1995 Tour de France

82nd edition: july 1 - july 23, 1995, results, stages with running gc, photos and video.

1994 Tour | 1996 Tour | Tour de France Database | 1995 Tour Quick Facts | Final 1995 Tour de France GC | Stage results with running GC | 1995 Tour de France photos | Video

Map of the 1995 Tour de France. The race started in Brittany's Saint-Brieuc

Cycling's 50 Craziest Stories

Les Woodland's book Cycling's 50 Craziest Stories is available as an audiobook here .

1995 Tour de France quick facts

The 1995 Tour had 20 stages plus a prologue that totaled 3,635 kilometers.

It was ridden at an average speed of 39.193 km/hr.

There were 189 starters (21 9-member teams) and 115 classified finishers.

This was Miguel Indurain's fifth Tour victory, allowing him to join Anquetil, Merckx and Hinault in the 5-time Tour winner's club.

Indurain was the first racer to win five sequential Tours, a feat later exceeded by Lance Armstrong, who won seven Tours in a row.

Of course, now we know those seven Armstrong Tour victories were annuled because of Armstrong's doping.

1995 Tour de France complete final General Classification:

Story of the Tour de France Volume 2

  • Alex Zulle (ONCE) @ 4min 35sec
  • Bjarne Riis (Gewiss-Ballan) @ 6min 47sec
  • Laurent Jalaber t (ONCE) @ 8min 24sec
  • Ivan Gotti (Gewiss-Ballan) @ 11min 34sec
  • Melchior Mauri (ONCE) @ 15min 20sec
  • Fernando Escartin (Festina) @ 15min 49sec
  • Tony Rominger (Kelme) @ 16min 46sec
  • Richard Virenque (Carrera Jeans) @ 17min 31sec
  • Hernan Buenahora (Castorama) @ 18min 50sec
  • Claudio Chiappucci (Carrera Jeans) @ 18min 55sec
  • Laurent Madouas (Brescialat) @ 20min 37sec
  • Marco Pantani (Gewiss-Ballan) @ 26min 20sec
  • Paolo Lanfranchi (Motorola) @ 29min 41sec
  • Bruno Cenghialta (Gewiss-Ballan) @ 29min 55sec
  • Alvaro Mejia (TVM) @ 33min 40sec
  • Bo Hamburger (Novell) @ 34min 40sec
  • Viatcheslav Ekimov (Festina) @ 39min 51sec
  • Laurent Dufaux (ONCE) @ 45min 55sec
  • Erik Breukink (ONCE) @ 47min 27sec
  • Vicente Aparicio (Banesto) @ 52min 54sec
  • Jean-Cyril Robin (Festina) @ 56min 1sec
  • Arsenio Gonzalez (Mapei) @ 56min 18sec
  • Federico Muñoz (Kelme) @ 1hr 1min 3sec
  • Vladimir Poulnikov (Telekom) @ 1hr 1min 31sec
  • Massimo Podenzana (Brescialat) @ 1hr 1min 54sec
  • Laudelino Cubino (Kelme) @ 1hr 2min 27sec
  • Laurent Brochard (Festina) @ 1hr 2min 45sec
  • Beat Zberg (Carrera) @ 1hr 7min 8sec
  • Yvon Ledanois (Gan) @ 1hr 14min 4sec
  • Johan Bruyneel (ONCE) @ 1hr 18min 14sec
  • Oscar Pelliccioli (Polti) @ 1hr 20min 13sec
  • Alberto Elli (MG-Technogym) @ 1hr 21min 34sec
  • Jean-François Bernard (Chazal) @ 1hr 23min 11sec
  • Herminio Diaz (ONCE) @ 1hr 23min 27sec
  • Lance Armstrong (Motorola) @ 1hr 28min 6sec
  • Georg Totschnig (Polti) @ 1hr 30min 47sec
  • Udo Bölts (Telekom) @ 1hr 31min 16sec
  • Andrea Tafi (Mapei) @ 1hr 36min 49sec
  • Ramon Gonzalez (Banesto) @ 1hr 38min 4sec
  • Ferard Rué (Banesto) @ 1hr 38min 11sec
  • Enrico Zaina (Carrera) @ 1hr 38min 28sec
  • Massimiliano Lelli (Mercatone Uno) @ 1hr 39min 43sec
  • Andrea Peron (Motorola) @ 1hr 42min 18sec
  • Eddy Bouwmans (Novell) @ 1hr 44min 9sec
  • Zenon Jaskula (Aki-Gipiemme) @ 1hr 53min 46sec
  • Maximilian Sciandri (MG-Technogym) @ 1hr 55min 10sec
  • Franco Vona (MG-Technogym) @ 1hr 55min 35sec
  • Jesper Skibby (TVM) @ 1hr 55min 43sec
  • Leonardo Sierra (Carrera) @ 1hr 56min 17sec
  • Gabriele Colombo (Gewiss-Ballan) @ 1hr 57min 14sec
  • Maarten Den Bakker (TVM) @ 1hr 58min 25sec
  • Gianni Bugno (MG-Technogym) @ 1hr 58min 47sec
  • Andrea Ferrigato (Telekom) @ 2hr 4min 51sec
  • Didier Rous (Gan) @ 2hr 7min 39sec
  • Djamolidine Abdoujaparov (Novell) @ 2hr 8min 55sec
  • Carmelo Miranda (Banesto) @ 2hr 8min 57sec
  • Rolf Aldag (Telekom) @ 2hr 13min 41sec
  • François Simon (Castorama) @ 2hr 15min 16sec
  • Neil Stephens (ONCE) @ 2hr 16min 1sec
  • Miguel Arroyo (Chazal) @ 2hr 19min 6sec
  • Armand De Las Cuevas (Castorama) @ 2hr 19min 23sec
  • Gilles Bouvard (Chazal) @ 2hr 24min 18sec
  • Stephen Hiodge (Festina) @ 2hr 28min 17sec
  • Alberto Volpi (Gewiss-Ballan) @ 2hr 28min 43sec
  • Jens Heppner (Telekom) @ 2hr 30min 47sec
  • Rolf Järmann (MG-Technogym) @ 2hr 32min 14sec
  • Fabian Jeker (Festina) @ 2hr 38min 21sec
  • José Ramon Uriarte (Banesto) @ 2hr 38min 22sec
  • Erik Dekker (Novell) @ 2hr 38min 22sec
  • Andrei Tchmil (Lotto) @ 2hr 39min 2sec
  • Massimo Donati (Mercatone Uno) @ 2hr 40min 4sec
  • Johan Museeuw (Mapei) @ 2hr 41min 54sec
  • Serhiy Itchakov (Polti) @ 2hr 42min 7sec
  • Arturas Kasputis (Chazal) @ 2hr 45min 50sec
  • Jim Van De Laer (TVM) @ 2hr 45min 52sec
  • Francesco Frattini (Geweiss-Ballan) @ 2hr 46min 11sec
  • Marino Alonso (Banesto) @ 2hr 47min 25sec
  • Dario Bottaro (Gewiss-Ballan) @ 2hr 47min 26sec
  • Thomas Davy (Banesto) @ 2hr 49min 17sec
  • Davide Perona (Lampre) @ 2hr 51min 34sec
  • Frankie Andreu (Motorola) @ 2hr 52min 15sec
  • Alessio Galletti (Lampre) @ 2hr 52min 22sec
  • Marcello Siboni (Carrera) @ 2hr 53min 16sec
  • Marco Milesi (Brescialat) @ 2hr 54min 10sec
  • Flavio Vanzella (MG-Technogym) s.t.
  • Giancarlo Perini (Brescialat) @ 2hr 54min 18sec
  • Wilfried Peeters (Mapei) @ 2hr 54min 18sec
  • Guido Bontempi (Gewiss-Ballan) @ 2hr 55min 28sec
  • Erik Zabel (Telekom) @ 2hr 56min 48sec
  • Arvis Piziks (Novell) @ 2hr 57min 55sec
  • François Lemarchand (Gan) @ 2hr 58min 26sec
  • José Angel Vidal (Kelme) @ 2hr 58min 26sec
  • Thierry Marie (Castorama) @ 2hr 58min 54sec
  • Aitor Garmendia (Banesto) @ 2hr 59min 43sec
  • Alexander Gontchenkov (Lampre) @ 3hr 0min 25sec
  • Frans Massen (Novell) @ 3hr 1min 43sec
  • Mario Scirea (Polti) @ 3hr 1min 55sec
  • Mauro Bettin (Ski-Gipiemme) @ 3hr 4min 0sec
  • Nicola Loda (MG-Technogym) @ 3hr 4min 45sec
  • Steve Bauer (Motorola) @ 3hr 5min 33sec
  • Rossano Brasi (Polti) @ 3hr 6min 23sec
  • Giovanni Lombardi (Polti) @ 3hr 6min 40sec
  • Gilles Talmant (Castorama) @ 3hr 7min 19sec
  • Peter Farazijn (Lotto) @ 3hr 9min 32sec
  • Stefano Colagé (Telekom) @ 3hr 10min 4sec
  • Gian-Matteo Fagnini (Mercatone Uno) @ 3hr 12min 11sec
  • Giovanni Fidanza (Polti) @ 3hr 12min 20sec
  • Stephen Swart (Motorola) @ 3hr 14min 15sec
  • Gianluca Gorini (Aki-Gipiemme) @ 3hr 14min 20sec
  • Marco Serpellini (Lampre) @ 3hr 16min 5sec
  • Davide Cassani (MG-Technogym) @ 3hr 16min 51sec
  • Bart Voskamp (TVM) @ 3hr 17min 41sec
  • Eros Poli (Mercatone Uno) @ 3hr 21min 26sec
  • Bruno Cornillet (Chazal) @ 3hr 36min 26sec

