Talk:Alpe d'Huez

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[edit] old comments

The TdF website states that the grade is 7.9%, not 8.1% as in the article. "Km 187 - L'ALPE-D'HUEZ - 13.8 km climb to 7.9 % - H Category" (http://www.letour.com/2006/TDF/LIVE/us/1500/dprofil.html) Anyone care to comment. Otherwise, I'll chnage the article.

The pages for Le Tour (and other similar pages, like the World Cycling Championships) list winners in chronological order, i.e., oldest to most recent. Any particular reason this page is backwards? (It confused me for a minute.) (Is there any Wikipedia guideline for this sort of thing?)

[edit] Conflicting data about Pantani's record.

The text says that Pantani's record is 37'35", but the "fastest ascent" table claims 36'50". Which is correct?

I'm not actually sure...it also says Pantani's record is one second better than Lance Armstrong's 37'36" but the tables never mention anything about a 37'35" (they do mention 37'15").

-Later Edit- However, I have found this source: http://www.gastrobiking.com/region/alpe_dhuez.html

The climb has been timed since 1994 so earlier times are not available. From 1994 to 1997 the climb was timed from a point 14.5km from the finish. Since 1999 a photo-finish system was used from 14km to the finish. These times are all taken from 13.8km from the summit ie. from the corner which marks the start of the climb. Other timings have also been taken from the road junction approximately 700m from the start of the climb.

Apparently, certain times have been corrected to be from 13.8km from the finish. I will put this in the article.

Also see cyclingnews.com report on 2004 TdF: http://www.cyclingnews.com/road/2004/tour04/?id=results/stage16 Note: Armstrong's time over the 13.8 km of climbing (excluding the 1.7 km of flat at the start) was 37'36, one second slower than Marco Pantani's "official" record of 37'35 set in 1997. But Pantani's time was actually 36'55 when measured from the start of the climb (as Armstrong was today). Pantani also rode 36'50 for the climb in 1995, which remains the best performance up l'Alpe d'Huez. RosinDebow 03:14, 7 August 2006 (UTC)

I've added another para which I hope adds additional information to the discussion, as well as the link to the Cycling News story. GuyWR

The links you guys provide have conflictive data. Pantani's best performance over the 13.8 km of climbing was in 1997 (37:35). I have just checked several cycling magazines from the time as well as videos and the final timings of other riders finishing after the winners. I have therefore updated the table which I think is now 99% correct. For example Pantani rode 38:04 in 1995, Indurain and Zulle who finished 2nd and 3rd respectively arrived 1:24 minutes later, therefore their climbing times were 39:28. I did the same for other years.

- The table looks good, but might be in need of an update already. Procycling mag, Jan 2007, lists the following times from the 2006 stage of the Tour. Frank Schleck: 40'46"; Floyd Landis and Andreas Kloden: 38'36". GuyWR

I had added Floyd Landis at 38'34" and Andreas Kloden at 38'35" which was from the July 19th, 2006 edition of l'Equipe -- I assume that the TdF doesn't offer official times.. these are probably obtained unofficially from individuals at various reporting angencies. It should also be noted that this table is VERY incomplete. scotts 21:42, 15 March 2007 (UTC)
I agree that the table is very incomplete - a bunch of times from several sources and some potentially dubious historical numbers (where did Coppi's time come from, for example?). I wonder, though, if we're getting close at all; or, would it be better represented as a 'selection of times for the climb' rather than a ranking of the supposed fastest? GuyWR

I made some further changes to the table, based on an article in the UK magazine Procycling (procycling.com) - see my note above - that also includes historical times over the last 20 years. I therefore added some new times at the bottom of the table, which appear plausible given the individuals and the eras. I also added Jose Azevedo, only 4" slower than Kloden in 2004; the problem with this 'count back' approach for the ITT is that it assumes all the riders did the same time for the first stretch from Bourg d'Oisans to the base of the climb (which is a reasonable assumption given the short distance), so I've left it at 'The Ace' for now and not added any others. GuyWR

"First , sorry about my bad english. The statistics are completely wrong! Have you ever timed the races yourselves!? I timed the performance of the 1997 alp d`huez today from a live recording. From the start of the climb, from the curve were the climb beginns to the finishline of the Tour de France Pantanis time was 36.42. Ullrichs time was 37.28. Ullrich is the second fastest ever on the climb. Not Armstrong. Armstrongs best times from the start of the climb were 37.36 and 38.01.The times from Matt Rendells book are bullshit. First, they were obviously not timed from the start of the climb. Second they were not even timed from the same place. Pantani was equally fast in 1995 as in 1997 and its impossible he was that much slower in 95 between the roadjunction or wereever they started the clock to the actual start of the climb.if you have doubts why dont you time the performances yourselves! my english is not good enough.For accurate statistics(more or less)http://grimpee.alpe.9online.fr/references.html And stop quoting Ligett!, Fredrik T " —Preceding unsigned comment added by 84.244.209.92 (talk) 02:25, 10 November 2007 (UTC)

