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2015 Tour de Suisse

The 2015 Tour de Suisse was the 79th edition of the Tour de Suisse stage race. It took place from 13 to 21 June and was the seventeenth race of the 2015 UCI World Tour. It started in Risch-Rotkreuz and finished in Bern. The race was composed of nine stages including two time trials, a short one on the first day and a long one on the last day. The event covered 1,262.6 kilometres (785 miles),[2] and visited Liechtenstein and Austria on its fifth stage, which was the race's sole mountaintop finish.

2015 Tour de Suisse
2015 UCI World Tour, race 17 of 28[1]
Simon Špilak won the 2015 Tour de Suisse
Race details
Dates13–21 June 2015[2]
Stages9
Distance1,262.6 km (784.5 mi)
Winning time30h 15' 09"
Results
Winner  Simon Špilak (SLO) (Team Katusha)
  Second  Geraint Thomas (GBR) (Team Sky)
  Third  Tom Dumoulin (NED) (Team Giant–Alpecin)

Mountains  Thomas De Gendt[a] (BEL) (Lotto–Soudal)
Sprints  Peter Sagan (SVK) (Tinkoff–Saxo)
  Team Team Sky
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2016 →

The winner of the general classification was Slovenian Simon Špilak of Team Katusha, who won the race by a margin of only five seconds from Great Britain's Geraint Thomas (Team Sky). The ultimate selection was made on the last day's individual time trial. Tom Dumoulin of the Team Giant–Alpecin squad rounded up the podium, having won the two individual time trial stages that bookended the race.

The mountains classification was initially awarded to Austria's Stefan Denifl (IAM Cycling), who featured in many breakaways to amass his points. Denifl was later disqualified following his suspension for doping in 2019. The sprints classification was won by Slovakian Peter Sagan (Tinkoff–Saxo) who also was the victor of two stages. Team Sky finished at the head of the team classification with a margin of 11 minutes and 49 seconds.

Other riders who won a stage were Croatian Kristijan Đurasek of Lampre–Merida, Australian Michael Matthews (Orica–GreenEDGE), Norwegian Alexander Kristoff (Team Katusha) and Kazakh Alexey Lutsenko of Astana. Frenchman Thibaut Pinot grabbed the queen stage to the Rettenbach glacier and held the leader's jersey for four stages, but had to surrender it on the last day of competition to Špilak.

Teams

As a UCI World Tour event, the organisation was obliged to invite all seventeen UCI WorldTeams, and likewise, all seventeen teams were obligated to send a squad.[5] To complete the field, two UCI Professional Continental teams were invited to join the race.[6] The number of riders allowed per team was eight, so the starting field contained 152 cyclists.[7]

UCI World Tour Teams

UCI Professional Continental teams

Pre-race favourites

 
World road race champion Michał Kwiatkowski, pictured before stage two, was considered to be among the pre-race favourites for the general classification.

Rui Costa (Movistar Team) won the last three editions of the race, however he was not present at the 2015 event, as he raced in the Critérium du Dauphiné instead. More contenders for the overall classification of the Tour de France opted for the latter race since it was more mountainous.[8] There were two former winners of the Tour de Suisse at the starting line, Trek Factory Racing teammates: Swiss Fabian Cancellara and Luxembourger Fränk Schleck.[9]

Contenders for the general classification were Simon Špilak (Team Katusha), Thibaut Pinot (FDJ), Rafał Majka (Tinkoff–Saxo), Sergio Henao (Team Sky), Tom Dumoulin (Team Giant–Alpecin), Michał Kwiatkowski (Etixx–Quick-Step) and Geraint Thomas (Team Sky).[10][11] Other hopefuls were Jurgen Van den Broeck (Lotto–Soudal) and Sébastien Reichenbach (IAM Cycling).[12] It was AG2R La Mondiale's Domenico Pozzovivo's first race after his disastrous crash in the Giro d'Italia, so his form was predicted as uncertain, but the Italian climber could certainly be a factor if he was in shape.[12][13]

Peter Sagan (Tinkoff–Saxo) was a contender for stage wins.[10] His directeur sportif (team manager) said he was the leader of the team and would target the opening prologue.[14] Mark Cavendish of Etixx–Quick-Step, who proved his form with twelve stage victories so far in the season, was a favourite for the sprint stages.[11] Other riders contending stage glory were Alexander Kristoff (Team Katusha) and John Degenkolb (Team Giant–Alpecin).[10][11] Cancellara, the 2009 winner, was recovering from a crash suffered at the E3 Harelbeke one-day race; his primary focus was on his recovery.[15]

Route

An important race in its own right, the 2015 Tour de Suisse was used by some Tour de France riders to perfect their physical conditions, as the well-known French race started on 4 July.[16] The route for the race was announced on 9 March 2015.[17][18]

The race did not follow any particular pattern in terms of geographical displacement around the country, but did visit Liechtenstein and Austria on the fifth stage. It was also the longest of the race and was qualified as the queen stage. It finished near Sölden situated in Austrian territory and featured a mountaintop finish. After that, the race came back in Swiss territory for the remainder of the event. The stages which were likely to be the most important for the general classification were stage five and the individual time trial on the final stage. The race featured a total elevation gain of 15,606 metres (51,200.8 feet).[12]

On 4 June 2015, it was announced that the town of Brunnen was desisting itself from being the start of stage three because of road damage caused by a rocky landslide, and that the town of Quinto would instead be the starting town. This shortened the stage by 57.2 kilometres (35.5 miles).[19]

Stage characteristics and winners
Stage Date Route Distance Type Winner
1 13 June Risch-Rotkreuz to Risch-Rotkreuz 5.1 km (3.2 mi)   Individual time trial   Tom Dumoulin (NED)
2 14 June 161.1 km (100.1 mi)   Medium-mountain stage   Kristijan Đurasek (CRO)
3 15 June Quinto to Olivone[b] 117.3 km (72.9 mi)[b]   Mountain stage   Peter Sagan (SVK)
4 16 June Flims to Schwarzenbach [de] 193.2 km (120.0 mi)   Medium-mountain stage   Michael Matthews (AUS)
5 17 June Unterterzen to Sölden (Austria) 237.3 km (147.5 mi)   Mountain stage   Thibaut Pinot (FRA)
6 18 June Wil to Biel/Bienne 193.1 km (120.0 mi)   Flat stage   Peter Sagan (SVK)
7 19 June Biel/Bienne to Düdingen 164.6 km (102.3 mi)   Flat stage   Alexander Kristoff (NOR)
8 20 June Bern to Bern 152.5 km (94.8 mi)   Medium-mountain stage   Alexey Lutsenko (KAZ)
9 21 June 38.4 km (23.9 mi)   Individual time trial   Tom Dumoulin (NED)
Total 1,262.6 km (785 mi)[c]

Stages

Stage 1

13 June 2015 — Risch-Rotkreuz to Risch-Rotkreuz, 5.1 km (3.2 mi), individual time trial (ITT)

 
The opening prologue's 5.1-kilometre (3.2-mile) course was in and around Risch-Rotkreuz.
 
Tom Dumoulin on his way to victory on Stage 1

The very short prologue contained three sharp corners. The first two kilometers were slightly uphill, the third one was slightly downhill and the rest was flat.[20]

The best times coming from the first tier of riders were Matthias Brändle (IAM Cycling) with 5' 45", Greg Van Avermaet (BMC Racing Team) a second slower and Cameron Meyer (Orica–GreenEDGE) another second in arrears. Thibaut Pinot (FDJ) came in with a deficit of twelve seconds on Brändle. Michael Matthews (Orica–GreenEDGE) also realised a good time, four seconds down on the provisional leader. Domenico Pozzovivo (AG2R La Mondiale) came to the finish with a fifteen-second deficit.[21] Daniele Bennati (Tinkoff–Saxo) had the best intermediate time all day, which was calculated with 2.1 kilometres (1.3 miles) remaining as the riders went through the checkpoint.

Fabian Cancellara (Trek Factory Racing), beat Brändle with a time of 5' 43". Time trialist Adriano Malori[22] (Movistar Team) started soon after Cancellara crossed the finish line, but came in at 5' 47", four seconds slower. Team Giant–Alpecin rider Tom Dumoulin clocked 5' 41", 2 seconds better than Cancellara, and would ultimately be the winner of the stage.[23]

BMC Racing Team's Silvan Dillier crashed as he was on a straight stretch of road. He managed to remount and finish the stage; his final position was last place, 1' 22" down. Team Sky's leader Geraint Thomas put in a fast ride, only seven seconds down on the winner. Peter Sagan (Tinkoff–Saxo) came in five seconds in arrears of Dumoulin, missing out on his objective of being the first leader of the race. Robert Gesink (LottoNL–Jumbo) clocked a time 22 seconds slower than Dumoulin, and so did Sergio Henao of Team Sky. Poles Rafał Majka (Tinkoff–Saxo) and Michał Kwiatkowski (Etixx–Quick-Step) were 20 and 21 seconds down respectively.[24][25][26]

After the event, Dumoulin said that he prepared at altitude for the race and that he produced a hard physical effort on the uphill section and went less intensely on the flatter parts.[24]

Stage 1 result and general classification after stage 1[24]
Rank Rider Team Time
1   Tom Dumoulin (NED)    Team Giant–Alpecin 5' 41"
2   Fabian Cancellara (SWI) Trek Factory Racing + 2"
3   Matthias Brändle (AUT) IAM Cycling + 4"
4   Peter Sagan (SVK) Tinkoff–Saxo + 5"
5   Steve Morabito (SWI) FDJ + 5"
6   Greg Van Avermaet (BEL) BMC Racing Team + 5"
7   Cameron Meyer (AUS) Orica–GreenEDGE + 6"
8   Ion Izagirre (SPA) Movistar Team + 6"
9   Adriano Malori (ITA) Movistar Team + 6"
10   Geraint Thomas (GBR) Team Sky + 7"

Stage 2

14 June 2015 — Risch-Rotkreuz to Risch-Rotkreuz, 161.1 km (100.1 mi)

 
The race leaders pass beneath the archway marking 1 kilometre (0.62 miles) to go (flamme rouge).

