Palais des Congres, Paris, France. 25th October 2018.
1. 00:00 Wide of cyclists walking on stage
2. 00:04 Mark Cavendish on stage
3. 00:10 Christopher Froome on stage
4. 00:19 Geraint Thomas on stage
5. 00:30 Froome and Thomas going back to their seats
6. 00:40 Geraint Thomas
7. 00:43 Christopher Froome
8. 00:47 Julian Alaphilippe
9. 00:51 Mark Cavendish
10. 00:57 Primoz Roglic
11. 01:01 Five-time Tour de France winners Bernard Hinault, Eddy Merckx, and Miguel Indurain, Raymond Poulidor, French former professional bicycle racer known as "The Eternal Second", and Tour de France director Christian Prudhomme
(UPSOUND Raymond Poulidor "Between us four we have won 15 Tour de France")
12. 01:09 Pan of Bernard Hinault, Eddy Merckx, Miguel Indurain, Raymond Poulidor on stage
13. 01:21 Tour de France director Christian Prudhomme arriving on stage with map of Tour de France 2019 on large screen
14. 01:26 SOUNDBITE (English): Geraint Thomas, 2018 Tour de France winner:
"It's solid, it's tough as ever, but it's hard to take in it all when it's so quick but there are some big stages, obviously a lot of climbs finishing over 2,000 metres, medium mountain days, you know, look hard as well so yes it's going to be a tough race."
15. 01:42 Close up Thomas' eyes
16. 01:47 SOUNDBITE (English) Geraint Thomas, 2018 Tour de France winner:
"Yeah I think that will be really nice, I've raced in Belgium quite a lot before in the past, so yeah it will be nice to go back and obviously team time trial which we are normally pretty good at. It will be nice to try and try and win that for a change, rather than second and third, which we always seem to be."
17. 02:03 Geraint Thomas talking to journalists
18. 02:07 SOUNDBITE (English): Mark Cavendish, British sprinter who has won 30 Tour de France stages:
"It's flat enough for me, it's 21 flat dates isn't it, but yes, when you've got six or seven spin opportunities that's good, that's fair and there is that, you know. We've got the climbs. I think although there's more climbing, probably more altitude metres, it's still probably (doesn't finish sentence).... 2018 was near-on impossible to reach Paris for most of the sprinters - just the position of the climbs and the layout of the stages whereas here, though there's more climbing there's actually a better opportunity for us. If we work hard, we get to Paris. This year, it didn't matter how hard you worked physiologically, we'd never get to Paris. I was sick in the end, but I don't think even if I was well I wouldn't have reached it. It's quite nice next year - I'm looking forward to it."
19. 02:54 Tour de France presentation on large screen
20. 02:59 Cavendish watching presentation
21. 02:17 SOUNDBITE (English): Mark Cavendish, British sprinter who won 30 Tour de France stages:
"Yeah I hope so. Just back on my bike now. Yeah, there's enough time to get health... to get fit, as long as I'm healthy so I'm monitoring my health at the minute and we'll see where I'm at."
(Journalist: What does the Tour de France mean?)
It's everything for me. It's everything for every bike rider. Even guys who don't ride the road, professional track riders always dreamt of one point or another riding the Tour de France. For me it's everything, it's my career, it's what I've built everything on. It's what I'll continue to do. It's the only reason I still ride a bike now."
22. 03:30 Cavendish leaving
23. 03:35 Wide pan from audience clapping to stage
23. 03:42 Audience listening
SOURCE: SNTV
DURATION: 03:47
Defending champion Geraint Thomas and Mark Cavendish spoke about the route for the 2019 Tour de France after it was announced in Paris on Thursday (25th October).
SCRIPTING INFORMATION:
Next year's Tour de France will celebrate the 100th anniversary of the showcase race's iconic yellow jersey.
With France emerging from the carnage of World War I, the Tour offered its beacon of hope to the war-ravaged nation.
In 1919, the race leader's yellow jersey — which has become cycling's most iconic symbol — was introduced.
"It came straight out of the trenches, born from the rubble of a wounded France," Tour race director Christian Prudhomme said Thursday, unveiling the route for the July 6-28 race.
Joining Prudhomme on stage were five-time Tour winners Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault and Miguel Indurain.
Only four riders, including Jacques Anquetil, have won five Tours; Lance Armstrong was stripped of his seven titles for doping.
British rider Chris Froome will try to win his fifth title next year, but will have to depose his Team Sky teammate Geraint Thomas over the 3,460-kilometre (2,145-mile) race.
It features seven flat stages for sprinters, five hilly ones for all-rounders, seven mountain stages — five with summit finishes — one team time trial and one individual time trial.
The big climbs start in the Pyrenees before hitting the Alps.
The Tour has less of the Hors Categorie (Beyond Classification) climbs than before - those HC climbs are the most gruelling.
Instead, the race has more of the Category Two climbs — which are noticeably less difficult and favour attacking strategies.
Sky has won six of the past seven races, often controlling them in the mountains by easily repelling attacks.
This has given the team an aura of invincibility and the race a predictable tone.
With closer racing needed, the two time trials combine for a relatively low 54 kilometres, meaning specialists such as Froome have less chance to gain significant time advantages.
The race begins with a flat stage for sprinters around the city of Brussels and stays there the next day for the 27 kilometre team time trial.
After leaving Belgium, the Tour snakes through the Champagne and Lorraine regions.
Stage 4 for sprinters starts in Reims — the Champagne-producing city where 25 French kings were crowned in its cathedral.
With the race leaving the Alsace region, Stage 7 is the longest at 230 kilometres and made for sprinters.
The next day's stage is a hilly one, with several short but sharp climbs from Macon to Saint-Etienne.
The first rest day is July 16 in Albi in southern France, followed by a sprint stage before the Tour enters the high Pyrenees.
Stage 14 on July 20 features finishes with a climb up the Tourmalet pass, one of the most famed in Tour history.
Riders tackle three days of Alpine climbing on stages 18-20, featuring an ascent up the famed Galibier and imposing Iseran — standing 2,770 metres — and culminating with a relentless 33.4 kilometre trek up to the ski resort of Val Thorens.
After the weary peloton is flown towards Paris, the race ends the next day with its processional showcase stage on the Champs-Elysees.