I'm not surprised if there are problems with the timings, but I don't think it is possible to accurately time from a television broadcast. There is no way to consistently and accurately measure the time when each rider passes over the starting point and the finish line without having timing equipment at the site, and there might be edits or delays even in a live broadcast. Except for the ITT, the climb was not officially timed, so in my opinion having an accurate table is an exercise in futility, and an example of the kind of statistics that don't belong in Wikipedia. The table is a mish mash of times from different sources and measured at different locations and so it is not verifiable at all. I propose replacing the table with a sentence stating what the fastest ascent was, which is verifiable in several places (Pantani at 37'35" in 1997). RosinDebow 05:37, 10 November 2007 (UTC)

" Regarding the 1997 television broadcast: It shows the peloton as it approaches bourgh d´oisans(village at the foot of the climb) it shows the peloton as it goes through the town, as it turns left from the junction a few hundred meters from the climb. It shows exactly when they hit the climb and from then on the leading riders all the way to the finish. There might be delays when they show Casagrande for example, halfway up, but definetly not at the start or at the finish of the climb. Pantanis time was about 36.42-36.43. Dont know the circumstances around the timing 1994-1997 or the so called "record" of 37.35, but if it stands as a record and not the actual fastest time, the reason can only be they had some sort of official, electronic timing from some point before the climb. The way to verifie this is contacting those responsible for the timing, and not some sport journalist on the internet(who might even have got it from Wikipedia). When done, my sugestion is to state the official "record" and the circumstces surrounding it together with the fastest time of the actual climb,and info of how this was obtained(manual timing). For sure there is info. on the internet of how Armstrong was just 1 second shy of the record of Pantani and so on, but almost everything written is unfortunately incorrect. The list of fastest ascents on this site is just unacceptable. You cant have times measured from different starting points on the same list. http://grimpee.alpe.9online.fr/references.html Fredrik T" —Preceding unsigned comment added by 84.244.209.92 (talk) 12:09, 10 November 2007 (UTC)

I added the grimpee link and some additional comments. Anyone is free to remove the table. It would be a shame to lose all that information, so perhaps the best approach would be to have a list of times, without the ranking - but in order - with an explanation as to the difficulty in making comparisons. GuyWR

GuyWR, thanks for your efforts in improving the article. But I think that the times as well as the ranking are problematic - given that the circumstances are different, they should not appear in the same table, and reconciling data from different sources could be considered original research (see Synthesis). I propose moving the table to this Talk page instead of deleting it entirely. RosinDebow (talk) 00:02, 6 December 2007 (UTC)

I'd hate to see the table disappear in its entirety given that it's a good record of times, however rough they may be. I'd have no objections to it being shifted. We might want to replace it with a statement regarding the record - with the different times from different sources, which are already on the page. I'll chip in at some point, I'm sure. Until then, good luck! GuyWR —Preceding comment was added at 05:33, 6 December 2007 (UTC)

Due to popular demand, the table is now here. I've added some text as a replacement and I'll look forward to subsequent edits. Cheers. GuyWR

Rank Time Name Year Country
1 37' 35" Marco Pantani 1997 Flag of Italy Italy
2* 37' 36" Lance Armstrong 2004 Flag of the United States United States
3 38' 00" Marco Pantani 1994 Flag of Italy Italy
4 38' 01" Lance Armstrong 2001 Flag of the United States United States
5 38' 04" Marco Pantani 1995 Flag of Italy Italy
6 38' 23" Jan Ullrich 1997 Flag of Germany Germany
7 38' 34" Floyd Landis 2006 Flag of the United States United States
8 38' 35" Andreas Kloden 2006 Flag of Germany Germany
9* 38' 37" Jan Ullrich 2004 Flag of Germany Germany
10 39' 02" Richard Virenque 1997 Flag of France France
11 39' 06" Iban Mayo 2003 Flag of Spain Spain
12* 39' 17" Andreas Klöden 2004 Flag of Germany Germany
13* 39' 21" Jose Azevedo 2004 Flag of Portugal Portugal
14 39' 28" Miguel Indurain 1995 Flag of Spain Spain
15 39' 28" Alex Zülle 1995 Flag of Switzerland Switzerland
16 39' 30" Bjarne Riis 1995 Flag of Denmark Denmark
17 39' 44" Gianni Bugno 1991 Flag of Italy Italy
18 39' 45" Miguel Indurain 1991 Flag of Spain Spain
19 40' 00" Jan Ullrich 2001 Flag of Germany Germany
20 40' 46" Fränk Schleck 2006 Flag of Luxembourg Luxembourg
21 40' 51" Alexander Vinokourov 2003 Flag of Kazakhstan Kazakhstan
22 41' 18" Lance Armstrong 2003 Flag of the United States United States
23 41' 50" Laurent Fignon 1989 Flag of France France
24 41' 50" Luis Herrera 1986 Flag of Colombia Colombia
25 42' 15" Pedro Delgado 1989 Flag of Spain Spain
26 45' 20" Gert-Jan Theunisse 1989 Flag of the Netherlands Netherlands
27 45' 22" Fausto Coppi 1952 Flag of Italy Italy
28 48' 00" Greg Lemond 1986 Flag of the United States United States
29 48' 00" Bernard Hinault 1986 Flag of France France

*ITT Stage in 2004.