The stage started right away with a Category 2 climb named Dorfstrasse which was 5.4 kilometres (3.4 miles) long. The riders then rode a loop to tackle the latter climb once more about midway through the stage. Afterward another loop around Risch-Rotkreuz was effectuated to reach a Category 1 affair named Michaelskreuz, 4 kilometres (2.5 miles) long. The course came back down and effectuated another circuit to tackle the climb a second and last time. This last King of the Mountains (KOM) checkpoint was situated at 12 kilometres (7.5 miles) from the finish. The riders negotiated the descent and ended up once again in Risch-Rotkreuz for the finale.[27]

After 38 kilometres (23.6 miles) of racing, Luka Pibernik (Lampre–Merida), Cameron Meyer (Orica–GreenEDGE), Jürgen Roelandts (Lotto–Soudal) and Valerio Agnoli of Astana had an advantage of 1' 08" over chasers Ben King (Cannondale–Garmin) and Simone Antonini of Pro Continental team Wanty–Groupe Gobert. They also enjoyed a lead of 2' 55" on the peloton. The two chasers soon fell back into the main field. The maximum gap the peloton allowed the escapees to have was 3' 20". As the main group attacked the climb of Michaelskreuz for the first time, Arnaud Démare (FDJ) crashed because of the fight for position.[28]

With 16 kilometres (9.9 miles) to go, the riders attacked the climb of Michaelskreuz for the second and last time and caught the remnants of the breakaway on the way up.[29] Astana's Jakob Fuglsang accelerated close to the summit, with only Geraint Thomas (Team Sky) and Simon Špilak (Team Katusha) initially able to follow, while Michał Kwiatkowski (Etixx–Quick-Step) lost contact. Thomas then attacked on the descent and was followed by Fuglsang and Špilak. Tom Dumoulin (Team Giant–Alpecin) chased them as he wanted to protect his leader's jersey. A small group of nine riders formed on the descent.[29]

Close to the final kilometre, Kristijan Đurasek of Lampre–Merida placed an acceleration and continued to a solo victory on the flat run-in. The group came in four seconds in arrears, with Daniel Moreno (Team Katusha) winning the sprint for second place before Julián Arredondo (Trek Factory Racing. Overall contenders Thibaut Pinot (FDJ) and Špilak were also part of that clique, coming in fourth and sixth respectively. Peter Sagan (Tinkoff–Saxo) won the sprint of the following group, coming in tenth at fourteen seconds. Dumoulin kept his leader's jersey, while Pibernik amassed enough mountain points (18) to earn the mountains classification jersey.[29][30]

Stage 2 result[29]
Rank Rider Team Time
1   Kristijan Đurasek (CRO) Lampre–Merida 3h 36' 52"
2   Daniel Moreno (SPA) Team Katusha + 4"
3   Julián Arredondo (COL) Trek Factory Racing + 4"
4   Thibaut Pinot (FRA) FDJ + 4"
5   Geraint Thomas (GBR) Team Sky + 4"
6   Simon Špilak (SLO) Team Katusha + 4"
7   Miguel Ángel López (COL) Astana + 4"
8   Jakob Fuglsang (DEN) Astana + 4"
9   Tom Dumoulin (NED)   Team Giant–Alpecin + 4"
10   Peter Sagan (SVK) Tinkoff–Saxo + 14"
General classification after stage 2[29]
Rank Rider Team Time
1   Tom Dumoulin (NED)    Team Giant–Alpecin 3h 42' 37"
2   Geraint Thomas (GBR) Team Sky + 7"
3   Daniel Moreno (SPA) Team Katusha + 11"
4   Jakob Fuglsang (DEN) Astana + 14"
5   Peter Sagan (SVK) Tinkoff–Saxo + 15"
6   Steve Morabito (SWI) FDJ + 15"
7   Thibaut Pinot (FRA) FDJ + 16"
8   Kristijan Đurasek (CRO) Lampre–Merida + 18"
9   Bob Jungels (LUX) Trek Factory Racing + 19"
10   Simon Špilak (SLO) Team Katusha + 19"

Stage 3

15 June 2015 — Quinto to Olivone, 117.3 km (72.9 mi)[b]

 
The third stage began with the hors catégorie Gotthard Pass climb.

This was the new version of the stage as the original route was closed due to a landslide.[19] The stage immediately started with the 1,087-metre (3,566.3-foot) ascent of the hors catégorie Gotthard Pass, the summit of which was 18.8 kilometres (11.7 miles) in. Then came a long false flat until a Category 2 climb, the 5-kilometre (3.1-mile) Zona Cumiasca. It was immediately followed by a Category 3 named ascent Via Cantonale, a 3.2-kilometre (2.0-mile) climb which summited 6 kilometres (3.7 miles) from the finish.[31]

The race got on its way under cloudy but dry conditions. The Tour de Suisse was featuring the Gotthard Pass for the 34th time in its history, and a break formed along its early slopes, which featured cobbles.[32] The two attackers were Stefan Denifl (IAM Cycling) and Marco Marcato (Wanty–Groupe Gobert). The pair had a lead of 2' 30" on the main field as Branislau Samoilau (CCC–Sprandi–Polkowice) was chasing them.[32] Denifl got to the top of the climb first to rake in twenty points. By the top of the pass, snow was covering the sides of the road and the field was 3' 20" back. The riders put gilets on before the descent, which lasted almost 40 kilometres (24.9 miles). Samoilau succeeded in joining the escape during the downhill.[32]

The competitors replenished their food stock at the feed zone situated shortly after the downhill section. The main field started accelerating, with the team of the leader Tom Dumoulin, Team Giant–Alpecin doing most of the work at the front. Realising this breakaway was gaining ground, Tinkoff came to the fore to help, resulting in the gap going down gradually.[32] There was 30 kilometres (18.6 miles) to cover as the gap was hovering around 4' 30".[33]

At the foot of the Zona Cumiasca climb, with 19 kilometres (11.8 miles) remaining, the gap had shrunk significantly. The peloton formed sprint trains to better position their leaders for the ascent. Marcato was soon dropped from the breakaway and Denifl won the mountain points. At that point, Denifl and Samoilau had only a thirty-second gap over the depleting field. The catch was effectuated with 8.7 kilometres (5.4 miles) to race. Michael Albasini (Orica–GreenEDGE) attacked, soon followed by Jan Bakelants (AG2R La Mondiale). With the two escapees enjoying only a ten-second advantage, Sergio Henao (Team Sky) accelerated and passed them. The trio was ultimately reeled in. Rafał Majka (Tinkoff–Saxo) was working at the front of the small leading group to bring back the attackers to give his team leader Peter Sagan a chance at victory.[34] In the last few kilometres, Sagan took over from Majka himself. He followed Daniel Moreno (Team Katusha), who had chased down Esteban Chaves (Orica–GreenEDGE), passing him to take victory.[34][35]

Stage 3 result[34]
Rank Rider Team Time
1   Peter Sagan (SVK) Tinkoff–Saxo 3h 00' 35"
2   Daniel Moreno (SPA) Team Katusha + 0"
3   Thibaut Pinot (FRA) FDJ + 0"
4   Julián Arredondo (COL) Trek Factory Racing + 0"
5   Tom Dumoulin (NED)   Team Giant–Alpecin + 0"
6   Geraint Thomas (GBR) Team Sky + 0"
7   Jakob Fuglsang (DEN) Astana + 0"
8   Esteban Chaves (COL) Orica–GreenEDGE + 0"
9   Sergio Henao (COL) Team Sky + 0"
10   José Joaquín Rojas (SPA) Movistar Team + 0"
General classification after stage 3[34]
Rank Rider Team Time
1   Tom Dumoulin (NED)   Team Giant–Alpecin 6h 43' 12"
2   Daniel Moreno (SPA)   Team Katusha + 5"
3   Peter Sagan (SVK) Tinkoff–Saxo + 5"
4   Geraint Thomas (GBR) Team Sky + 7"
5   Thibaut Pinot (FRA) FDJ + 12"
6   Jakob Fuglsang (DEN) Astana + 14"
7   Steve Morabito (SWI) FDJ + 15"
8   Kristijan Đurasek (CRO) Lampre–Merida + 18"
9   Bob Jungels (LUX) Trek Factory Racing + 19"
10   Simon Špilak (SLO) Team Katusha + 19"

Stage 4

16 June 2015 — Flims to Schwarzenbach [de], 193.2 km (120.0 mi)

 
The 193.2-kilometre (120.0-mile) route of stage four began in Flims and finished in Schwarzenbach [de].

The first 60 kilometres (37.3 miles) were flat until the peloton reached the Wildhaus Pass, a Category 2 test of 8.9 kilometres (5.5 miles) in length. Then there were three Category 3 climbs on offer, which were the 1.8-kilometre (1.1-mile) Kirchberg climb repeated three times as the riders accomplished a loop. There were however a number of uncategorized rises, especially one with about 5 kilometres (3.1 miles) to cover, that was expected to play a role in the outcome. The finishing 900 metres (2,952.8 feet) were straight with a consistent incline.[36]

Davide Malacarne (Astana) and Thomas De Gendt (Lotto–Soudal) attacked early in the stage. They were joined by a trio of Stijn Devolder (Trek Factory Racing), Alex Howes (Cannondale–Garmin) and Frederik Backaert (Wanty–Groupe Gobert). De Gendt crested the Wildhaus Pass first to take eight points in the mountains competition.[37] At the summit, after 66 kilometres (41.0 miles) of racing, the gap between the peloton and the breakers was two minutes and fifty seconds.[37][38]

De Gendt took maximum points atop the Kirchberg climb on the riders' first passage. The main field got through the same point 2' 05" in arrears. The descent was fast and the riders crossed the finish line for the first time of three with about 60 kilometres (37.3 miles) to race.[39] The breakaway was caught less than 10 kilometres (6.2 miles) later.[37] Orica–GreenEDGE marshaled the field as De Gendt attacked again to no avail as he was swiftly swept back. Sprint specialists Arnaud Démare (FDJ), Mark Cavendish (Etixx–Quick-Step) and Alexander Kristoff (Team Katusha) struggled with the high pace at the front set by Orica–GreenEDGE.[39][40] As the peloton crossed the line for the last time with 29.2 kilometres (18.1 miles) to race, there were no escapees.[37]

The last mountains points of the day atop the Kirchberg climb was won by Daryl Impey; it was uncontested and he won because he was riding at the front.[39] Alexey Lutsenko (Astana) placed an attack with 16 kilometres (9.9 miles) to go.[40] With 10 kilometres (6.2 miles) to race he had opened up an advantage of 20 seconds.[39] With 6.7 kilometres (4.2 miles) remaining, Lutsenko was caught. An attack formed immediately including the riders Marco Marcato (Wanty–Groupe Gobert), Jan Bakelants (AG2R La Mondiale) and Sergio Henao (Team Sky); it failed and they were brought back as Tinkoff–Saxo and Orica–GreenEDGE teams worked together to set up a sprint finish. With 300 metres (984.3 feet) to go, Sagan initiated his sprint first and was followed by Michael Matthews of Orica–GreenEDGE. Matthews then passed him to claim his first victory at the Tour de Suisse. Sagan took second place and the points classification jersey.[37]

Stage 4 result[40]
Rank Rider Team Time
1   Michael Matthews (AUS) Orica–GreenEDGE 4h 36' 00"
2   Peter Sagan (SVK) Tinkoff–Saxo + 0"
3   Greg Van Avermaet (BEL) BMC Racing Team + 0"
4   John Degenkolb (GER) Team Giant–Alpecin + 0"
5   Jasper Stuyven (BEL) Trek Factory Racing + 0"
6   Daniel Moreno (ESP)   Team Katusha + 0"
7   Silvan Dillier (SUI) BMC Racing Team + 0"
8   Thibaut Pinot (FRA) FDJ + 0"
9   Matteo Trentin (ITA) Etixx–Quick-Step + 0"
10   Robert Gesink (NED) LottoNL–Jumbo + 0"
General classification after stage 4[40]
Rank Rider Team Time
1   Tom Dumoulin (NED)   Team Giant–Alpecin 11h 19' 09"
2   Peter Sagan (SVK)   Tinkoff–Saxo + 0"
3   Daniel Moreno (SPA) Team Katusha + 8"
4   Geraint Thomas (GBR) Team Sky + 9"
5   Thibaut Pinot (FRA) FDJ + 15"
6   Jakob Fuglsang (DEN) Astana + 17"
7   Steve Morabito (SWI) FDJ + 18"
8   Kristijan Đurasek (CRO) Lampre–Merida + 21"
9   Bob Jungels (LUX) Trek Factory Racing + 22"
10   Simon Špilak (SLO) Team Katusha + 22"

Stage 5

17 June 2015 — Unterterzen to Sölden (Austria), 237.3 km (147.5 mi)

 
After more than 200 kilometres (124.3 miles) of racing, the climb to the Rettenbach glacier awaited.

