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Tour de France 2018 to start on the Passage du Gois

Tour organizers unveiled the first three stages of the 2018 route

Tour de France
Kenzo Tribouillard, AFP/Getty Images
This file photo taken on July 24, 2016 shows Great Britain’s Christopher Froome (fourth from right), wearing the overall leader’s yellow jersey riding in the pack on the Champs-Elysees avenue decorated with French national flag near the Arc de Triomphe during the 113-km 21st and last stage of the 103rd edition of the Tour de France cycling race on between Chantilly and Paris Champs-Elysees.
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PARIS — Riders in the 2018 Tour de France will set off from the Passage du Gois, a causeway that Atlantic Ocean tides cover twice a day.

With this year’s race set to start in the German city of Dusseldorf, cycling’s biggest event will return home for its “Grand Depart” in 2018.

Tour organizers unveiled the first three stages of the 2018 route, which will start in the western Pays de La Loire region on June 30.

Stage 1 will take the peloton on a 195-kilometer ride from Noirmoutier-en-l’Ile to Fontenay-le-Comte.

Sprinters will have a chance to grab the yellow jersey the next day between Mouilleron-Saint-Germain and La Roche-sur-Yon, a town that will host its first stage finish since 1938.

Stage 3 will be a 35-kilometer team time trial in Cholet, and Stage 4 will start from the posh sea resort of La Baule, with the peloton heading north. The remainder of the route is to be announced in October at the official race presentation.

The Passage du Gois featured in the 2011 race.

The Gois is a four-kilometer road flooded by tide twice a day, linking the island of Noirmoutier to the mainland, and has contributed to race lore. In 1999, a handful of Tour favorites had their victory hopes ended in a massive crash on the Gois, which was still covered by the sea.

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