Paris, France - 20th October, 2015.
1. 00:00 Wide pan from media to riders in audience
2. 00:06 Close of defending champion Chris Froome
3. 00:11 Mid of riders
4. 00:15 Wide pan of conference hall
5. 00:24 SOUNDBITE: (English) Christopher Froome, 2013 and 2015 Tour de France champion
"I think it's, it's a great parkour (course) for the next year's Tour de France. I think it really does challenge in every aspect of cycling. The time trials, the mountains.... tricky technical descent also. So, I mean it really is going to take a complete cyclist to win next year's Tour de France."
6. 00:47 Various of Tour de France route presentation
7. 01:05 Mid of Christian Prudhomme, Tour de France director, talking to journalists
8. 01:09 SOUNDBITE: (French) Christian Prudhomme, Tour de France director:
"It is true that for those who feel physically strong but that are not too sure about their nerves, who are afraid that the pressure (of the race) can drop down, having a major stage starting from Wednesday (day five), well that will take off the pressure that they feel because they will be less together with others, because the differences between riders will be already established. I believe that this Tour is for those who dare."
9. 01:31 Various of presentation
10. 01:42 SOUNDBITE: (French) Christian Prudhomme, Tour de France director :
"Our will was that everything can be done at the last moment... with the mountain stage just a day before the end at Champs Elysees. We already did it couple of times, but this is the first time you will have a mountain peak and a descent (in the same stage). I insist that one should be good in climbing but also in descents in the incoming Tour de France."
11. 02:07 Various of riders on stage
12. 02:25 SOUNDBITE: (English) Mark Cavendish, winner of 26 Tour de France stages
"It's a grand tour, it always favours someone who can climb and time trial. I think the two long time trials will be uphill time trial and the hard one will favour an all-rounder really, like a grand tour contender. It's simple as, it's the greatest bike race in the World. As a sprinter, it's a very hard race. (It) Provides six opportunities for a sprint and apart from that it's really difficult for us."
13. 02:53 Mid of Thibault Pinot being interviewed
14. SOUNDBITE: (French) Thibault Pinot, 2014 Tour de France top young rider
"I am really happy with the parkour (course). I think that climbers will take pleasure with two time trials that are really difficult, but there is less danger than the last year. I think it will be nice."
15. 03:09 Wide of presentation.
Reaction after the route for the 2016 Tour de France was unveiled in Paris on Tuesday (20th October).
SCRIPTING INFORMATION:
Chris Froome fancies his chances of defending the Tour de France title on a route that should suit his all-around riding skills.
Two individual time trials and 28 tough climbs will be on the 2016 Tour de France's 3,519-kilometre (2,186-mile) route, which was revealed in France on Tuesday.
Froome, who also won in 2013, is strong both on climbs and in individual time trials, making him an early favourite for 2016.
An ascent of Mont Ventoux in Provence on Bastille Day (14th July) will test the best climbers.
Froome was the stage winner when the Tour last scaled the Ventoux's barren, 1,909-metre (6,263-feet) peak in 2013 and he will be eyeing that stage for another victory.
The Mont-Saint-Michel, a Benedictine abbey perched on a rock off the Normandy coast, will provide a picture-postcard start for the race.
The first stage ends at Utah Beach, where Allied troops landed on D-Day in 1944.
The first taste of the mountains will come on stage five, in the Massif Central.
From there, there will be little respite on the next 15 stages before the last ride into Paris.
The first of the time trial on stage 13, a day after the Ventoux ascent, combines two short climbs, long flats and a tricky descent over 37 kilometres (23 miles).
Riders hoping to win time-trial gold the following month at the Olympics Games in Rio de Janeiro will be able to use that tough course to gauge their form.
After the Pyrenees, where the Tour will dip into Spain and Andorra, the final placings will be decided in the Alps and neighbouring Switzerland before the finish in Paris on 24th of July.