This was the queen stage of the 2015 Tour de Suisse and was also the longest stage the race featured in the last twenty years.[12] The first difficulty of the day was the 34.4-kilometre (21.4-mile) hors catégorie Bielerhöhe Pass which summited at 2,071 metres (6,794.6 feet) of altitude and at that point, the riders were already in Austria after a brief visit to Liechtenstein. Following that difficulty, the run-in to Sölden offered a respite until the cyclists reached the town and tackled the stage's second hors catégorie climb to the Rettenbach glacier, which took them to an altitude of 2,669 metres (8,756.6 feet). The competitors rode the Ötztal Glacier Road from Sölden to get to the finish line.[41]

The overall race leader Tom Dumoulin (Team Giant–Alpecin) said before the stage that if he lost less than one minute and a half to the pure climbers, he could still win the Tour by taking that time back on the final stage's time trial.[42] The previous stage's victor Michael Matthews (Orica–GreenEDGE) was a non-starter, saying he had gotten what he wanted from the race: a stage win.[43] A breakaway formed in the opening 10 kilometres (6.2 miles) of the race. They were Grégory Rast (Trek Factory Racing), mountains jersey wearer Stefan Denifl and his teammate Matthias Brändle (IAM Cycling), Ben King (Cannondale–Garmin), Przemysław Niemiec (Lampre–Merida), Stefan Schumacher (CCC–Sprandi–Polkowice), Thomas De Gendt (Lotto–Soudal) and Mirko Selvaggi (Wanty–Groupe Gobert).[44][45] The best-placed cyclist in the break on the general classification was Selvaggi in 59th place, 18' 38" down on Dumoulin.[40] Denifl amassed maximum points atop the Bielerhöhe Pass, comforting his lead in the mountains classification. Ion Izagirre of the Movistar Team abandoned after the pass.[44]

 
Thibaut Pinot, seen here riding stage two, won the queen stage of the race and took the lead of the race.

With 90 kilometres (55.9 miles) to go the gap was miscalculated by the race organisers as there were unrealistic fluctuations in the official timing throughout the long stretch of flat road before the final climb. With 82 kilometres (51.0 miles) to cover, Astana took control of the peloton for their leader Jakob Fuglsang.[44] FDJ and Team Katusha started helping the chase at the front, since those teams had riders aiming for victory (Thibaut Pinot and the Daniel MorenoSimon Špilak duo, respectively).[45] With 30 kilometres (18.6 miles) to the start of the big final climb, the gap was around six and a half minutes. The break fractured, just as the peloton did later when they hit the Rettenbach ascent.[44] Dumoulin was dropped almost at the beginning of it but resisted, climbing at his own pace.[45] Špilak attacked with 8 kilometres (5.0 miles) remaining and dangled in front of a select group.[46]

Early breaker Denifl was alone in front and had about two minutes of an advantage with 4 kilometres (2.5 miles) to go. Behind, Domenico Pozzovivo placed an acceleration that put the lead group in difficulty, but he was brought back. The time gap rapidly decreased, due to dubious time monitoring again.[44] Pinot launched an attack from the group, but Špilak had the resources to keep up with him for a while but was ultimately dropped. Pinot passed the passive Denifl before the arch signaling the last kilometre (flamme rouge) and took a solo victory. Pozzovivo finished second while Špilak settled for third. However, it became soon apparent that Dumoulin would not lose much more than the minute and a half that was his objective. He passed the line 1' 37" down on Pinot.[43] "I'm very happy, it was important for me and the team. We came here to win a stage, and I had good legs today. I've got a lot of confidence now, that's important for the Tour de France. And it's true, racing in Switzerland seems to suit me", said Pinot. "The objective is to win overall here, but the rouleurs like [Geraint] Thomas and [Tom] Dumoulin aren't far back", he added. "It'll be a long and difficult time trial [on stage nine]. We'll see what happens on the day."[44]

Stage 5 result[43]
Rank Rider Team Time
1   Thibaut Pinot (FRA) FDJ 6h 22' 47"
2   Domenico Pozzovivo (ITA) AG2R La Mondiale + 34"
3   Simon Špilak (SLO) Team Katusha + 37"
4   Miguel Ángel López (COL) Astana + 43"
5   Geraint Thomas (GBR) Team Sky + 43"
6   Jakob Fuglsang (DEN) Astana + 1' 15"
7   Jan Hirt (CZE) CCC–Sprandi–Polkowice + 1' 18"
8   Sergio Henao (COL) Team Sky + 1' 29"
DSQ   Stefan Denifl[a] (AUT)   IAM Cycling + 1' 31"
10   Tom Dumoulin (NED)   Team Giant–Alpecin + 1' 37"
General classification after stage 5[43]
Rank Rider Team Time
1   Thibaut Pinot (FRA)   FDJ 17h 42' 01"
2   Geraint Thomas (GBR) Team Sky + 47"
3   Simon Špilak (SLO) Team Katusha + 50"
4   Domenico Pozzovivo (ITA) AG2R La Mondiale + 55"
5   Miguel Ángel López (COL) Astana + 1' 07"
6   Jakob Fuglsang (DEN) Astana + 1' 27"
7   Tom Dumoulin (NED) Team Giant–Alpecin + 1' 32"
8   Steve Morabito (SWI) FDJ + 2' 29"
9   Sébastien Reichenbach (SWI) IAM Cycling + 2' 43"
10   Sergio Henao (COL) Team Sky + 2' 46"

Stage 6

18 June 2015 — Wil to Biel/Bienne, 193.1 km (120.0 mi)

 
The finishing town of Biel/Bienne saw Peter Sagan take his second win at the 2015 Tour de Suisse. Pictured here is the Lake Biel close to the town.

This stage contained only one categorised ascent midway through it and was a Category 3 affair named Auensteinstrasse. However, there were numerous uncategorized rises on the course to Biel/Bienne and the total elevation gain for the stage was 1,167 metres (3,828.7 feet). Two intermediate sprints came before the run into town in the final 40 kilometres (24.9 miles).[47]

As the stage started, there were 145 riders remaining in the race, as only seven entrants had abandoned since the start of the race. The day's breakers were Axel Domont (AG2R La Mondiale), Marek Rutkiewicz (CCC–Sprandi–Polkowice), Matej Mohorič (Cannondale–Garmin) and Jérôme Baugnies (Wanty–Groupe Gobert). The riders soon tackled the Eschenmosen, one of the many uncategorised ascents of the day. With 136 kilometres (84.5 miles) left, the breakaway's advantage stood at 4' 30".[48] The breakers took the points on offer on the only climb of the day, Auensteinstrasse, so Stefan Denifl of IAM Cycling maintained his 30-point advantage over his nearest competitor Thomas De Gendt (Lotto–Soudal).[48][49] Rutkiewicz won the maximum five points that came with cresting the ascent first.[48] About midway through, it was calculated that the peloton's average speed was slower than the slowest prediction by the organisers, most likely due to the severity of the previous stage.[48][50]

With 65 kilometres (40.4 miles) to cover, rain began to fall;[51] the main field was led by FDJ, Etixx–Quick-Step, Team Giant–Alpecin and Team Katusha.[52] Baugnies rode first across an uncontested intermediate sprint with 42.7 kilometres (26.5 miles) to go.[48][53] 25 kilometres (15.5 miles) from the finish, Adriano Malori and Francisco Ventoso of Movistar Team surprised the peloton by attacking.[52] At the 10 kilometres (6.2 miles) remaining arch, the break of four still held a lead of forty seconds with the two Movistar Team riders placed between the groups. Etixx–Quick-Step took matters in their own hands and began forming their sprint train for Mark Cavendish.[48] Tinkoff–Saxo moved to the front in support of their sprint hopeful, Peter Sagan.[52] With 5 kilometres (3.1 miles) to cover, the escape had 30 seconds of an advantage. At that point, two Etixx–Quick-Step riders (Julien Vermote and Zdeněk Štybar) crashed on the water-logged tarmac before a bend, but the mishap had no consequences on the peloton.[48] The breakers were brought back just before the flamme rouge.[54]

Shortly thereafter, Cavendish lost the wheel of his lead-out man Mark Renshaw after struggling to come back after the crash which hindered his lead-out train.[55] There were two technical turns before the finish line.[52] Sagan was sitting in third wheel of his team's train; he negotiated the final 90 degree corner with 200 metres (660 feet) to go and profited from an unintentional lead-out by Jürgen Roelandts (Lotto–Soudal), who had opened his sprint before Sagan outpowered him in the last 100 metres (330 feet) to win the day. It was Sagan's eleventh victory at the Tour de Suisse, matching the record of Hugo Koblet and Ferdinand Kübler. Due to a split in the peloton, Pinot lost five seconds to general classification rival Geraint Thomas of Team Sky.[54]

Stage 6 result[54]
Rank Rider Team Time
1   Peter Sagan (SVK)   Tinkoff–Saxo 4h 34' 43"
2   Jürgen Roelandts (BEL) Lotto–Soudal + 0"
3   Alexander Kristoff (NOR) Team Katusha + 0"
4   Jempy Drucker (LUX) BMC Racing Team + 0"
5   Daniele Bennati (ITA) Tinkoff–Saxo + 0"
6   Mark Cavendish (GBR) Etixx–Quick-Step + 2"
7   Tom Van Asbroeck (BEL) LottoNL–Jumbo + 2"
8   Alexey Lutsenko (KAZ) Astana + 2"
9   Borut Božič (SLO) Astana + 2"
10   Jakob Fuglsang (DEN) Astana + 2"
General classification after stage 6[54]
Rank Rider Team Time
1   Thibaut Pinot (FRA)   FDJ 22h 16' 51"
2   Geraint Thomas (GBR) Team Sky + 42"
3   Simon Špilak (SLO) Team Katusha + 50"
4   Domenico Pozzovivo (ITA) AG2R La Mondiale + 55"
5   Miguel Ángel López (COL) Astana + 1' 07"
6   Jakob Fuglsang (DEN) Astana + 1' 22"
7   Tom Dumoulin (NED) Team Giant–Alpecin + 1' 32"
8   Steve Morabito (SWI) FDJ + 2' 29"
9   Sébastien Reichenbach (SWI) IAM Cycling + 2' 43"
10   Sergio Henao (COL) Team Sky + 2' 46"

Stage 7

19 June 2015 — Biel/Bienne to Düdingen, 164.2 km (102.0 mi)

 
Team Katusha rider Alexander Kristoff (pictured in 2009) won stage seven's bunch sprint finish.

