Tour de France 2026
Stage 4
7 July
2026 Carcassonne – Foix
182 km
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On this day in Tour de France history
Believe it, or not, but it's true: both Gino bartali (1937) and Fausto Coppi (1949) celebrated the first Tour de France stage victiry on 7th July.
Gino Bartali was already a two-time Giro d’Italia champion (1936 and 1937) when he made his debut at the Tour de France in the summer of 1937.
The years leading up to World War II were marked by mounting political and military tensions across Europe. In 1936, the same year Nazi Germany violated the Treaty of Versailles by reoccupying the demilitarized Rhineland, both Germany and Italy boycotted the Tour de France.
But by 1937, they had returned. Fascist regimes often glorified athletic success as a symbol of national strength, and Italy’s dictator Benito Mussolini was no exception. He sought an Italian victory at the Tour as a propaganda triumph. Italy had already produced a Tour de France champion—Ottavio Bottecchia, winner in 1924 and 1925—but his mysterious death in 1927 and his known leftist sympathies made him an unsuitable figure for Fascist celebration. Mussolini needed a new hero, one whose victories could be claimed as triumphs of Fascist Italy.
After six mostly flat stages, the race entered the mountains on Stage 7—a grueling 228 km route from Aix-les-Bains to Grenoble featuring the Col du Télégraphe and the Col du Galibier. Bartali seized the stage win and took the yellow jersey, establishing a lead of more than nine minutes in the general classification. He was now the clear favorite to win.
However, disaster struck in the very next stage. While trying to avoid a collision with a teammate, Bartali crashed and fell into a river. Although he managed to complete the stage and retain the yellow jersey, the crash took a toll on his condition. His performance declined steadily over the following days. He lost the overall lead after Stage 9, which included the climbs of the Col d’Izoard, Col de Vars, and Col d’Allos, and ultimately withdrew from the race during Stage 12.
Bartali returned to the Tour de France in 1938, having been ordered to skip that year’s Giro d’Italia to stay fresh. The strategy paid off—he won the race. A decade later, in 1948, he claimed his second Tour de France victory, solidifying his legacy as one of cycling’s great champions.
In 1949, Italian legend Fausto Coppi secured his first stage victory in the Tour de France with a commanding performance in a 92-kilometer individual time trial from Les Sables-d’Olonne to La Rochelle.
Racing against the clock, Coppi completed the course in 2 hours, 18 minutes, and 10 seconds, showcasing his signature smooth cadence and unyielding endurance. His ride not only etched his name into the Tour’s stage-winning annals but also served notice to the rest of the peloton that a new force had arrived.