Climbers Competition:

Points Competition:

Team Classification:

  • ONCE: 278hr 29min 35sec
  • Gewiss-Ballan @ 13min 23sec
  • Mapei @ 55min 53sec
  • Marco Pantani (Carrera) 93hr 11min 19sec
  • Bo Hamburger (TVM) @ 8min 29sec
  • Beat Zberg (Carrera) @ 40min 48sec

Content continues below the ads

1995 Tour de France stage results with running GC

TDF volume 1

Prologue: Saturday, July 1, St. Brieuc 7.3 km Individual Time Trial. Stage and GC times are the same.

Stage 1: Sunday, July 2, Dinan - Lannion, 233.5 km

GC after Stage 1:

Stage 2: Monday, July 3, Perros Guirrec - Vitré, 235.5 km

GC after stage 2:

Stage 3: Tuesday, July 4, Mayenne - Alençon 67 km Team Time Trial

GC after Stage 3:

Stage 4: Wednesday, July 5, Alençon - Le Havre, 162 km

GC after Stage 4:

Stage 5: Thursday, July 6, Fécamp - Dunkerque, 261 km

GC after Stage 5:

Stage 6: Friday, July 7, Dunkerque - Charleroi, 202 km

GC after stage 6:

Stage 7: Saturday, July 8, Charleroi - Liège, 203 km

GC after Stage 7:

Stage 8: Sunday, July 9, Huy - Seraing 54 km Individual Time Trial

GC after Stage 8:

Stage 9: Tuesday, July 11, Le Grand Bornand - La Plagne, 160 km.