Stage 7 was a flat stage except for three Category 3 climbs in the second half of the stage. The opening 60 kilometres (37.3 miles) were totally flat. After 91 kilometres (56.5 miles), the riders tackled the finishing circuit twice. During that circuit, the first climb was the 1.1-kilometre (0.7-mile) Freiburgstrasse. There was a descent, then the Hauptstrasse climb was covered. During the second circuit, the Freiburgstrasse was attacked again. This last difficulty was situated 19 kilometres (11.8 miles) from the finish line. The final 800 metres (2,624.7 feet) were steep.[56]

World road race champion Michał Kwiatkowski of the Etixx–Quick-Step squad made attempts at escaping before the peloton finally let him go 20 kilometres (12.4 miles) into the race. He was joined by Silvan Dillier (BMC Racing Team), Daryl Impey (Orica–GreenEDGE) and Axel Domont (AG2R La Mondiale).[57] After the break was resolved, the peloton was content in letting the gap increase to 3' 15" with 129 kilometres (80.2 miles) of racing remaining. The best placed rider in this quartet was Impey, 29' 18" down on race leader Thibaut Pinot (FDJ). The average speed of the first hour was 47.7 km/h (29.6 mph). Tinkoff–Saxo and Team Giant–Alpecin dictated the pace, pulling back thirty seconds. With 88 kilometres (54.7 miles) to go, the race passed through the village of Misery-Courtion, at which point the gap stood at 2' 50". A crash occurred in the outskirts of Misery-Courtion, involving Ben Hermans and Manuel Senni (both with BMC Racing Team). They were able to remount their bikes and rejoined the main field.[58]

Wanty–Groupe Gobert's Enrico Gasparotto abandoned two hours into the stage, which were contested at the speed of 44 km/h (27.3 mph). With 55 kilometres (34.2 miles) remaining, the escapees had a minute's lead. Domont took the maximum points atop the first climb of the day. As they crossed the line for the last time with 37 kilometres (23.0 miles) to go, the breakers were resisting as the time difference was still around a minute.[58] On the second lap of the finishing circuit, Domont was dropped from the breakaway and was absorbed in by the peloton.[57] The now three-rider break had a thirty-second advantage with 10 kilometres (6.2 miles) remaining.[59] Team Katusha controlled the front of the field in the final kilometres. With 2 kilometres (1.2 miles) to go, the peloton almost pulled back the all unyielding breakers, as Kwiatkowski decided to go alone. He was caught in sight of the finish line.[59] The uphill sprint was won by Alexander Kristoff of Team Katusha, with Peter Sagan (Tinkoff–Saxo) being a close second. Sagan got out of Kristoff's slipstream to try to out-sprint him in the final metres, but to no avail.[57] This was Kristoff's eighteenth victory of the season. Through bad positioning, Pinot lost a further five seconds to Geraint Thomas (Team Sky) in the overall classification.[60] "It was a hard day, I haven't felt super in this Tour de Suisse but I did a good sprint today", said the winner. "I got ahead of Sagan and I was able to go again at the end to hold off his run."[58]

Stage 7 result[59]
Rank Rider Team Time
1   Alexander Kristoff (NOR) Team Katusha 3h 38' 07"
2   Peter Sagan (SVK)   Tinkoff–Saxo + 0"
3   Davide Cimolai (ITA) Lampre–Merida + 0"
4   Greg Van Avermaet (BEL) BMC Racing Team + 0"
5   Arnaud Démare (FRA) FDJ + 0"
6   Jürgen Roelandts (BEL) Lotto–Soudal + 0"
7   Sep Vanmarcke (BEL) LottoNL–Jumbo + 0"
8   Michael Albasini (SWI) Orica–GreenEDGE + 0"
9   Marco Marcato (ITA) Wanty–Groupe Gobert + 0"
10   José Joaquín Rojas (SPA) Movistar Team + 0"
General classification after stage 7[59]
Rank Rider Team Time
1   Thibaut Pinot (FRA)   FDJ 25h 55' 03"
2   Geraint Thomas (GBR) Team Sky + 37"
3   Domenico Pozzovivo (ITA) AG2R La Mondiale + 50"
4   Simon Špilak (SLO) Team Katusha + 50"
5   Miguel Ángel López (COL) Astana + 1' 07"
6   Jakob Fuglsang (DEN) Astana + 1' 22"
7   Tom Dumoulin (NED) Team Giant–Alpecin + 1' 27"
8   Steve Morabito (SWI) FDJ + 2' 29"
9   Sébastien Reichenbach (SWI) IAM Cycling + 2' 43"
10   Sergio Henao (COL) Team Sky + 2' 46"

Stage 8

20 June 2015 — Bern to Bern, 152.5 km (94.8 mi)

 
Stage eight's 38.7-kilometre (24.0-mile) circuit in and around Bern was navigated four times.

The stage was ridden in and around Bern, the first time the Tour de Suisse had been to the national capital since 2009.[61] This was another stage which featured a lot of uncategorised rises. It however contained four Category 3 ascents. The event featured four circuits of 38.7 kilometres (24.0 miles) around town, on the same course that was to be used in the stage nine time trial. The two climbs present in the loops gave mountain points on the last two laps only. The riders first took on the 800-metre (2,624.7-foot) Category 3 Liebewill, then it was the 400-metre (1,312.3-foot) Aargauerstalden climb. The stage finished on the flat, a plateau after the latter ascent, featuring a number of technical turns.[62]

A breakaway of twelve formed at the very start, but was deemed too dangerous and quickly reabsorbed.[63] Citing back problems, Trek Factory Racing rider Jasper Stuyven abandoned the race. The attackers continued to try to form a break and a move by Etixx–Quick-Step's Michał Kwiatkowski finally made it. A break of nineteen riders emerged,[64] containing among others Warren Barguil (Team Giant–Alpecin), the best placed rider of the move in the general classification at 4' 52". Team Sky, Cannondale–Garmin and FDJ led the chase.[63] Despite the main field's effort, the gap grew to two minutes with 87 kilometres (54.1 miles) to cover.[64]

With 75 kilometres (46.6 miles) to go in the stage, the gap stood at 2' 12". However, Team Sky, Cannondale–Garmin and FDJ were still working to keep the escapees in range. The time difference to the escape was remaining stationary at around two minutes at the 40 kilometres (24.9 miles) to go marker. As the peloton passed through the finish line to undertake the last lap of the circuit, Jakob Fuglsang of Astana abandoned the race due to stomach problems. The peloton was forming a long single line as the pace was high. Maxime Monfort (Lotto–Soudal) crashed and abandoned, with bruising on his shoulder and back.[64]

With 20 kilometres (12.4 miles) remaining, Astana's Alexey Lutsenko attacked the escapees, followed by Jan Bakelants (AG2R La Mondiale); they opened a gap, holding off their former breakaway companions.[65] Bakelants led for the last few kilometres except under the flamme rouge and Lutsenko outsprinted him to claim the victory.[63] He described the win as the biggest of his career.[66] The main field arrived in small groups, with the first one containing Team Sky's Geraint Thomas and Tom Dumoulin of Team Giant–Alpecin,[64] who made a marginal time gain of three seconds on overall leader Thibaut Pinot.[63][67]

Stage 8 result[67]
Rank Rider Team Time
1   Alexey Lutsenko (KAZ) Astana 3h 28' 11"
2   Jan Bakelants (BEL) AG2R La Mondiale + 1"
3   Warren Barguil (FRA) Team Giant–Alpecin + 17"
4   Marco Haller (AUT) Team Katusha + 22"
5   Daniele Bennati (ITA) Tinkoff–Saxo + 22"
6   Michael Albasini (SWI) Orica–GreenEDGE + 22"
7   Matteo Trentin (ITA) Etixx–Quick-Step + 22"
8   Danilo Wyss (SWI) BMC Racing Team + 22"
9   Winner Anacona (COL) Movistar Team + 22"
10   Stijn Devolder (BEL) Trek Factory Racing + 22"
General classification after stage 8[67]
Rank Rider Team Time
1   Thibaut Pinot (FRA)   FDJ 29h 25' 28"
2   Geraint Thomas (GBR) Team Sky + 34"
3   Simon Špilak (SLO) Team Katusha + 47"
4   Domenico Pozzovivo (ITA) AG2R La Mondiale + 50"
5   Miguel Ángel López (COL) Astana + 1' 14"
6   Tom Dumoulin (NED) Team Giant–Alpecin + 1' 24"
7   Steve Morabito (SWI) FDJ + 2' 29"
8   Sébastien Reichenbach (SWI) IAM Cycling + 2' 43"
9   Sergio Henao (COL) Team Sky + 2' 46"
10   Warren Barguil (FRA) Team Giant–Alpecin + 2' 51"

Stage 9

21 June 2015 — Bern to Bern, 38.4 km (23.9 mi), individual time trial (ITT)

 
Bern hosted the last two stages of the 2015 Tour de Suisse.

The lengthy individual time trial featured a climb in the middle of it, but no mountains classification points were on offer. The course was technical and featured several turns. It was the same course that was raced four times in stage eight, except that the finish line was not situated at the same place. Midway through the stage, the riders took on the difficulty of the day, the 800-metre (2,624.7-foot) Liebewill climb. There were other small climbs situated on the course.[68]

The final general classification of the race was decided on this stage, and a majority of the observers believed that Pinot would lose his lead since he is not a great time trialist. Geraint Thomas of Team Sky was only 34 seconds down coming into the stage and was among the favourites to take the overall victory. Tom Dumoulin (Team Giant–Alpecin) won the short prologue and was a contender for overall victory as a time trial specialist, but he had 1' 24" to make up. Another contender for the overall win was Simon Špilak of Team Katusha (47 seconds down).[69] Fourth-placed Domenico Pozzovivo (AG2R La Mondiale) was an enigma, as he had mixed performances in time trials throughout his career.[70][71] As far as the stage win was concerned, solo effort specialists Fabian Cancellara (Trek Factory Racing) and Adriano Malori (Movistar Team) were to be considered, but they had no chance of a victory in the general classification since they were too far down in the rankings.[65][72][73]

 
Tom Dumoulin of Team Giant–Alpecin won the ninth stage; he is seen here celebrating his victory in the opening stage.

