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  • If you look closely at this pack of riders in the Tour de France, you'll see

  • some of the best cyclists in the world. They're here in the back.

  • They're keeping up but also resting while their teammates in the front do most of the work.

  • It's a technique called drafting and it's what helps them survive the

  • three-week race around France. But drafting only really makes a difference

  • on these parts of the route: the long flat and hilly stages. Eventually these

  • riders reach stages where they won't be able to rely on others. They have to rely

  • on their own strength and endurance to win the race. That happens here on the

  • climbs. They're the most brutal and exciting parts of the race and they're

  • what makes the Tour de France the most famous bike ride in the world...

  • The Tour de France began as a desperate ploy to sell more copies of the sports

  • newspaper, L'Auto. The paper was struggling, so 1903 its editor, Henri Desgranges

  • organized a 19 day, 2,400 kilometer bike race around the country.

  • It went on to become such a success that L'Auto made it an annual event. Year after

  • year they added new routes to make the tour more challenging and also more

  • interesting for people to follow. By 1908, L'Auto's sales had more than doubled. Then

  • in 1910, one of Desgranges' writers, Alphonse Steines, suggested adding a new

  • twist to the route: the Tourmalet. It was a brutal 19 kilometer uphill climb

  • ascending 1400 meters to the summit. To see if this was even possible

  • Steines jumped in his car to make the climb. He drove up, but his car got stuck

  • in the snow at the top, he suffered from hypothermia and nearly

  • died. But nonetheless he sent a telegram saying: Tourmalet crossed. Very good road.

  • perfectly passable. So the Tourmalet made its debut in the 1910 Tour. French

  • cyclist Octave Lapize was the first to make the climb successfully. But he had

  • to walk up some parts and famously called officials assassins when he

  • reached the summit. But he went on to win the whole tour and his statue was placed

  • at the top of the Tourmalet. Since then, climbs became a staple of the Tour de

  • France. This year the route is made up of 21 stages over 23 days. It features 30

  • major climbs; seven of them are in the tour's most difficult category.

  • Including the Tourmalet, which is part of the event for the 86th time. More than

  • any other climb in the Tour's history. These climbs are where the tour is

  • ultimately won or lost. These are the long, flat, and hilly stages that are

  • usually about 200 kilometers long. Here cyclists ride together in a

  • formation, called a peloton. It allows cyclists to save energy by sitting

  • behind another rider or drafting. At high speeds, riders use most of their energy

  • to pedal against wind resistance. But when a rider stays close behind another,

  • they're sheltered from much of that. So, pedaling becomes much easier and they

  • can keep up with the front riders. The way to measure this is to look at how

  • much power a cyclist generates. Here at the front of the peloton, a Tour de

  • France rider will generate at least 300 watts of power. I jumped on a bike to see

  • what that feels like and just two kilometers holding 300 watts was really

  • really hard. By comparison when a rider is behind the lead in the peloton, they

  • only need to generate about 240 watts to move at the same speed. Holding 240 watts

  • for two kilometers felt remarkably easier. So even though these two might

  • finish a 200 kilometer flat stage at the same time, one is going to be way less

  • tired than the other. That's why you see some of the tour's best riders here in

  • the back. They're drafting up their teammates whose job it is to do the hard

  • work now so that the team's best cyclist is rested for the most difficult part;

  • the mountains. Where they'll have to be on their own.

  • When the peloton starts pedaling uphill, it slows down. At this stage the race is

  • less about fighting wind resistance and more about gravity, which affects all

  • riders the same way in the peloton. So, now every rider in the front and the

  • back needs to generate an extraordinary amount of power to keep up pace. In 2010

  • for instance, Danish cyclist Chris Anker Sorensen made it to the front of the

  • pack on the Tourmalet climb. "Look at the face on Chris Anker Sorenesen. Dishing out the

  • pain at the front end. As the lead, he dictated the pace of the whole group.

  • This chart shows his power output on the final climb. He averaged 415 watts for

  • more than 11 minutes. "...face of Chris Anker Sorensen now, really dishing out the pain.

  • And around here he peaked at an incredible 590 watts. "magnificent riding by

  • Chris Anker Sorenson, but how long can he keep this up? "Now look at American cyclist

  • Chris Horner. Even though he was several positions behind Sorenson, his power

  • output was almost the same. The faster Sorenson climbed, the harder it was for

  • the rest of the peloton to keep up. And so the formation started to break up as

  • weaker riders fell behind. This is the moment in the race when the tour's best

  • riders switch from drafting to relying on their own strength to get ahead.

  • Andy Schleck has finally attacked and Alberto Contador has gone with him.

  • The race is breaking up behind them like two of the best riders here:

  • Luxembourgian Andy Schleck and Spaniard Alberto Contador, who were coasting in the back

  • of the peloton during the long flat stages. But here they are halfway up the

  • Tourmalet, breaking away for the win. each likely generating well over 400 watts

  • for the final eight kilometers. Contador in the yellow jersey, was the overall

  • Tour de France leader but only by eight seconds. In second place was Schleck, who

  • would try and lose him on this climb.

  • "Andy Schleck is riding like a man possessed"

  • It was neck-and-neck to the very top...

  • It's Schleck on the right. Contador! Schleck wins! Contador takes second!

  • Schleck edged Contador by a hair at the top of the Tourmalet to win the stage. But since

  • he didn't lose him, Contador kept his overall lead and went

  • on to win the Tour de France. This kind of drama is only possible in the

  • mountains and this year's route makes climbs particularly important.

  • This year's Tour is being called the highest in history because of how many climbs

  • there are over the course of three weeks. Just one day features seven climbs. Even

  • after more than two weeks in the race, riders climb to 2,770 meters

  • above sea level where the thin air makes climbing even harder.

  • That's what makes the Tour de France the most grueling and

  • prestigious race in this sport. The winner isn't simply the strongest rider

  • but the one who endures the most pain and ultimately has what it takes to

  • conquer the mountains.

If you look closely at this pack of riders in the Tour de France, you'll see

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