GC after Stage 9:

Stage 10: Wednesday, July 12, Aime La Plagne - L'Alpe d'Huez, 162.5 km

GC after stage 10:

Stage 11: Thursday, July 13, Bourg d'Oisons - St. Etienne, 199 km

GC after Stage 11:

Stage 12: Friday, July 14, St. Etienne - Mende, 222.5 km

GC after Stage 12:

Stage 13: Saturday, July 15, Mende - Revel, 245 km

GC after Stage 13:

Stage 14: Sunday, July 16, St. Orens de Gameville - Guzet Neige, 164 km.

GC after stage 14:

Stage 15: Tuesday, July 18, St. Girons - Cauterets, 206 km.

Richard Virenque was first to the top of all 6 passes.

Fabio Casartelli died after crashing on the descent of the Portet d'Aspet.

GC after stage 15:

Stage 16: Wednesday, July 19, Tarbes - Pau, 229 km

The stage was neutralized in homage to Fabio Casartelli, who died during stage 15.

Stage 17: Pau - Bordeaux, 246 km.

GC after Stage 17:

Stage 18: Friday, July 21, Montpon Ménestérol - Limoges, 166.5 km

GC after Stage 18:

Stage 19: Saturday, July 22, Lac de Vassivière 46.5 km Individual Time Trial

GC after Stage 19:

20th and Final Stage: Sunday, July 23, St. Geneviève des Bois - Paris (Champs Elysées)

Complete Final 1995 Tour de France GC after Stage 20

1995 Tour de France photos:

Video of Stage 10 with Pantani's record ride to the top of l'Alpe d'Huez

© McGann Publishing

History of the Tour de France by numbers

Records and stats from the last 109 years

The world’s most famous road race - the Tour de France - has a rich 109 year history and its fabled past is synonymous with the greatest names in the sport.

Evans Tour de France preparations on track

Wiggins spurred on by 2010 Tour de France disappointment

Schleck confirms he will miss Tour de France

Rabobank names Tour de France squad

Kittel leads Argos-Shimano at Tour de France

But who are the figures that have written themselves into the record books of this most emblematic of events? Who’s the fastest winner? The oldest winner? The youngest winner? Which country has basked in yellow more than any other? Who’s the climber that stands head and shoulders above all the others?

We’ve got all the answers and more right here in our history of the Tour de France by numbers, and alongside it is a gallery of some of the race's biggest names. With the start of the latest edition on June 30 rapidly approaching, will any of the current generation force their way into some of these categories?

Multiple winners 7: Lance Armstrong (USA) – 1999-2005 5: Jacques Anquetil (Fra) – 1957, 1961-64 5: Eddy Merckx (Bel) – 1969-72, 1974 5: Bernard Hinault (Fra) – 1978-79, 1981-82, 1985 5: Miguel Indurain (Spa) – 1991-95

Victories by nation France: 36 Belgium: 18 Spain: 13 USA: 10 Italy: 9 Luxembourg: 5 Holland and Switzerland: 2 Ireland, Denmark, Germany, Australia: 1

Smallest winning margins (since 1947) 8 seconds: 1989 - Greg LeMond (USA) beats Laurent Fignon (Fra) 23 seconds: 2007 – Alberto Contador (Spa) beats Cadel Evans (Aus) 32 seconds: 2006 – Oscar Pereiro (Spa) over Andreas Klöden (Ger) after Floyd Landis was disqualified. 38 seconds: 1968 – Jan Janssen (Hol) beats Herman Van Springel (Bel)

Largest winning margins (since 1947) 28m 17s: 1952 – Fausto Coppi (Ita) beats Constant Ockers (Bel) 26m 16s: 1948 – Gino Bartali (Ita) beats Alberic Schotte (Bel) 22m 00s: 1951 – Hugo Koblet (Sui) beats Raphael Geminiani (Fra)

Get The Leadout Newsletter

The latest race content, interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, direct to your inbox!

Yellow jersey wearers by nation France: 82 Belgium: 53 Italy: 25 Holland: 17 Germany: 12 Spain: 12 Switzerland: 10 Luxembourg: 7 Denmark: 6 USA and Australia: 5 Great Britain: 4 Ireland: 3 Canada: 2 Austria, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Estonia, Colombia, Norway and Ukraine: 1

Most days in the yellow jersey Eddy Merckx (Bel): 111 Lance Armstrong (USA): 83 Bernard Hinault (Fra): 79 Miguel Indurain (Spa): 60 Jacques Anquetil (Fra): 52

Most green jersey victories 6: Erik Zabel (Ger) – 1996-2001 4: Sean Kelly (Ire) – 1982-83, 1985, 1989 3: Jan Janssen (Hol) – 1964-65, 1967 3: Eddy Merckx (Bel) – 1969, 1971-72 3: Freddy Maertens (Bel) – 1976, 1978, 1981 3: Djamolidine Abdoujaparov (Uzb) – 1991, 1993-94 3: Robbie McEwen (Aus) – 2002, 2004, 2006

Green jersey winners by nation Belgium: 19 France: 9 Germany: 8 Holland, Ireland and Australia: 4 Uzbekistan: 3 Italy, Switzerland and Norway: 2 Spain, Great Britain: 1

Most polka-dot jersey victories 7: Richard Virenque (Fra) – 1994-97, 1999, 2003-04 6: Federico Bahamontes (Spa) – 1954, 1958-59, 1962-64 6: Lucien Van Impe (Bel) – 1971-72, 1975, 1977, 1981, 1983

Polka-dot jersey winners by nation France: 18 Spain: 15 Italy: 13 Belgium: 11 Colombia: 4

Most white jersey victories 3: Andy Schleck (Lux) – 2008-2010 3: Jan Ullrich (Ger) – 1996-98 2: Marco Pantani (Ita) – 1994-95

White jersey winners by nation France, Holland, Italy and Spain: 5 Germany: 4 Luxembourg: 3 Colombia, USA and Russia: 2 Australia, Mexico and Ukraine: 1