The riders started in reverse order of the general classification, so Pinot was the last one to start.[74] The riders went off the starting ramp in two-minute intervals. Cancellara got on course early, as he was the seventh man to start. He clocked a time of 48' 55", which would stay a reference for most of the day. He was followed out of the starting area by Matthias Brändle (IAM Cycling) who came in 2' 28" after Cancellara, somewhat surprisingly as he is a time trial specialist.[75] Malori set the best time at the 21-kilometre (13.0-mile) intermediate point but faded a little bit in the end, coming to the finish line only 15 seconds off Cancellara's time.[73] Cancellara would stay as a reference for a while now that some time trial specialists had finished their effort and failed to beat him. Damien Gaudin (AG2R La Mondiale) clocked in a time of 50' 46" which put him in sixth position.[76]

Cameron Meyer (Orica–GreenEDGE) put in a time of 49' 43", 48 seconds off Cancellara's mark. Around that time, general classification hopeful Dumoulin started his time trial. Silvan Dillier (BMC Racing Team) provisionally slotted into sixth position with a time of 50' 19" and minutes later, race leader Pinot rolled down the starting ramp. Jérôme Coppel (IAM Cycling) crossed the finish line with a rapid time, only 25 seconds off Cancellara's performance. Meanwhile, in early time splits, Pinot had already lost twelve seconds to Thomas. The previous day's stage winner Alexey Lutsenko of Astana confirmed his good form with a time of 50' 32".[76][77] At the 21-kilometre (13.0-mile) marker, Dumoulin beat Malori's best time by eleven seconds. Špilak was also doing a fast time trial, being equal to the best time at the 15.5-kilometre (9.6-mile) mark and passing the 21-kilometre (13.0-mile) arch faster than Dumoulin by four tenths of a second. By that time, Pinot had virtually lost his lead. Dumoulin took a very focused corner and he almost slammed into spectators upon exiting it, but no accident occurred.[73] Špilak needed fourteen seconds over Thomas to get in front of him in the general classification. Dumoulin came in with a time nineteen seconds better than Cancellara's and won the stage with an average speed of 47.407 km/h (29.5 mph).[78] Špilak came in with a time of 48' 54" and Thomas registered 49' 12", a difference of 18 seconds. Therefore, Špilak won the race overall by five seconds.[79]

"I’m really happy and want to thank my teammates who helped me too much during the race. This is the biggest win of my career so far", Spilak said. "The time trial was really hard but I liked it. It was up and down all the way and that helped me. I gave it everything."[79] It was the Slovenian's tenth victory in the professional ranks.[79]

Stage 9 result[79]
Rank Rider Team Time
1   Tom Dumoulin (NED) Team Giant–Alpecin 48' 36"
2   Simon Špilak (SLO) Team Katusha + 18"
3   Fabian Cancellara (SWI) Trek Factory Racing + 19"
4   Adriano Malori (ITA) Movistar Team + 34"
5   Geraint Thomas (GBR) Team Sky + 36"
6   Bob Jungels (LUX) Trek Factory Racing + 41"
7   Jérôme Coppel (FRA) IAM Cycling + 44"
8   Cameron Meyer (AUS) Orica–GreenEDGE + 1' 07"
9   Rafał Majka (POL) Tinkoff–Saxo + 1' 26"
10   Robert Gesink (NED) LottoNL–Jumbo + 1' 32"
Final general classification[79]
Rank Rider Team Time
1   Simon Špilak (SLO)   Team Katusha 30h 15' 09"
2   Geraint Thomas (GBR) Team Sky + 5"
3   Tom Dumoulin (NED) Team Giant–Alpecin + 19"
4   Thibaut Pinot (FRA) FDJ + 45"
5   Domenico Pozzovivo (ITA) AG2R La Mondiale + 2' 21"
6   Bob Jungels (LUX) Trek Factory Racing + 2' 58"
7   Miguel Ángel López (COL) Astana + 3' 06"
8   Steve Morabito (SWI) FDJ + 3' 17"
9   Robert Gesink (NED) LottoNL–Jumbo + 3' 19"
10   Rafał Majka (POL) Tinkoff–Saxo + 3' 20"

Classification leadership

In the 2015 Tour de Suisse, three different jerseys were awarded. For the general classification, calculated by adding each cyclist's finishing times on each stage, and the leader received a yellow jersey. This classification was considered the most important of the Tour de Suisse, and the winner of the classification was considered the winner of the race. There was also a mountains classification, the leadership of which was marked by a light blue jersey. In the mountains classification, points were won by reaching the top of a climb before other cyclists, with more points available for the higher-categorised climbs. Hors Category gave 20 points to the first rider crossing (20, 15, 10, 6, 4),[34] a Category 1 was worth 12 points (12, 8, 6, 4, 2),[29] a Category 2 was worth 8 points (8, 6, 4, 2, 1)[34] and a Category 3 was worth 5 points (5, 3, 2, 1).[34]

The third jersey represented the points classification, marked by a white-and-red jersey. In the points classification, cyclists got points for finishing highly in a stage. A stage victory awarded 10 points, with 8 points for second, 6 for third, 4 for fourth and 2 for fifth.[34] Points could also be earned at intermediate sprints location for finishing in the top three during each stage on a 6–3–1 scale.[34] There was also a classification for teams, in which the times of the best three cyclists per team on each stage were added together; the leading team at the end of the race was the team with the lowest total time.[80]

A combativity award was also attributed for the rider who had ridden the most aggressively in the eyes of the judges at the end of every stage. It could have been a rider who featured in breakaways or a cyclist who attacked often.[80]

Classification standings

Legend
      Denotes the leader of the general classification       Denotes the leader of the mountains classification
      Denotes the leader of the points classification       Denotes the leader of the teams classification

General classification

Result of general classification[79]
Rank Rider Team Time
1   Simon Špilak (SLO)   Team Katusha 30h 15' 09"
2   Geraint Thomas (GBR) Team Sky + 5"
3   Tom Dumoulin (NED) Team Giant–Alpecin + 19"
4   Thibaut Pinot (FRA) FDJ + 45"
5   Domenico Pozzovivo (ITA) AG2R La Mondiale + 2' 21"
6   Bob Jungels (LUX) Trek Factory Racing + 2' 58"
7   Miguel Ángel López (COL) Astana + 3' 06"
8   Steve Morabito (SWI) FDJ + 3' 17"
9   Robert Gesink (NED) LottoNL–Jumbo + 3' 19"
10   Rafał Majka (POL) Tinkoff–Saxo + 3' 20"

Points classification

Result of points classification[79]
Rank Rider Team Points
1   Peter Sagan (SVK)   Tinkoff–Saxo 43
2   Tom Dumoulin (NED) Team Giant–Alpecin 28
3   Alexey Lutsenko (KAZ) Astana 23
4   Thibaut Pinot (FRA) FDJ 20
5   Jürgen Roelandts (BEL) Lotto–Soudal 20
6   Jan Bakelants (BEL) AG2R La Mondiale 17
7   Alexander Kristoff (NOR) Team Katusha 16
8   Daniel Moreno (SPA) Team Katusha 16
9   Simon Špilak (SLO)   Team Katusha 14
10   Fabian Cancellara (SWI) Trek Factory Racing 14

Mountains classification

Result of mountains classification[79][81]
Rank Rider Team Points
DSQ   Stefan Denifl[a] (AUT) IAM Cycling 63
1   Thomas De Gendt (BEL)   Lotto–Soudal 33
3   Thibaut Pinot (FRA) FDJ 22
4   Luka Pibernik (SLO) Lampre–Merida 22
5   Daryl Impey (RSA) Orica–GreenEDGE 21
6   Axel Domont (FRA) AG2R La Mondiale 18
7   Cameron Meyer (AUS) Orica–GreenEDGE 16
8   Branislau Samoilau (BLR) CCC–Sprandi–Polkowice 16
9   Marco Marcato (ITA) Wanty–Groupe Gobert 16
10   Jan Bakelants (BEL) AG2R La Mondiale 15

Teams classification

Result of teams classification[79]
Rank Team Time
1 Team Sky   90h 55' 38"
2 Trek Factory Racing + 11' 49"
3 IAM Cycling + 15' 08"
4 Astana + 18' 43"
5 BMC Racing Team + 22' 33"
6 Team Giant–Alpecin + 26' 44"
7 AG2R La Mondiale + 31' 04"
8 Orica–GreenEDGE + 31' 15"
9 FDJ + 31' 35"
10 LottoNL–Jumbo + 38' 49"

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Stefan Denifl's results were expunged following his four-year suspension for blood doping in June 2019.[3][4]
  2. ^ a b c The stage was due to be held over a distance of 174.5 kilometres (108.4 miles) and was due to start in Brunnen, but a landslide resulted in the start being moved to Quinto.[19]
  3. ^ The race was initially scheduled to be held over 1,319.8 kilometres (820.1 miles), but was altered due to the shortening of the third stage.[19]

References

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  2. ^ a b TdS 2020, p. 198.
  3. ^ "Denifl and Preidler handed four-year bans after blood doping confessions". Cyclingnews.com. 27 June 2019. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  4. ^ (PDF). UCI.org. Union Cycliste Internationale. 30 May 2022. p. 2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 June 2022. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  5. ^ (PDF). UCI. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 July 2015. Retrieved 1 July 2015.
  6. ^ Axelgaard, Emil (22 May 2015). "Tour de Suisse wildcards announced". CyclingQuotes.com. JJnet.dk A/S. from the original on 14 June 2015. Retrieved 9 June 2015.
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  9. ^ Puddicombe, Stephen (11 June 2015). "Tour de Suisse 2015 preview". Cycling Weekly. from the original on 29 June 2015. Retrieved 6 July 2015.
  10. ^ a b c Puddicombe, Stephen (12 June 2015). "Tour de Suisse 2015: Who will win?". Cycling Weekly. from the original on 28 June 2015. Retrieved 1 July 2015.
  11. ^ a b c Henrys, Colin (12 June 2015). "Tour de Suisse 2015 - preview: Mark Cavendish steps up Tour de France preparations against sprinting rivals". Road Cycling UK. Mpora. from the original on 2 July 2015. Retrieved 1 July 2015.
  12. ^ a b c d Fletcher, Patrick (12 June 2015). "Tour de Suisse primed for duel among top sprinters". Cyclingnews.com. from the original on 13 June 2015. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
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  15. ^ Farrand, Stephen (24 June 2015). "Cancellara ready to suffer at the Tour de Suisse as he returns from fractured vertebra". Cyclingnews.com. from the original on 1 July 2015. Retrieved 1 July 2015.
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  17. ^ "1,320 kilometres, 15,606 metres of elevation gain and a portion of glacier ice". Tour de Suisse. 3 March 2015. from the original on 3 July 2015. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
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  19. ^ a b c d . Tour de Suisse. 4 June 2015. Archived from the original on 10 June 2015. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  20. ^ Tour de Suisse 2015, pp. 30–31.
  21. ^ Puddicombe, Stephen (13 June 2015). "Tom Dumoulin wins Tour de Suisse opener, Geraint Thomas 10th". Cycling Weekly. from the original on 15 June 2015. Retrieved 13 June 2015.
  22. ^ Ryan, Barry (8 July 2015). "Malori targets Italian TT title". Cyclingnews.com. from the original on 9 July 2015. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  23. ^ "Tom Dumoulin wins fast prologue". Tour de Suisse. INM. 13 June 2015. from the original on 3 July 2015. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
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Sources

