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| Thursday, October 21, 1999 Published at 17:22 GMT 18:22 UKArmstrong welcomes Tour route ![]() The route is anti-clockwise with the Alps in the final week The first Tour de France route of the new millenium has been welcomed as a "fair and balanced" course by 1999 winner Lance Armstrong. The American who recovered from cancer to win sport's biggest single annual event, and one of its most gruelling, appeared on a satellite link from Texas at the Paris launch. More surprising was the presence at the event of Richard Virenque, the Frenchman the organisers tried unsuccessfully to ban in 1999, but who went on to win the King of the Mountains title. The route features the return of two old friends of the Tour, and some innovations, plus a trip to two significant foreign destinations.
The race begins at theme park Futuroscope in the Vienne region of France, where Armstrong won his fourth stage in 1999. The team time trial, where riders race in groups of nine at high speed, follows between Nantes and St-Nazaire.
The Pyrenees come next, although there is only one full mountain stage there, a fact compensated by the Ventoux, which rears up three days later. The Giant of Provence is one of Europe's strangest landscapes, a barren hillside approached by a grinding, constant climb of 10%. The Alps are next, with two traditional mountain stages finishing at Courcheval and Morzine, divided by the race's second rest day. After that the race moves into Switzerland and Germany, returning to France during a time trial to Mulhouse in Alsace - an opportunity perhaps for Ullrich to show his class on his doorstep. The traditional Orient Express, rather than the usual TGV high-speed train, takes the riders to Paris for the finale, where 10,000 amateurs will ride the route before the final stage.
He believed Ullrich, recent winner of the similar Tour of Spain, would be one of his main rivals, alongside Spanish duo Fernando Escartin and Abraham Olano. 1998 champion Marco Pantani was also named by the Texan, but the Italian has not ridden since a controversial exclusion from the Tour of Italy in June. Ullrich and Pantani both missed Armstrong's win, and he will hope they are there next year to prove himself against the best.
"This race is going to epic places that bring back moving memories for me," he said. "It is a better course than last year." The 87th Tour de France, July 2000
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