Highest average speed of Tour winner 41.654kph: Lance Armstrong (USA) – 2005 40.940kph: Lance Armstrong (USA) – 2003 40.553kph: Lance Armstrong (USA) – 2004

Biggest winning margin in a stage (since 1947) 22m 50s: 1976 (Montgenevre-Manosque) - Jose Luis Viego (Spa) 21m 48s: 1957 (Pau-Bordeaux) – Pierino Baffi (Ita) 20m 31s: 1955 (Millau-Albi) – Daan De Groot (Hol)

Most stage victories 34: Eddy Merckx (Bel) 28: Bernard Hinault (Fra) 25: Andre Leducq (Fra) 22: Andre Darrigade (Fra) 22: Lance Armstrong (USA) 20: Nicolas Frantz (Lux) 20: Mark Cavendish (GBr)

Most time trial victories 20: Bernard Hinault (Fra) 16: Eddy Merckx (Bel) 11: Jacques Anquetil (Fra) 11: Lance Armstrong (USA)

Most stage wins in one Tour 8: Charles Pelissier (Fra) – 1930 8: Eddy Merckx (Bel) – 1970, 1974 8: Freddy Maertens (Bel) – 1976

Oldest Tour winners (age at end of the race) 36: Firmin Lambot (Bel) – 1922 34: Henri Pelissier (Fra) – 1923 34: Gino Bartali (Ita) - 1948 34: Cadel Evans (Aus) – 2011

Youngest Tour winners (age at end of the race) 19: Henri Cornet (Fra) – 1904 21: Romain Maes (Bel) – 1935 22: Francois Faber (Lux) – 1909 22: Octave Lapize (Fra) – 1910 22: Philippe Thys (Bel) – 1913 22: Felice Gimondi (Ita) – 1965 22: Laurent Fignon (Fra) – 1983

Longest gap between victories 10 Years: Gino Bartali (Ita) – 1938 and 1948

Most Tour starts 16: Joop Zoetemelk (Hol) 16: George Hincapie (USA)  

tour de france nummer 95

Thank you for reading 5 articles in the past 30 days*

Join now for unlimited access

Enjoy your first month for just £1 / $1 / €1

*Read any 5 articles for free in each 30-day period, this automatically resets

After your trial you will be billed £4.99 $7.99 €5.99 per month, cancel anytime. Or sign up for one year for just £49 $79 €59

Try your first month for just £1 / $1 / €1

Seven tech predictions for the Tour de France from the pits at the Critérium du Dauphiné

Four new bikes, two new wheelsets, fresh custom paint, tyre nerdery, and much more besides: Biggest ever tech gallery from the Critérium du Dauphiné

ZLM Tour: Rune Herregodts carves fastest time on time trial and wins stage 1

Most Popular

tour de france nummer 95

“The Greatest Tour de France Climber of All Time” Has Died at Age 95

Federico Bahamontes , known as the “Eagle of Toledo”, was the first Spanish rider ever to win the Tour de France.

tour de france 1964

Federico Bahamontes, who was the first Spanish rider ever to win the Tour de France, died Tuesday at the age of 95.

“It is with deep sorrow that we mourn the loss of Federico Martin Bahamontes, the Eagle of Toledo, a benchmark in sport who has taken the name of our city to the very top,” Toledo’s mayor Carlos Velázquez said in a statement following Bahamontes’s death. “Adopted son of the city of Toledo, admired and loved, Fede has thrilled us with his extraordinary climbs. His bicycle shop, in our Plaza de la Magdalena, has been a place of pilgrimage for all fans … Thanks to him we all won the Tour.”

Federico Bahmontes was born in 1928 in the central Spanish province of Toledo. That geography would earn him the nickname “The Eagle of Toledo” later in his career.

Due to the Spanish civil war, Bahmontes’s family spent much of the mid-1930s fleeing from their hometown of Santo Domingo-Claudilla to Madrid and then, eventually, to the village of Villarubbia de Santiago.

In the wake of the war, the country was under food rationing orders. This led Bahamontes to buy his first bike at the age of eighteen in order to transport and sell food illegally between towns and villages.

Soon after, in July 1947, he entered his first bike race, finishing second.

Bahamontes spent the next half decade racing as an amateur, which allowed him to earn more than his black-market food trade.

In 1953, Bahamontes entered his first professional race, the Vuelta a Asturias. After winning the opening stage, Bahamontes finished the race in twenty-first place out of a field of sixty-nine racers.

federico bahamontes

That same year, Bahamontes won the King of the Mountains classification in the Volta a Catalunya, which, as the Vuelta a España was not run between 1950 and 1955, was the country’s biggest race at the time.

He competed in his first Tour de France the following summer, initially declining an invite to the race on the grounds that he didn’t have any luggage. He won that year’s KOM classification and finished the race twenty-fifth overall.

federico bahamontes

In 1959, Bahamontes won the Tour de France, becoming the race’s first-ever Spanish yellow jersey.

However, over his career, the Eagle of Toledo was best known for his climbing acumen. He won the Tour de France’s KOM jersey a total of six times (1954, ’58, ’59, ’62, ’63, and ’64), the Giro’s KOM in 1956, and Vuelta’s KOM in 1957, where he also finished second overall.

Following his retirement in 1965, Bahamontes returned to Toledo to run a bicycle shop.

In 2013, in celebration of the Tour’s hundredth anniversary, French newspaper L’Equipe named Bahamontes the greatest Tour de France climber of all time.

