Mikel Astarloza86
Juan Manuel Gárate86
Sandy Casar84

Young rider classification

RankRiderTeamTime12345678910
Andy Schleck [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxSchleck was awarded the final white jersey as highest placed young rider winner]]85h 52′ 46″
Vincenzo Nibali+ 3′ 24″
Roman Kreuziger+ 10′ 05″
Pierre Rolland+ 33′ 33″
Nicolas Roche+ 34′ 09″
Brice Feillu+ 37′ 03″
Peter Velits+ 42′ 24″
Chris Anker Sørensen+ 45′ 36″
Tony Martin+ 50′ 53″
Yury Trofimov+ 1h 04′ 50″

Team classification

RankTeamTime12345678910
[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded the final yellow numbers as team classification winners]]243h 56′ 04″
+ 22′ 35″
+ 28′ 34″
+ 31′ 47″
+ 43′ 31″
+ 58′ 05″
+ 1h 01′ 48″
+ 1h 05′ 34″
+ 1h 13′ 57″
+ 1h 20′ 38″

World rankings

The following points were earned in the Tour towards the 2009 UCI World Ranking.

RiderTeamNationalityStageOverallTotal
Pierrick Fédrigo
Juan Manuel Gárate
Luis León Sánchez
Nicki Sørensen

Notes

References

Bibliography

References

  1. (8 March 2011). "The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) imposes a two-year ban on the Italian cyclists Pietro Caucchioli and Franco Pellizotti". [[Court of Arbitration for Sport]].
  2. "Results – Tour de France 2009 – Mountain Classification".
  3. (26 July 2009). "Contador seals 2009 Tour victory". BBC Sport.
  4. "Wiggins 3e en 2009". L'Equipe.
  5. "Wiggins handed 3rd place on 2009 Tour". Wide World of Sports.
  6. (26 July 2009). "How the 2009 Tour was won". BBC Sport.
  7. "Tour de France 2009 – Riders list". [[Amaury Sport Organisation]].
  8. "Tour de France 2009 – Teams and riders". [[Amaury Sport Organisation]].
  9. Daniel Benson. (9 June 2009). "The Tour de France Ladder".
  10. "Tour de France 2009 – The Tour summits". [[Tour de France]].
  11. "Tour de France 2009 – The Tour 2009". [[Amaury Sport Organisation]].
  12. "96ème Tour de France 2009". Mémoire du cyclisme.
  13. "The history of the Tour de France – Year 2009 – The stage winners". [[Amaury Sport Organisation]].
  14. "The history of the Tour de France – 2009". [[Amaury Sport Organisation]].
  15. Tan, Anthony. (26 July 2009). "Cavendish celebrates with number six on the Champs-Élysées". [[Immediate Media Company]].
  16. (26 July 2009). "Danish anthem played for Spanish winner Contador". Reuters.
  17. "Armstrong on doping: 'I think I've answered the question'". CNN.
  18. (22 July 2009). "Italian Di Luca fails doping test". BBC.
  19. (31 July 2009). "Astarloza tests positive for EPO, UCI says". Velo News.
  20. (22 October 2012). "Lance Armstrong: Governing body strips American of Tour wins". BBC News.
  21. (10 July 2014). "Athlete sanctions press release". UCI.
  22. Tan, Anthony. (21 July 2009). "Astarloza top dog in Bourg-Saint-Maurice". [[Cyclingnews.com]].
  23. (12 July 2009). "Fedrigo claims another stage for France". [[Immediate Media Company]].
  24. "Tour de France 2009 – Leaders overview".
  25. van den Akker, Pieter. "Informatie over de Tour de France van 2009".
  26. "The history of the Tour de France – Year 2009 – Stage 21 Montereau-Fault-Yonne > Paris Champs-Élysées". [[Amaury Sport Organisation]].
  27. (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". [[United States Anti-Doping Agency]].
  28. (22 October 2012). "Lance Armstrong stripped of all seven Tour de France wins by UCI". [[BBC News]].
  29. "Tour de France – 2009".
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