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1956 Tour de France

1956 Tour de France
Route of the 1956 Tour de FranceFollowed counterclockwise, starting in Reims and finishing in Paris
Route of the 1956 Tour de France
Followed counterclockwise, starting in Reims and finishing in Paris
Race details
Dates 5–28 July
Stages 22
Distance 4,498 km (2,795 mi)
Winning time 124h 01' 16"
Results
Jersey awarded to the overall winner Winner  Roger Walkowiak (FRA) (Northeast-Center France)
  Second  Gilbert Bauvin (FRA) (France)
  Third  Jan Adriaensens (BEL) (Belgium)

Points  Stan Ockers (BEL) (Belgium)
  Mountains  Charly Gaul (LUX) (Luxembourg/Mixed)
  Team Belgium
← 1955
1957 →
Jersey awarded to the overall winner Winner  Roger Walkowiak (FRA) (Northeast-Center France)
  Second  Gilbert Bauvin (FRA) (France)
  Third  Jan Adriaensens (BEL) (Belgium)

Points  Stan Ockers (BEL) (Belgium)
  Mountains  Charly Gaul (LUX) (Luxembourg/Mixed)
  Team Belgium

The 1956 Tour de France was the 43rd edition of the Tour de France, taking place from 5 to 28 July. It consisted of 22 stages over 4,498 km (2,795 mi).

There was no previous Tour winner competing for the 1956 Tour, which had only previously happened in 1903 and 1927. An unknown rider from a regional team, Roger Walkowiak on the Northeast-Center French team, ended up winning the Tour. Many Tour fans dismissed the win as being lucky or unworthy at the time, which Walkowiak took hard; this made him not often speak of his win.

The Tour was ridden at the fastest average speed so far, over 36 km/h. Walkowiak became only the second rider, after Firmin Lambot in the 1922 Tour de France, to win without taking a single stage, and is the only Tour de France winner to date who never won a stage in any year.

In the previous years, a flat tyre had to be repaired, but from 1956 on, it was allowed to change wheels.

As was the custom since the 1930 Tour de France, the 1956 Tour de France was contested by national and regional teams. Seven national teams were sent, with 10 cyclists each from France, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands, Spain, Switzerland and Luxembourg/Mixed (the latter a combined team of seven Luxembourgian cyclists added with one Portuguese, on British and one Italian cyclist). France additionally sent five regional teams from 10 cyclists each, divided into Center-North East France, South East France, West France, Ile de France and South West France. In total, 120 cyclists started the race.

The teams entering the race were:

The winner of the three previous editions, Louison Bobet, was absent because he had surgery. Because there were less climbs and no mountain top finishes, cycling experts expected this edition to be too easy. No other former Tour de France winner started the race. This was the third time in history that the race started without former winners, after the initial 1903 Tour de France and the 1927 Tour de France.

Because Bobet was not there, the race was open, and there were many riders thought able to win the Tour. The most favourite of these was probably Charly Gaul, who had won the 1956 Giro d'Italia, although he was in a weak team, and would also be aiming for the mountains classification.


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