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Tour de l'Avenir

Tour de l'Avenir
Tour de l'Avenir logo.svg
Date September
Region France
English name Tour of the Future
Local name(s) Tour de l'Avenir (French)
Discipline Road
Competition UCI Nations Cup
Type Stage race
Organiser Amaury Sport Organisation
First edition 1961 (1961)
Editions 53 (as of 2016)
First winner  Guido De Rosso (ITA)
Most wins  Serguei Soukhoroutchenkov (URS) (2 wins)
Most recent  David Gaudu (FRA)

Tour de l'Avenir (English: Tour of the Future) is a French road bicycle racing stage race, which started in 1961 as a race similar to the Tour de France and over much of the same course but for amateurs and for semi-professionals known as independents. Felice Gimondi, Joop Zoetemelk, Greg LeMond, Miguel Indurain and Laurent Fignon won the Tour de l'Avenir and went on to win 12 Tours de France between them.

The race was created in 1961 by Jacques Marchand, the editor of L'Equipe, to attract teams from the Soviet Union and other communist nations that had no professional riders to enter the Tour de France. Until 1967, it took place earlier the same day as some of the stages of the Tour de France and shared the latter part of each stage's route, but moved to September and a separate course from 1968 onwards. It became the Grand Prix de l'Avenir in 1970, the Trophée Peugeot de l'Avenir from 1972 to 1979 and the Tour de la Communauté Européenne from 1986 to 1990. It was restricted to amateurs from 1961 to 1980, before opening to professionals in 1981. After 1992, it was open to all riders of less than 25 and is now for riders 23 or younger.

Since 2007, the tour has been a national team competition with the 2013 edition involving the following countries:

France, Netherlands, Belgium, Norway, Germany, Slovenia, Great Britain, Italy, Kazakhstan, Denmark, Colombia, Australia, Russia, United States, Ukraine, Spain, Austria, Switzerland, Latvia, plus a mixed team from the World Cycling Centre


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