Headshot of Michael Venutolo-Mantovani

Michael Venutolo-Mantovani is a writer and musician based in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. He loves road and track cycling, likes gravel riding, and can often be found trying to avoid crashing his mountain bike. 

preview for HDM All Sections Playlist - Bicycling

.css-1t6om3g:before{width:1.75rem;height:1.75rem;margin:0 0.625rem -0.125rem 0;content:'';display:inline-block;-webkit-background-size:1.25rem;background-size:1.25rem;background-color:#F8D811;color:#000;background-repeat:no-repeat;-webkit-background-position:center;background-position:center;}.loaded .css-1t6om3g:before{background-image:url(/_assets/design-tokens/bicycling/static/images/chevron-design-element.c42d609.svg);} News

107th giro d'italia 2024 stage 19

Kuss Prepared to Adapt If Vingegaard Misses Tour

cycling fra tdf2023 stage21

Vingegaard Excluded from Danish Olympic Squad

78th tour of spain 2023 stage 21

2025 Vuelta a España Set to Start in Italy

73rd uci cyclo cross world championships fayetteville 2022 men's junior

Driver Pleads Not Guilty in Magnus White Case

nove mesto mountain bike worldcup

Peter Sagan’s Olympic Dream Halted

nove mesto mountain bike worldcup

Ferrand-Prévot to Focus on Road Racing Comeback

cycling fra tdf2023 stage15

Tour de France 2024 Rider Power Rankings

105th giro d'italia 2022 stage 3

Paris 2024: Ecuador Selects Narváez Over Carapaz

39th vuelta a san juan international 2023 stage 2

Miguel Ángel López Suspended for Four Years

riders riding in a group at unbound gravel

Unbound Gravel’s Drafting Rule Stirs Controversy

a person riding a bicycle

How to Make Your Bike Commute Better

BEST WEEK EVER

Try out unlimited access with 7 days of Outside+ for free.

Start Your Free Trial

Powered by Outside

Tour de France

Federico bahamontes, spain’s first tour de france winner, dies at 95, the 'eagle of toledo' won six king of the mountains jerseys and one yellow jersey as he raced during cycling's 'golden era' of the 1950s and 1960s..

Heading out the door? Read this article on the new Outside+ app available now on iOS devices for members! >","name":"in-content-cta","type":"link"}}'>Download the app .

Federico Bahamontes, the pure climber who became the first rider from Spain to win the Tour de France , died Tuesday. He was 95.

Born in 1928, the “Eagle of Toledo” raced against some of the peloton’s biggest names in the Tour golden era of the 1950s and 1960s.

He won the 1959 Tour de France, the first by a Spanish rider. A natural born climber, he won 11 grand tour stages across his prolific career, and won King of the Mountains jersey in all three grand tours.

Bahamontes grew up during Spain’s Civil War, and turned pro in 1953.

A keen climber, Bahamontes often targeted the climber’s jersey, winning the title six times at the Tour, which stood as a longtime record. At 95, he was the oldest living Tour winner.

Bahamontes also won seven Tour stages, three stages at the Vuelta a España, as well as the climber’s title in 1957 and 1958, and one stage at the Giro d’Italia, with the climber’s jersey in 1958.

He also finished second in the 1957 Vuelta, and second in the 1963 Tour, and third in 1964.

After retiring in 1965, Bahamontes owned a bicycle and motorcycle shop in Toledo, Spain, and was named the best climber in the history of the Tour de France by a panel organized by L’Équipe in 2013.

Federico Bahamontes

Popular on Velo

What’s it like to be an American cyclist living in France? Watch to get professional road cyclist Joe Dombrowski’s view.

Related content from the Outside Network

One way south, mountain bikers react to their first taste of non-alcoholic craft beer, video review: bmc urs 01 two gravel bike, kiel reijnen vuelta video diary: the painful decision to abandon.

2023 Edition

  • Stage winners
  • All the videos

Tour Culture

  • Commitments
  • KEY FIGURES
  • Sporting stakes
  • Maillot Jaune Collection
  • Photos & vidéos

UCI Logo

Femmes du Tour : Niamh Fisher-Black

Open the way for the pros on the key stage of the....

alt img

Discover the Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift 2024...

alt img

Discover the 2024 route

alt img

2023 rankings

jersey

Stage 1 | 08/12 Rotterdam > La Haye

Stage 2 | 08/13 dordrecht > rotterdam, stage 3 | 08/13 rotterdam > rotterdam, stage 4 | 08/14 valkenburg > liège, stage 5 | 08/15 bastogne > amnéville, stage 6 | 08/16 remiremont > morteau, stage 7 | 08/17 champagnole > le grand-bornand, stage 8 | 08/18 le grand-bornand > alpe d'huez, tour culture, femmes du tour - demi vollering (ep.1), tour de france femmes avec zwift challenge, elles arrivent, grand départ rotterdam 2024, our commitments, "maillot jaune" collection, the tour's news, accessories.

Get exclusive information about Le Tour de France Femmes

General Ranking

> Withdrawals

fantasy en

Privacy and cookies policy

Your gdpr rights.

Official games

PRO CYCLING MANAGER 2024 (PC)

2023 Edition

  • Stage winners
  • All the videos

Tour Culture

  • Commitments
  • key figures
  • Sporting Stakes
  • "Maillot Jaune" Collection
  • The jerseys

UCI Logo

  • Intermediate sprint 1
  • Stages victory 0

2019. Equipe continentale Groupama-FDJ

2 e of the fourth stage of the Ronde de l'Isard (Bélesta>Saint-Girons)

4 e of the fourth stage of the Tour de l'Avenir (Mauriac>Espalion)

5 e of the first stage of the Giro Ciclistico della Valle d'Aosta - Mont Blanc (Sainte Foy Tarentaise>Saint Gervais Mont Blanc), of the third stage of the Giro Next Gen (Sesto Fiorentino>Gaiole in Chianti)

6 e of the first stage of the Ronde de l'Isard (Toulouse>Le Mas d'Azil), of the fifth stage of the Tour de Normandie (Alençon>Bagnoles-de-l'Orne), of the first stage of the Tour du Rwanda (Kigali>Kigali)

