:COUNTDOWN [targettime:2026-07-04T16:35:00Z] :STATS :INFO 113th Tour de France: Barcelona to Paris The 2026 Tour de France opens on Saturday with a team time trial through Barcelona, the first time the race has used a TTT as its opening stage since 1971. The peloton then rides north and east over 21 stages, crossing the Pyrenees twice and the Alps once before the traditional finale on the Champs-Elysees on 26 July. Reigning champion Tadej Pogacar returns to defend his title against Jonas Vingegaard and French hope Paul Seixas in what promises to be the deepest and most competitive field in a generation. :TIMELINE 🚴🏔️🏁 2026-07-04 | Stage 1, Barcelona (TTT, 19.6 km): Teams launch the race in a short, sharp team time trial through the streets of Barcelona. Early jersey on the line. 2026-07-05 | Stage 2, Tarragona to Barcelona (168.5 km): First road stage heads south along the coast before returning to Barcelona. Sprinters make their first move. 2026-07-06 | Stage 3, Granollers to Les Angles (195.9 km): The race enters the Pyrenees for the first time. A tough mountain finish in Andorra territory sets the first GC order. 2026-07-09 | Stage 6, Pau to Gavarnie-Gedre (186.2 km): The highest and hardest of the Pyrenean stages. Expect the first serious GC battle of the race here. 2026-07-13 | Rest Day 1: The peloton pauses. Teams regroup and tacticians reassess. 2026-07-18 | Alpine stages begin: The race enters the Alps and the final reckoning begins. Cols including the Galibier and Alpe d'Huez shape the final podium contenders. 2026-07-20 | Rest Day 2: Second and final rest day before the run to Paris. 2026-07-26 | Stage 21, Paris (Champs-Elysees): The procession into Paris and the traditional sprint finale under the Arc de Triomphe. The yellow jersey is confirmed. :NOTE The Barcelona opening. The last time the Tour used a team time trial as its Stage 1 was 1971, won by Eddy Merckx and Molteni. The format rewards the richest rosters, and UAE Team Emirates, Visma, and Ineos Grenadiers are all expected to target the early jersey. :NOTE The French drought. No Frenchman has won the Tour de France since Bernard Hinault in 1985, a run of 41 years. Paul Seixas is the most credible home contender since Thibaut Pinot retired in 2024. The pressure on the young climber will be extraordinary from Stage 1. :LINK https://www.letour.fr/en/ Official Tour de France 2026 site, stages, and live coverage