  • [Technical Guide] (PDF). 2015. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 July 2015. Retrieved 2 July 2015. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  • [Tour of Switzerland Statistical Document] (PDF). December 2020. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 June 2022. Retrieved 25 June 2022. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)

External links

  • Official website  

2015, tour, suisse, 79th, edition, tour, suisse, stage, race, took, place, from, june, seventeenth, race, 2015, world, tour, started, risch, rotkreuz, finished, bern, race, composed, nine, stages, including, time, trials, short, first, long, last, event, cover. The 2015 Tour de Suisse was the 79th edition of the Tour de Suisse stage race It took place from 13 to 21 June and was the seventeenth race of the 2015 UCI World Tour It started in Risch Rotkreuz and finished in Bern The race was composed of nine stages including two time trials a short one on the first day and a long one on the last day The event covered 1 262 6 kilometres 785 miles 2 and visited Liechtenstein and Austria on its fifth stage which was the race s sole mountaintop finish 2015 Tour de Suisse2015 UCI World Tour race 17 of 28 1 Simon Spilak won the 2015 Tour de SuisseRace detailsDates13 21 June 2015 2 Stages9Distance1 262 6 km 784 5 mi Winning time30h 15 09 ResultsWinner Simon Spilak SLO Team Katusha Second Geraint Thomas GBR Team Sky Third Tom Dumoulin NED Team Giant Alpecin Mountains Thomas De Gendt a BEL Lotto Soudal Sprints Peter Sagan SVK Tinkoff Saxo TeamTeam Sky 20142016 The winner of the general classification was Slovenian Simon Spilak of Team Katusha who won the race by a margin of only five seconds from Great Britain s Geraint Thomas Team Sky The ultimate selection was made on the last day s individual time trial Tom Dumoulin of the Team Giant Alpecin squad rounded up the podium having won the two individual time trial stages that bookended the race The mountains classification was initially awarded to Austria s Stefan Denifl IAM Cycling who featured in many breakaways to amass his points Denifl was later disqualified following his suspension for doping in 2019 The sprints classification was won by Slovakian Peter Sagan Tinkoff Saxo who also was the victor of two stages Team Sky finished at the head of the team classification with a margin of 11 minutes and 49 seconds Other riders who won a stage were Croatian Kristijan Đurasek of Lampre Merida Australian Michael Matthews Orica GreenEDGE Norwegian Alexander Kristoff Team Katusha and Kazakh Alexey Lutsenko of Astana Frenchman Thibaut Pinot grabbed the queen stage to the Rettenbach glacier and held the leader s jersey for four stages but had to surrender it on the last day of competition to Spilak Contents 1 Teams 2 Pre race favourites 3 Route 4 Stages 4 1 Stage 1 4 2 Stage 2 4 3 Stage 3 4 4 Stage 4 4 5 Stage 5 4 6 Stage 6 4 7 Stage 7 4 8 Stage 8 4 9 Stage 9 5 Classification leadership 6 Classification standings 6 1 General classification 6 2 Points classification 6 3 Mountains classification 6 4 Teams classification 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Sources 9 External linksTeams EditAs a UCI World Tour event the organisation was obliged to invite all seventeen UCI WorldTeams and likewise all seventeen teams were obligated to send a squad 5 To complete the field two UCI Professional Continental teams were invited to join the race 6 The number of riders allowed per team was eight so the starting field contained 152 cyclists 7 UCI World Tour Teams AG2R La Mondiale Astana BMC Racing Team Etixx Quick Step FDJ IAM Cycling Lampre Merida Lotto Soudal Movistar Team Orica GreenEDGE Cannondale Garmin Team Giant Alpecin Team Katusha LottoNL Jumbo Team Sky Tinkoff Saxo Trek Factory Racing UCI Professional Continental teams CCC Sprandi Polkowice Wanty Groupe GobertPre race favourites Edit World road race champion Michal Kwiatkowski pictured before stage two was considered to be among the pre race favourites for the general classification Rui Costa Movistar Team won the last three editions of the race however he was not present at the 2015 event as he raced in the Criterium du Dauphine instead More contenders for the overall classification of the Tour de France opted for the latter race since it was more mountainous 8 There were two former winners of the Tour de Suisse at the starting line Trek Factory Racing teammates Swiss Fabian Cancellara and Luxembourger Frank Schleck 9 Contenders for the general classification were Simon Spilak Team Katusha Thibaut Pinot FDJ Rafal Majka Tinkoff Saxo Sergio Henao Team Sky Tom Dumoulin Team Giant Alpecin Michal Kwiatkowski Etixx Quick Step and Geraint Thomas Team Sky 10 11 Other hopefuls were Jurgen Van den Broeck Lotto Soudal and Sebastien Reichenbach IAM Cycling 12 It was AG2R La Mondiale s Domenico Pozzovivo s first race after his disastrous crash in the Giro d Italia so his form was predicted as uncertain but the Italian climber could certainly be a factor if he was in shape 12 13 Peter Sagan Tinkoff Saxo was a contender for stage wins 10 His directeur sportif team manager said he was the leader of the team and would target the opening prologue 14 Mark Cavendish of Etixx Quick Step who proved his form with twelve stage victories so far in the season was a favourite for the sprint stages 11 Other riders contending stage glory were Alexander Kristoff Team Katusha and John Degenkolb Team Giant Alpecin 10 11 Cancellara the 2009 winner was recovering from a crash suffered at the E3 Harelbeke one day race his primary focus was on his recovery 15 Route EditAn important race in its own right the 2015 Tour de Suisse was used by some Tour de France riders to perfect their physical conditions as the well known French race started on 4 July 16 The route for the race was announced on 9 March 2015 17 18 The race did not follow any particular pattern in terms of geographical displacement around the country but did visit Liechtenstein and Austria on the fifth stage It was also the longest of the race and was qualified as the queen stage It finished near Solden situated in Austrian territory and featured a mountaintop finish After that the race came back in Swiss territory for the remainder of the event The stages which were likely to be the most important for the general classification were stage five and the individual time trial on the final stage The race featured a total elevation gain of 15 606 metres 51 200 8 feet 12 On 4 June 2015 it was announced that the town of Brunnen was desisting itself from being the start of stage three because of road damage caused by a rocky landslide and that the town of Quinto would instead be the starting town This shortened the stage by 57 2 kilometres 35 5 miles 19 Stage characteristics and winners Stage Date Route Distance Type Winner1 13 June Risch Rotkreuz to Risch Rotkreuz 5 1 km 3 2 mi Individual time trial Tom Dumoulin NED 2 14 June 161 1 km 100 1 mi Medium mountain stage Kristijan Đurasek CRO 3 15 June Quinto to Olivone b 117 3 km 72 9 mi b Mountain stage Peter Sagan SVK 4 16 June Flims to Schwarzenbach de 193 2 km 120 0 mi Medium mountain stage Michael Matthews AUS 5 17 June Unterterzen to Solden Austria 237 3 km 147 5 mi Mountain stage Thibaut Pinot FRA 6 18 June Wil to Biel Bienne 193 1 km 120 0 mi Flat stage Peter Sagan SVK 7 19 June Biel Bienne to Dudingen 164 6 km 102 3 mi Flat stage Alexander Kristoff NOR 8 20 June Bern to Bern 152 5 km 94 8 mi Medium mountain stage Alexey Lutsenko KAZ 9 21 June 38 4 km 23 9 mi Individual time trial Tom Dumoulin NED Total 1 262 6 km 785 mi c Stages EditStage 1 Edit 13 June 2015 Risch Rotkreuz to Risch Rotkreuz 5 1 km 3 2 mi individual time trial ITT The opening prologue s 5 1 kilometre 3 2 mile course was in and around Risch Rotkreuz Tom Dumoulin on his way to victory on Stage 1The very short prologue contained three sharp corners The first two kilometers were slightly uphill the third one was slightly downhill and the rest was flat 20 The best times coming from the first tier of riders were Matthias Brandle IAM Cycling with 5 45 Greg Van Avermaet BMC Racing Team a second slower and Cameron Meyer Orica GreenEDGE another second in arrears Thibaut Pinot FDJ came in with a deficit of twelve seconds on Brandle Michael Matthews Orica GreenEDGE also realised a good time four seconds down on the provisional leader Domenico Pozzovivo AG2R La Mondiale came to the finish with a fifteen second deficit 21 Daniele Bennati Tinkoff Saxo had the best intermediate time all day which was calculated with 2 1 kilometres 1 3 miles remaining as the riders went through the checkpoint Fabian Cancellara Trek Factory Racing beat Brandle with a time of 5 43 Time trialist Adriano Malori 22 Movistar Team started soon after Cancellara crossed the finish line but came in at 5 47 four seconds slower Team Giant Alpecin rider Tom Dumoulin clocked 5 41 2 seconds better than Cancellara and would ultimately be the winner of the stage 23 BMC Racing Team s Silvan Dillier crashed as he was on a straight stretch of road He managed to remount and finish the stage his final position was last place 1 22 down Team Sky s leader Geraint Thomas put in a fast ride only seven seconds down on the winner Peter Sagan Tinkoff Saxo came in five seconds in arrears of Dumoulin missing out on his objective of being the first leader of the race Robert Gesink LottoNL Jumbo clocked a time 22 seconds slower than Dumoulin and so did Sergio Henao of Team Sky Poles Rafal Majka Tinkoff Saxo and Michal Kwiatkowski Etixx Quick Step were 20 and 21 seconds down respectively 24 25 26 After the event Dumoulin said that he prepared at altitude for the race and that he produced a hard physical effort on the uphill section and went less intensely on the flatter parts 24 Stage 1 result and general classification after stage 1 24 Rank Rider Team Time1 Tom Dumoulin NED Team Giant Alpecin 5 41 2 Fabian Cancellara SWI Trek Factory Racing 2 3 Matthias Brandle AUT IAM Cycling 4 4 Peter Sagan SVK Tinkoff Saxo 5 5 Steve Morabito SWI FDJ 5 6 Greg Van Avermaet BEL BMC Racing Team 5 7 Cameron Meyer AUS Orica GreenEDGE 6 8 Ion Izagirre SPA Movistar Team 6 9 Adriano Malori ITA Movistar Team 6 10 Geraint Thomas GBR Team Sky 7 Stage 2 Edit 14 June 2015 Risch Rotkreuz to Risch Rotkreuz 161 1 km 100 1 mi The race leaders pass beneath the archway marking 1 kilometre 0 62 miles to go flamme rouge The stage started right away with a Category 2 climb named Dorfstrasse which was 5 4 kilometres 3 4 miles long The riders then rode a loop to tackle the latter