7 e of the second stage of the Tour du Rwanda (Kigali>Huye)

8 e of the Giro Next Gen, of the fourth stage of the Tour de Normandie (Tilly-sur-Seulles>Argentan)

9 e of the Il Piccolo Lombardia, of the ninth stage of the Giro Next Gen (Agordo>Passo Fedaia)

11 e of the sixth stage of the Giro Next Gen (Aprica>Aprica)

12 e of the fourth stage of the Giro Next Gen (Buonconvento>Monte Amiata)

13 e of the sixth stage of the Tour de Normandie (Gouville-sur-Mer>Martinvast)

14 e of the Ronde de l'Isard, of the second stage of the Alpes Isère Tour (Saint Exupéry Airport>Saint-Pierre-de-Chandieu)

15 e of the third stage of the Alpes Isère Tour (Montanay>Saint-Maurice-l'Exil), of the Le Tour de Bretagne Cycliste

16 e of the Tour de l'Avenir, of the prologue of the Giro Next Gen (Riccione>Riccione), of the Alpes Isère Tour, of the fourth stage of the Alpes Isère Tour (Saint-Maurice-l'Exil>Charvieu-Chavagneux), of the seventh stage of the Le Tour de Bretagne Cycliste (Plounévez-Lochrist>Saint-Pol-de-Léon), of the seventh stage of the Tour de Normandie (Saint-Lô>Caen)

17 e of the prologue of the Giro Ciclistico della Valle d'Aosta - Mont Blanc (Aosta>Aosta)

18 e of the second stage of the Ronde de l'Isard (Salies-du-Salat>Castillon-en-Couserans), of the second stage of the Tour de Normandie (Darnétal>Forges-les-Eaux)

19 e of the third stage of the Ronde de l'Isard (Mirepoix>Quérigut)

20 e of the fifth stage of the Giro Next Gen (Sorbolo Mezzani>Passo Maniva)

22 e of the seventh stage of the Tour de l'Avenir (Grésy-sur-Isere>La Giettaz)

23 e of the fourth stage of the Tour ALSACE (Ottmarsheim>Dannemarie)

24 e of the first stage of the Alpes Isère Tour (Charvieu-Chavagneux>Villefontaine)

25 e of the Grand Prix d'Isbergues - Pas de Calais, of the first stage of the Tour de Normandie (Courseulles-sur-Mer>Le Neubourg)

2020. Groupama - FDJ

15 e of the Tour du Doubs

16 e of the Tour du Limousin-Périgord - Nouvelle Aquitaine

18 e of the Paris - Camembert

19 e of the third stage of the Tour du Limousin-Périgord - Nouvelle Aquitaine (Ussac>Chamberet)

20 e of the second stage of the Tour de l'Ain (Lagnieu>Lélex Monts-Jura)

22 e of the Bretagne Classic - Ouest-France

24 e of the first stage of the Tour du Limousin-Périgord - Nouvelle Aquitaine (Couzeix>Evaux-Les-Bains), of the Tour de l'Ain

2021. Groupama - FDJ

5 e of the eleventh stage of the Giro d'Italia (Perugia>Montalcino)

14 e of the Boucles de l'Aulne - Châteaulin, of the sixth stage of the Volta Ciclista a Catalunya (Tarragona>Mataró)

15 e of the first stage of the Tour de l'Ain (Parc des Oiseaux>Bourg-en-Bresse)

24 e of the second stage of the Tour de l'Ain (Lagnieu>Saint-Vulbas)

2022. Team Arkéa Samsic

7 e of the ninth stage of the La Vuelta Ciclista a España (Villaviciosa>Les Praeres. Nava)

10 e of the Boucles de l'Aulne - Châteaulin

11 e of the Jaén Paraiso Interior

12 e of the seventeenth stage of the La Vuelta Ciclista a España (Aracena>Monasterio de Tentudía)

13 e of the twentieth stage of the La Vuelta Ciclista a España (Moralzarzal>Puerto de Navacerrada)

17 e of the Tour du Finistère

18 e of the Trofeo Ses Salines - Alcudia, of the Cholet - Pays de la Loire

20 e of the second stage of the Volta ao Algarve em Bicicleta (Albufeira>Fóia (Monchique))

22 e of the Faun Drôme Classic, of the nineteenth stage of the La Vuelta Ciclista a España (Talavera de la Reina>Talavera de la Reina)

23 e of the second stage of the Tour de l'Ain (Saint-Vulbas>Lagnieu)

24 e of the seventh stage of the Critérium du Dauphiné (Saint-Chaffrey>Vaujany)

25 e of the Volta ao Algarve em Bicicleta, of the first stage of the Tour de l'Ain (Châtillon-Sur-Chalaronne>Val-Revermont)

2023. Team Arkéa Samsic

9 e of the second stage of the Itzulia Basque Country (Viana>Leitza)

17 e of the Trofeo Calvia

19 e of the Trofeo Ses Salines - Alcudia

23 e of the fourth stage of the Volta ao Algarve em Bicicleta (Albufeira>Alto do Malhão), of the Gran Premio Miguel Indurain

24 e of the first stage of the Itzulia Basque Country (Vitoria-Gasteiz>Labastida)

25 e of the sixth stage of the Itzulia Basque Country (Eibar>Eibar)

All news of S. Guglielmi

tour de france nummer 95

Simon Guglielmi: "It's been a good day"

"When Mathieu Burgaudeau told me “I leave you alone”, I thought it would be a long...

Riders TEAM ARKEA - SAMSIC

born on 28/10/1991

J. BIERMANS

born on 30/10/1995

C. CHAMPOUSSIN

born on 29/05/1998

A. DELAPLACE

born on 11/09/1989

S. GUGLIELMI

born on 01/07/1997

born on 19/07/1999

born on 15/02/1998

born on 19/07/1986

Receive exclusive news about the Tour

Logo

Accreditations

Privacy policy, your gdpr rights.