[edit] Basque Rider

Is it really fair to characterize Iban Mayo as a Basque rider? The American riders and not referred to by their ethnic origin. Shouldn't he just be called Spanish for these purposes? User: Nlsanand

Evito 05:53, 7 June 2006 (UTC)

I have made the change, as no one has spoken. 1 August, 2006. User: Nlsanand

I kind of think that Iban Mayo would prefer to think of himself as Basque. I mean, Basque are an nation inside of a nation-state with a separate identity. I think the comparison to American riders is actually not that relevant. Jul 13 2007 User: JonnyDomestik

[edit] dutch mountain

i wonder if the title "dutch mountain" is at all relevant to this article regardless of the amount of dutch cyclists that actually won the tour the France etappe on this mountain, the fact remains that only the dutch call it the dutch mountain, based on some arrogant notion that becaues "we call it like that in holland, so it's a fact and should be in the article , cause after all ,we won there more then others" big deal

you will not hear French folks , let alone folks that actually live on the mountain call it "the dutch mountain"

furthermore, Alpe d'Huez is a lot more then simply a mountain stage of the tour de FRance, it's also a ski resort and so on...

and let's face it , everybody knows that holland is flat as a pancake so a dutch mountain ... in their dreams

Please, there's no need to attack the Dutch. Here's a couple of non-Dutch sites that mentions Dutch Mountain: [1] [2] [3]. I'm reverting your edit for these reasons. --Turbothy 11:07, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
Oh, by the way - highest point in Denmark is only half as high as the highest point in the Netherlands, and Michael Rasmussen wins the polka dot jersey for the second consecutive year now, so clearly nationality has no impact on whether you can ride a bike up a mountain. --Turbothy 11:07, 20 July 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Ski hill details?

The article starts by claiming that the Alpe is a 1850 m ski hill. Looking at the image one cannot help but be confused, as it looks like the slope in the background is perhaps 150 m at most. I noticed later on the page that the BOTTOM of the hill is at 1850 m... So is the ski area of the hill actually much smaller? If so, this should be what appears in the intro! Maury

the whole mountain is a ski resort, it links up with the "Les Deux Alpes" resort

the article focusses to much on cycling and as such the pic show roads , not ski resorts just do an image search on google for "alpe d'huez ski" ,and you'll see

it's actually one of the better places to go skiing in france, if you can go outside the common holidays...


the pic in the article is basically the top of the mountain that's allready high up in the mountain , during winter that area is white, that road isn't accessible then either

[edit] Bends named after riders?

Aren't some of the bends named after riders? I know one of them is named after Joaquim Agostinho but what about the rest? Wouldn't it be an interesting addition to the article? Orta 01:33, 19 August 2006 (UTC)

I added this information to the table of winners. Doctormatt 23:53, 27 October 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Map of the climb

The map of the climb is actually inaccurate, as it shows the final corners going to the right above Huez, when they should go to the left and enter the town of Alpe d'Huez from the left of the picture. GuyWR

I was just watching the 1997 Alpe d'Huez and Pantani comes from the right of the screen which is a left turn. The map looks good to me. If this is solved then can you remove this conversation? July 13 User:JonnyDomestik.

Correct me if I'm wrong, but the picture with the map looks like a scan of a postcard, in which case it would be a copyright violation and doesn't belong on in Wikipedia at all. Someone want to get in a plane and take an original photo? RosinDebow 12:07, 14 July 2007 (UTC)

I have just visited the equivalent French wikipedia page - the route shown there is correct. New to wikipedia - can someone copy the correction to teh english language version? The approach is from the left of town as the photo is shown - when you watch race coverage, there is a flat bit as they accelarate across town left to right, but not until they are in the buildings. sorry, new to this so don't know how to take action, only to raise the issue!—Preceding unsigned comment added by trimike (talk • contribs)

The image at the french article appears to be a "corrected" version of the image from this article: you can see some of yellow line remains, though decolored a bit. It looks terrible. Both articles need a better, correct image. (p.s. remember to sign your comments with four tildes (~~~~)) Doctormatt 02:43, 27 July 2007 (UTC)

The route does indeed go through the town (I watched it in 2006). Velonews has a good map, but I don't think it can be poached for here. [4] Anyway, I just added the map from the French site. GuyWR

[edit] List of times for climb

Some times from the 2004 ITT still need to be added to the table. 136 riders finished inside 48 minutes in 2004.

[edit] WikiProject class rating

This article was automatically assessed because at least one article was rated and this bot brought all the other ratings up to at least that level. BetacommandBot 02:13, 27 August 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Alpe d'HuZes

I moved this text from the article to here since it is not pertinent to the Tour de France section but may be worthwhile RosinDebow (talk) 16:39, 8 December 2007 (UTC)

Since 2006 some Dutch riders are climbing the Alpe d'Huez six times a dag, for the action 'Alpe d'huZes'Stichting Alpe d'HuZes. They collect money with this action for the fight against cancer.