climb once more about midway through the stage Afterward another loop around Risch Rotkreuz was effectuated to reach a Category 1 affair named Michaelskreuz 4 kilometres 2 5 miles long The course came back down and effectuated another circuit to tackle the climb a second and last time This last King of the Mountains KOM checkpoint was situated at 12 kilometres 7 5 miles from the finish The riders negotiated the descent and ended up once again in Risch Rotkreuz for the finale 27 After 38 kilometres 23 6 miles of racing Luka Pibernik Lampre Merida Cameron Meyer Orica GreenEDGE Jurgen Roelandts Lotto Soudal and Valerio Agnoli of Astana had an advantage of 1 08 over chasers Ben King Cannondale Garmin and Simone Antonini of Pro Continental team Wanty Groupe Gobert They also enjoyed a lead of 2 55 on the peloton The two chasers soon fell back into the main field The maximum gap the peloton allowed the escapees to have was 3 20 As the main group attacked the climb of Michaelskreuz for the first time Arnaud Demare FDJ crashed because of the fight for position 28 With 16 kilometres 9 9 miles to go the riders attacked the climb of Michaelskreuz for the second and last time and caught the remnants of the breakaway on the way up 29 Astana s Jakob Fuglsang accelerated close to the summit with only Geraint Thomas Team Sky and Simon Spilak Team Katusha initially able to follow while Michal Kwiatkowski Etixx Quick Step lost contact Thomas then attacked on the descent and was followed by Fuglsang and Spilak Tom Dumoulin Team Giant Alpecin chased them as he wanted to protect his leader s jersey A small group of nine riders formed on the descent 29 Close to the final kilometre Kristijan Đurasek of Lampre Merida placed an acceleration and continued to a solo victory on the flat run in The group came in four seconds in arrears with Daniel Moreno Team Katusha winning the sprint for second place before Julian Arredondo Trek Factory Racing Overall contenders Thibaut Pinot FDJ and Spilak were also part of that clique coming in fourth and sixth respectively Peter Sagan Tinkoff Saxo won the sprint of the following group coming in tenth at fourteen seconds Dumoulin kept his leader s jersey while Pibernik amassed enough mountain points 18 to earn the mountains classification jersey 29 30 Stage 2 result 29 Rank Rider Team Time1 Kristijan Đurasek CRO Lampre Merida 3h 36 52 2 Daniel Moreno SPA Team Katusha 4 3 Julian Arredondo COL Trek Factory Racing 4 4 Thibaut Pinot FRA FDJ 4 5 Geraint Thomas GBR Team Sky 4 6 Simon Spilak SLO Team Katusha 4 7 Miguel Angel Lopez COL Astana 4 8 Jakob Fuglsang DEN Astana 4 9 Tom Dumoulin NED Team Giant Alpecin 4 10 Peter Sagan SVK Tinkoff Saxo 14 General classification after stage 2 29 Rank Rider Team Time1 Tom Dumoulin NED Team Giant Alpecin 3h 42 37 2 Geraint Thomas GBR Team Sky 7 3 Daniel Moreno SPA Team Katusha 11 4 Jakob Fuglsang DEN Astana 14 5 Peter Sagan SVK Tinkoff Saxo 15 6 Steve Morabito SWI FDJ 15 7 Thibaut Pinot FRA FDJ 16 8 Kristijan Đurasek CRO Lampre Merida 18 9 Bob Jungels LUX Trek Factory Racing 19 10 Simon Spilak SLO Team Katusha 19 Stage 3 Edit 15 June 2015 Quinto to Olivone 117 3 km 72 9 mi b The third stage began with the hors categorie Gotthard Pass climb This was the new version of the stage as the original route was closed due to a landslide 19 The stage immediately started with the 1 087 metre 3 566 3 foot ascent of the hors categorie Gotthard Pass the summit of which was 18 8 kilometres 11 7 miles in Then came a long false flat until a Category 2 climb the 5 kilometre 3 1 mile Zona Cumiasca It was immediately followed by a Category 3 named ascent Via Cantonale a 3 2 kilometre 2 0 mile climb which summited 6 kilometres 3 7 miles from the finish 31 The race got on its way under cloudy but dry conditions The Tour de Suisse was featuring the Gotthard Pass for the 34th time in its history and a break formed along its early slopes which featured cobbles 32 The two attackers were Stefan Denifl IAM Cycling and Marco Marcato Wanty Groupe Gobert The pair had a lead of 2 30 on the main field as Branislau Samoilau CCC Sprandi Polkowice was chasing them 32 Denifl got to the top of the climb first to rake in twenty points By the top of the pass snow was covering the sides of the road and the field was 3 20 back The riders put gilets on before the descent which lasted almost 40 kilometres 24 9 miles Samoilau succeeded in joining the escape during the downhill 32 The competitors replenished their food stock at the feed zone situated shortly after the downhill section The main field started accelerating with the team of the leader Tom Dumoulin Team Giant Alpecin doing most of the work at the front Realising this breakaway was gaining ground Tinkoff came to the fore to help resulting in the gap going down gradually 32 There was 30 kilometres 18 6 miles to cover as the gap was hovering around 4 30 33 At the foot of the Zona Cumiasca climb with 19 kilometres 11 8 miles remaining the gap had shrunk significantly The peloton formed sprint trains to better position their leaders for the ascent Marcato was soon dropped from the breakaway and Denifl won the mountain points At that point Denifl and Samoilau had only a thirty second gap over the depleting field The catch was effectuated with 8 7 kilometres 5 4 miles to race Michael Albasini Orica GreenEDGE attacked soon followed by Jan Bakelants AG2R La Mondiale With the two escapees enjoying only a ten second advantage Sergio Henao Team Sky accelerated and passed them The trio was ultimately reeled in Rafal Majka Tinkoff Saxo was working at the front of the small leading group to bring back the attackers to give his team leader Peter Sagan a chance at victory 34 In the last few kilometres Sagan took over from Majka himself He followed Daniel Moreno Team Katusha who had chased down Esteban Chaves Orica GreenEDGE passing him to take victory 34 35 Stage 3 result 34 Rank Rider Team Time1 Peter Sagan SVK Tinkoff Saxo 3h 00 35 2 Daniel Moreno SPA Team Katusha 0 3 Thibaut Pinot FRA FDJ 0 4 Julian Arredondo COL Trek Factory Racing 0 5 Tom Dumoulin NED Team Giant Alpecin 0 6 Geraint Thomas GBR Team Sky 0 7 Jakob Fuglsang DEN Astana 0 8 Esteban Chaves COL Orica GreenEDGE 0 9 Sergio Henao COL Team Sky 0 10 Jose Joaquin Rojas SPA Movistar Team 0 General classification after stage 3 34 Rank Rider Team Time1 Tom Dumoulin NED Team Giant Alpecin 6h 43 12 2 Daniel Moreno SPA Team Katusha 5 3 Peter Sagan SVK Tinkoff Saxo 5 4 Geraint Thomas GBR Team Sky 7 5 Thibaut Pinot FRA FDJ 12 6 Jakob Fuglsang DEN Astana 14 7 Steve Morabito SWI FDJ 15 8 Kristijan Đurasek CRO Lampre Merida 18 9 Bob Jungels LUX Trek Factory Racing 19 10 Simon Spilak SLO Team Katusha 19 Stage 4 Edit 16 June 2015 Flims to Schwarzenbach de 193 2 km 120 0 mi The 193 2 kilometre 120 0 mile route of stage four began in Flims and finished in Schwarzenbach de The first 60 kilometres 37 3 miles were flat until the peloton reached the Wildhaus Pass a Category 2 test of 8 9 kilometres 5 5 miles in length Then there were three Category 3 climbs on offer which were the 1 8 kilometre 1 1 mile Kirchberg climb repeated three times as the riders accomplished a loop There were however a number of uncategorized rises especially one with about 5 kilometres 3 1 miles to cover that was expected to play a role in the outcome The finishing 900 metres 2 952 8 feet were straight with a consistent incline 36 Davide Malacarne Astana and Thomas De Gendt Lotto Soudal attacked early in the stage They were joined by a trio of Stijn Devolder Trek Factory Racing Alex Howes Cannondale Garmin and Frederik Backaert Wanty Groupe Gobert De Gendt crested the Wildhaus Pass first to take eight points in the mountains competition 37 At the summit after 66 kilometres 41 0 miles of racing the gap between the peloton and the breakers was two minutes and fifty seconds 37 38 De Gendt took maximum points atop the Kirchberg climb on the riders first passage The main field got through the same point 2 05 in arrears The descent was fast and the riders crossed the finish line for the first time of three with about 60 kilometres 37 3 miles to race 39 The breakaway was caught less than 10 kilometres 6 2 miles later 37 Orica GreenEDGE marshaled the field as De Gendt attacked again to no avail as he was swiftly swept back Sprint specialists Arnaud Demare FDJ Mark Cavendish Etixx Quick Step and Alexander Kristoff Team Katusha struggled with the high pace at the front set by Orica GreenEDGE 39 40 As the peloton crossed the line for the last time with 29 2 kilometres 18 1 miles to race there were no escapees 37 The last mountains points of the day atop the Kirchberg climb was won by Daryl Impey it was uncontested and he won because he was riding at the front 39 Alexey Lutsenko Astana placed an attack with 16 kilometres 9 9 miles to go 40 With 10 kilometres 6 2 miles to race he had opened up an advantage of 20 seconds 39 With 6 7 kilometres 4 2 miles remaining Lutsenko was caught An attack formed immediately including the riders Marco Marcato Wanty Groupe Gobert Jan Bakelants AG2R La Mondiale and Sergio Henao Team Sky it failed and they were brought back as Tinkoff Saxo and Orica GreenEDGE teams worked together to set up a sprint finish With 300 metres 984 3 feet to go Sagan initiated his sprint first and was followed by Michael Matthews of Orica GreenEDGE Matthews then passed him to claim his first victory at the Tour de Suisse Sagan took second place and the points classification jersey 37 Stage 4 result 40 Rank Rider Team Time1 Michael Matthews AUS Orica GreenEDGE 4h 36 00 2 Peter Sagan SVK Tinkoff Saxo 0 3 Greg Van Avermaet BEL BMC Racing Team 0 4 John Degenkolb GER Team Giant Alpecin 0 5 Jasper Stuyven BEL Trek Factory Racing 0 6 Daniel Moreno ESP Team Katusha 0 7 Silvan Dillier SUI BMC Racing Team 0 8 Thibaut Pinot FRA FDJ 0 9 Matteo Trentin ITA Etixx Quick Step 0 10 Robert Gesink NED LottoNL Jumbo 0 General classification after stage 4 40 Rank Rider Team Time1 Tom Dumoulin NED Team Giant Alpecin 11h 19 09 2 Peter Sagan SVK Tinkoff Saxo 0 3 Daniel Moreno SPA Team Katusha 8 4 Geraint Thomas GBR Team Sky 9 5 Thibaut Pinot FRA FDJ 15 6 Jakob Fuglsang DEN Astana 17 7 Steve Morabito SWI FDJ 18 8 Kristijan Đurasek CRO Lampre Merida 21 9 Bob Jungels LUX Trek Factory Racing 22 10 Simon Spilak SLO Team Katusha 22 Stage 5 Edit 17 June 2015 Unterterzen to Solden Austria 237 3 km 147 5 mi After more than 200 kilometres 124 3 miles of racing the climb to the Rettenbach glacier awaited This was the queen stage of the 2015 Tour de Suisse and was also the longest stage the race featured in