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“We come to see people capable of anything”: when death stalks Tour de France riders

“We come to see people capable of anything”: when death stalks Tour de France riders
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This Tuesday, July 22, before the finish at Ventoux, the peloton will pass in front of the stele of Tom Simpson, a rider who died on the pass in 1967. An opportunity to ask those involved in cycling about their fear of death.
Yellow jersey rider Tadej Pogacar, on the descent of the Col du Tourmalet, Saturday, July 19, 2025. (Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP)

The riders will see the white mass from very far away. At first, in fits and starts. Around a bend. At the top of a hill. Between two trees. They will have to advance in a long and terrible procession towards the interminable 15.7 km climb at 8.8%, the final summit of stage 16. At the hamlet of Sainte-Colombe, it will still be okay. In the vineyards and orchards, the slope is gentle. Suddenly, at Saint-Estève, the road will rear up like a mad horse as it enters the pine forest. Then, at Chalet Reynard, nearly 6 km from the finish, the curse will begin: a wide, melting asphalt, battered by the mistral, across the limestone scree. Nothing to shelter in, no shade to linger, only a lunar expanse with the Observatory tower as its only focal point. It will seem almost close, accessible, but will always seem to recede. A mirage. A dream.

1.5 km from the summit, no rider will glance at the stele dedicated to Tom Simpson. They won't have the time, nor the energy. In 1967, the British rider died there , of a cardiac collapse, struck down on his bike by fatigue, amphetamines, the lack of supplies, the mountain. Since then, the highest point of the mountains

Libération

Libération

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