  • Tour de France
  • Giro d'Italia
  • La Vuelta ciclista a España
  • World Championships
  • Amstel Gold Race
  • Milano-Sanremo
  • Tirreno-Adriatico
  • Liège-Bastogne-Liège
  • Il Lombardia
  • La Flèche Wallonne
  • Paris - Nice
  • Paris-Roubaix
  • Volta Ciclista a Catalunya
  • Critérium du Dauphiné
  • Tour des Flandres
  • Gent-Wevelgem in Flanders Fields
  • Clásica Ciclista San Sebastián
  • INEOS Grenadiers
  • Groupama - FDJ
  • EF Education-EasyPost
  • Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale Team
  • BORA - hansgrohe
  • Bahrain - Victorious
  • Astana Qazaqstan Team
  • Intermarché - Wanty
  • Lidl - Trek
  • Movistar Team
  • Soudal - Quick Step
  • Team dsm-firmenich PostNL
  • Team Jayco AlUla
  • Team Visma | Lease a Bike
  • UAE Team Emirates
  • Arkéa - B&B Hotels
  • Alpecin-Deceuninck
  • Grand tours
  • Countdown to 3 billion pageviews
  • Favorite500
  • Profile Score
  • Stage winners
  • All stage profiles
  • Race palmares
  • Complementary results
  • Finish photo
  • Contribute info
  • Contribute results
  • Contribute site(s)
  • Results - Results
  • Info - Info
  • Live - Live
  • Game - Game
  • Stats - Stats
  • More - More
  •   »  
  • Stage 2 (TTT)

Race information

tour de france nummer 95

  • Date: 02 July 1989
  • Start time: -
  • Avg. speed winner: 51.3 km/h
  • Race category: ME - Men Elite
  • Distance: 46 km
  • Points scale:
  • Parcours type:
  • ProfileScore: 17
  • Vert. meters: 433
  • Departure: Luxembourg
  • Arrival: Luxembourg
  • Race ranking: 0
  • Startlist quality score: 1849
  • Avg. temperature:

Grand Tours

  • Vuelta a España

Major Tours

  • Volta a Catalunya
  • Tour de Romandie
  • Tour de Suisse
  • Itzulia Basque Country
  • Milano-SanRemo
  • Ronde van Vlaanderen

Championships

  • European championships

Top classics

  • Omloop Het Nieuwsblad
  • Strade Bianche
  • Gent-Wevelgem
  • Dwars door Vlaanderen
  • Eschborn-Frankfurt
  • San Sebastian
  • Bretagne Classic
  • GP Montréal

Popular riders

  • Tadej Pogačar
  • Wout van Aert
  • Remco Evenepoel
  • Jonas Vingegaard
  • Mathieu van der Poel
  • Mads Pedersen
  • Primoz Roglic
  • Demi Vollering
  • Lotte Kopecky
  • Katarzyna Niewiadoma
  • PCS ranking
  • UCI World Ranking
  • Points per age
  • Latest injuries
  • Youngest riders
  • Grand tour statistics
  • Monument classics
  • Latest transfers
  • Favorite 500
  • Points scales
  • Profile scores
  • Reset password
  • Cookie consent

About ProCyclingStats

  • Cookie policy
  • Contributions
  • Pageload 0.0627s

IMAGES

  1. Tour De France `95

    tour de france nummer 95

  2. Wiggins makes it two out of two for Sky in Romandie

    tour de france nummer 95

  3. Cyclisme Légende on Instagram: “📊 TOUR DE FRANCE 1996

    tour de france nummer 95

  4. Miguel Indurain Time Trial Tour de France 1995 Photo

    tour de france nummer 95

  5. Celia Munoz: Jonas Vingegaard Tour De France Nummer

    tour de france nummer 95

  6. Celia Munoz: Jonas Vingegaard Tour De France Nummer

    tour de france nummer 95

VIDEO

  1. Tour de France 1989, stage 9

  2. Unboxing Siegerrad Tour de France 96 97

  3. TOUR de FRANCE Symfonie Orkest Eindhoven

  4. WielerFlits' Tour de France-pooltips 2017

  5. Tour De France 1995 8th Stage C4

  6. Tour De France 1995 6th Stage C4

COMMENTS

  1. 1995 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.

  2. 1995 Tour de France results by BikeRaceInfo

    1995 Tour de France quick facts. The 1995 Tour had 20 stages plus a prologue that totaled 3,635 kilometers. It was ridden at an average speed of 39.193 km/hr. There were 189 starters (21 9-member teams) and 115 classified finishers. This was Miguel Indurain's fifth Tour victory, allowing him to join Anquetil, Merckx and Hinault in the 5-time ...

  3. List of Tour de France general classification winners

    The Tour de France is an annual road bicycle race held over 23 days in July. Established in 1903 by newspaper L'Auto, the Tour is the best-known and most prestigious of cycling's three "Grand Tours"; the others are the Giro d'Italia and the Vuelta a España. The race usually covers approximately 3,500 kilometres (2,200 mi), passing through France and neighbouring countries such as Belgium.

  4. Tour de France 1995 Stage 20 results

    Miguel Indurain is the winner of Tour de France 1995, before Alex Zülle and Bjarne Riis. Djamolidine Abduzhaparov is the winner of the final stage.

  5. History of the Tour de France by numbers

    Victories by nation France: 36 Belgium: 18 Spain: 13 USA: 10 Italy: 9 Luxembourg: 5 Holland and Switzerland: 2 Ireland, Denmark, Germany, Australia: 1. Smallest winning margins (since 1947) 8 ...

  6. Startlist for Tour de France 1995

    Competing teams and riders for Tour de France 1995. Top competitors are Laurent Jalabert, Laurent Jalabert and Laurent Jalabert.

  7. 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 Aki-Gipiemme, the first team in ...

  8. Tour de France 1995 Stage 9 results

    Alex Zülle is the winner of Tour de France 1995 Stage 9, before Miguel Indurain and Pavel Tonkov. Miguel Indurain was leader in GC. ... 95: Sprint: FIDANZA Giovanni Polti - Granarolo - Santini. 29: Polti - Granarolo - Santini,, 34:50. 107: 86 +54:52: 99: GC: SCIREA Mario Polti - Granarolo - Santini. 30:

  9. Official website of Tour de France 2024

    Tour de France 2024 - Official site of the famed race from the Tour de France. Includes route, riders, teams, and coverage of past Tours. Club 2024 route 2024 Teams 2023 Edition Rankings Stage winners All the videos. Grands départs Tour Culture news ...

  10. Tour de France

    Four riders have won five Tours each: Jacques Anquetil of France (1957 and 1961-64), Eddy Merckx of Belgium (1969-72 and 1974), Bernard Hinault of France (1978-79, 1981-82, and 1985), and Miguel Indurain of Spain (1991-95). A list of Tour de France winners is provided in the table. Special 67% offer for students!

  11. "The Greatest Tour de France Climber of All Time" Has Died at Age 95

    Keystone-France // Getty Images. Federico Bahamontes, who was the first Spanish rider ever to win the Tour de France, died Tuesday at the age of 95. "It is with deep sorrow that we mourn the ...

  12. Tour de France

    The Tour de France (French pronunciation: [tuʁ də fʁɑ̃s]; English: Tour of France) is an annual men's multiple-stage bicycle race held primarily in France. It is the oldest of the three Grand Tours (the Tour, the Giro d'Italia, and the Vuelta a España) and is generally considered the most prestigious.. The race was first organized in 1903 to increase sales for the newspaper L'Auto and ...

  13. Tour de France 1995 Stage 12 results

    Laurent Jalabert is the winner of Tour de France 1995 Stage 12, before Massimo Podenzana and Dario Bottaro. Miguel Indurain was leader in GC.

  14. Federico Bahamontes, Spain's first Tour de France winner, dies at 95

    Download the app . Federico Bahamontes, the pure climber who became the first rider from Spain to win the Tour de France, died Tuesday. He was 95. Born in 1928, the "Eagle of Toledo" raced against some of the peloton's biggest names in the Tour golden era of the 1950s and 1960s. He won the 1959 Tour de France, the first by a Spanish rider.

  15. The 12 most famous mountain passes of Le Tour de France

    The Col du Mollard is a mountain pass in the French Alps. It is located in the Savoie department, between the villages of Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne and Mont-de-Lans. The col du Mollard is one of the most famous mountain passes of Le Tour de France because it has been used many times in the race, most recently in 2013.

  16. Official website

    Tour de France Femmes 2024 - Official site of the race from the Tour de France Femmes. Includes route, riders, teams, and coverage of past Tours. Club 2024 route 2023 Edition Rankings Stage winners All the videos. Tour Culture News Commitments KEY FIGURES ...

  17. List of starters

    Official games. PRO CYCLING MANAGER 2024 (PC) TOUR DE FRANCE 2024 - VIDEO GAMES (PC, XBOX ONE, PS4 & PS5) Fantasy by Tissot. Cycling Legends (iOS, Android) - Official Mobile Game. Other events.

  18. Tour de France 1995 Stage 15 results

    Richard Virenque is the winner of Tour de France 1995 Stage 15, before Claudio Chiappucci and Hernan Buenahora. Miguel Indurain was leader in GC. ... 95: Sprint: FIDANZA Giovanni Polti - Granarolo - Santini. 29: Polti - Granarolo - Santini,, 35:27. 108: 80 +2:38:29: 13: Classic: BOTTARO Dario Gewiss - Ballan. 28: Gewiss - Ballan,, 35:27. 109: 116

  19. Tour de France records and statistics

    Appearances. Between 1920 and 1985, Jules Deloffre (1885 - 1963) was the record holder for the highest number of Tour de France participations, with 14, and was sole holder of this record until 1966 with the fourteenth and last participation of André Darrigade. The record for most the appearances as of 2021 is held by Sylvain Chavanel, with 18. George Hincapie had held the mark for the most ...

  20. Tour de France

    Tour de France (fransk: Le Tour de France; dansk: Frankrig Rundt, nogle gange omtalt som "touren") ... Cadel Evans blev nummer 2, og Contadors holdkammerat Levi Leipheimer blev nummer 3. 2008 - 95. udgave af Touren blev vundet af spanske Carlos Sastre fra det danske hold Team CSC foran australske Cadel Evans. Sidste års vinder Alberto ...

  21. Tour de France 1995 Stage 5 results

    Jeroen Blijlevens is the winner of Tour de France 1995 Stage 5, before Ján Svorada and Erik Zabel. Ivan Gotti was leader in GC.

  22. Profil of Simon GUGLIELMI

    2023. Team Arkéa Samsic. 9 e of the second stage of the Itzulia Basque Country (Viana>Leitza) 17 e of the Trofeo Calvia. 19 e of the Trofeo Ses Salines - Alcudia. 23 e of the fourth stage of the Volta ao Algarve em Bicicleta (Albufeira>Alto do Malhão), of the Gran Premio Miguel Indurain. 24 e of the first stage of the Itzulia Basque Country ...

  23. Tour de France 1989 Stage 2 (TTT) results

    Thierry Marie is the winner of Tour de France 1989 Stage 2 (TTT), before Dominique Garde and Bjarne Riis. Acácio da Silva was leader in GC.