the last twenty years 12 The first difficulty of the day was the 34 4 kilometre 21 4 mile hors categorie Bielerhohe Pass which summited at 2 071 metres 6 794 6 feet of altitude and at that point the riders were already in Austria after a brief visit to Liechtenstein Following that difficulty the run in to Solden offered a respite until the cyclists reached the town and tackled the stage s second hors categorie climb to the Rettenbach glacier which took them to an altitude of 2 669 metres 8 756 6 feet The competitors rode the Otztal Glacier Road from Solden to get to the finish line 41 The overall race leader Tom Dumoulin Team Giant Alpecin said before the stage that if he lost less than one minute and a half to the pure climbers he could still win the Tour by taking that time back on the final stage s time trial 42 The previous stage s victor Michael Matthews Orica GreenEDGE was a non starter saying he had gotten what he wanted from the race a stage win 43 A breakaway formed in the opening 10 kilometres 6 2 miles of the race They were Gregory Rast Trek Factory Racing mountains jersey wearer Stefan Denifl and his teammate Matthias Brandle IAM Cycling Ben King Cannondale Garmin Przemyslaw Niemiec Lampre Merida Stefan Schumacher CCC Sprandi Polkowice Thomas De Gendt Lotto Soudal and Mirko Selvaggi Wanty Groupe Gobert 44 45 The best placed cyclist in the break on the general classification was Selvaggi in 59th place 18 38 down on Dumoulin 40 Denifl amassed maximum points atop the Bielerhohe Pass comforting his lead in the mountains classification Ion Izagirre of the Movistar Team abandoned after the pass 44 Thibaut Pinot seen here riding stage two won the queen stage of the race and took the lead of the race With 90 kilometres 55 9 miles to go the gap was miscalculated by the race organisers as there were unrealistic fluctuations in the official timing throughout the long stretch of flat road before the final climb With 82 kilometres 51 0 miles to cover Astana took control of the peloton for their leader Jakob Fuglsang 44 FDJ and Team Katusha started helping the chase at the front since those teams had riders aiming for victory Thibaut Pinot and the Daniel Moreno Simon Spilak duo respectively 45 With 30 kilometres 18 6 miles to the start of the big final climb the gap was around six and a half minutes The break fractured just as the peloton did later when they hit the Rettenbach ascent 44 Dumoulin was dropped almost at the beginning of it but resisted climbing at his own pace 45 Spilak attacked with 8 kilometres 5 0 miles remaining and dangled in front of a select group 46 Early breaker Denifl was alone in front and had about two minutes of an advantage with 4 kilometres 2 5 miles to go Behind Domenico Pozzovivo placed an acceleration that put the lead group in difficulty but he was brought back The time gap rapidly decreased due to dubious time monitoring again 44 Pinot launched an attack from the group but Spilak had the resources to keep up with him for a while but was ultimately dropped Pinot passed the passive Denifl before the arch signaling the last kilometre flamme rouge and took a solo victory Pozzovivo finished second while Spilak settled for third However it became soon apparent that Dumoulin would not lose much more than the minute and a half that was his objective He passed the line 1 37 down on Pinot 43 I m very happy it was important for me and the team We came here to win a stage and I had good legs today I ve got a lot of confidence now that s important for the Tour de France And it s true racing in Switzerland seems to suit me said Pinot The objective is to win overall here but the rouleurs like Geraint Thomas and Tom Dumoulin aren t far back he added It ll be a long and difficult time trial on stage nine We ll see what happens on the day 44 Stage 5 result 43 Rank Rider Team Time1 Thibaut Pinot FRA FDJ 6h 22 47 2 Domenico Pozzovivo ITA AG2R La Mondiale 34 3 Simon Spilak SLO Team Katusha 37 4 Miguel Angel Lopez COL Astana 43 5 Geraint Thomas GBR Team Sky 43 6 Jakob Fuglsang DEN Astana 1 15 7 Jan Hirt CZE CCC Sprandi Polkowice 1 18 8 Sergio Henao COL Team Sky 1 29 DSQ Stefan Denifl a AUT IAM Cycling 1 31 10 Tom Dumoulin NED Team Giant Alpecin 1 37 General classification after stage 5 43 Rank Rider Team Time1 Thibaut Pinot FRA FDJ 17h 42 01 2 Geraint Thomas GBR Team Sky 47 3 Simon Spilak SLO Team Katusha 50 4 Domenico Pozzovivo ITA AG2R La Mondiale 55 5 Miguel Angel Lopez COL Astana 1 07 6 Jakob Fuglsang DEN Astana 1 27 7 Tom Dumoulin NED Team Giant Alpecin 1 32 8 Steve Morabito SWI FDJ 2 29 9 Sebastien Reichenbach SWI IAM Cycling 2 43 10 Sergio Henao COL Team Sky 2 46 Stage 6 Edit 18 June 2015 Wil to Biel Bienne 193 1 km 120 0 mi The finishing town of Biel Bienne saw Peter Sagan take his second win at the 2015 Tour de Suisse Pictured here is the Lake Biel close to the town This stage contained only one categorised ascent midway through it and was a Category 3 affair named Auensteinstrasse However there were numerous uncategorized rises on the course to Biel Bienne and the total elevation gain for the stage was 1 167 metres 3 828 7 feet Two intermediate sprints came before the run into town in the final 40 kilometres 24 9 miles 47 As the stage started there were 145 riders remaining in the race as only seven entrants had abandoned since the start of the race The day s breakers were Axel Domont AG2R La Mondiale Marek Rutkiewicz CCC Sprandi Polkowice Matej Mohoric Cannondale Garmin and Jerome Baugnies Wanty Groupe Gobert The riders soon tackled the Eschenmosen one of the many uncategorised ascents of the day With 136 kilometres 84 5 miles left the breakaway s advantage stood at 4 30 48 The breakers took the points on offer on the only climb of the day Auensteinstrasse so Stefan Denifl of IAM Cycling maintained his 30 point advantage over his nearest competitor Thomas De Gendt Lotto Soudal 48 49 Rutkiewicz won the maximum five points that came with cresting the ascent first 48 About midway through it was calculated that the peloton s average speed was slower than the slowest prediction by the organisers most likely due to the severity of the previous stage 48 50 With 65 kilometres 40 4 miles to cover rain began to fall 51 the main field was led by FDJ Etixx Quick Step Team Giant Alpecin and Team Katusha 52 Baugnies rode first across an uncontested intermediate sprint with 42 7 kilometres 26 5 miles to go 48 53 25 kilometres 15 5 miles from the finish Adriano Malori and Francisco Ventoso of Movistar Team surprised the peloton by attacking 52 At the 10 kilometres 6 2 miles remaining arch the break of four still held a lead of forty seconds with the two Movistar Team riders placed between the groups Etixx Quick Step took matters in their own hands and began forming their sprint train for Mark Cavendish 48 Tinkoff Saxo moved to the front in support of their sprint hopeful Peter Sagan 52 With 5 kilometres 3 1 miles to cover the escape had 30 seconds of an advantage At that point two Etixx Quick Step riders Julien Vermote and Zdenek Stybar crashed on the water logged tarmac before a bend but the mishap had no consequences on the peloton 48 The breakers were brought back just before the flamme rouge 54 Shortly thereafter Cavendish lost the wheel of his lead out man Mark Renshaw after struggling to come back after the crash which hindered his lead out train 55 There were two technical turns before the finish line 52 Sagan was sitting in third wheel of his team s train he negotiated the final 90 degree corner with 200 metres 660 feet to go and profited from an unintentional lead out by Jurgen Roelandts Lotto Soudal who had opened his sprint before Sagan outpowered him in the last 100 metres 330 feet to win the day It was Sagan s eleventh victory at the Tour de Suisse matching the record of Hugo Koblet and Ferdinand Kubler Due to a split in the peloton Pinot lost five seconds to general classification rival Geraint Thomas of Team Sky 54 Stage 6 result 54 Rank Rider Team Time1 Peter Sagan SVK Tinkoff Saxo 4h 34 43 2 Jurgen Roelandts BEL Lotto Soudal 0 3 Alexander Kristoff NOR Team Katusha 0 4 Jempy Drucker LUX BMC Racing Team 0 5 Daniele Bennati ITA Tinkoff Saxo 0 6 Mark Cavendish GBR Etixx Quick Step 2 7 Tom Van Asbroeck BEL LottoNL Jumbo 2 8 Alexey Lutsenko KAZ Astana 2 9 Borut Bozic SLO Astana 2 10 Jakob Fuglsang DEN Astana 2 General classification after stage 6 54 Rank Rider Team Time1 Thibaut Pinot FRA FDJ 22h 16 51 2 Geraint Thomas GBR Team Sky 42 3 Simon Spilak SLO Team Katusha 50 4 Domenico Pozzovivo ITA AG2R La Mondiale 55 5 Miguel Angel Lopez COL Astana 1 07 6 Jakob Fuglsang DEN Astana 1 22 7 Tom Dumoulin NED Team Giant Alpecin 1 32 8 Steve Morabito SWI FDJ 2 29 9 Sebastien Reichenbach SWI IAM Cycling 2 43 10 Sergio Henao COL Team Sky 2 46 Stage 7 Edit 19 June 2015 Biel Bienne to Dudingen 164 2 km 102 0 mi Team Katusha rider Alexander Kristoff pictured in 2009 won stage seven s bunch sprint finish Stage 7 was a flat stage except for three Category 3 climbs in the second half of the stage The opening 60 kilometres 37 3 miles were totally flat After 91 kilometres 56 5 miles the riders tackled the finishing circuit twice During that circuit the first climb was the 1 1 kilometre 0 7 mile Freiburgstrasse There was a descent then the Hauptstrasse climb was covered During the second circuit the Freiburgstrasse was attacked again This last difficulty was situated 19 kilometres 11 8 miles from the finish line The final 800 metres 2 624 7 feet were steep 56 World road race champion Michal Kwiatkowski of the Etixx Quick Step squad made attempts at escaping before the peloton finally let him go 20 kilometres 12 4 miles into the race He was joined by Silvan Dillier BMC Racing Team Daryl Impey Orica GreenEDGE and Axel Domont AG2R La Mondiale 57 After the break was resolved the peloton was content in letting the gap increase to 3 15 with 129 kilometres 80 2 miles of racing remaining The best placed rider in this quartet was Impey 29 18 down on race leader Thibaut Pinot FDJ The average speed of the first hour was 47 7 km h 29 6 mph Tinkoff Saxo and Team Giant Alpecin dictated the pace pulling back thirty seconds With 88 kilometres 54 7 miles to go the race passed through the village of Misery Courtion at which point the gap stood at 2 50 A crash occurred in the outskirts of Misery Courtion involving Ben Hermans and Manuel Senni both with BMC Racing Team They were able to remount their bikes and rejoined the main field 58 Wanty Groupe Gobert s Enrico Gasparotto abandoned two hours into the stage which were contested at the speed of 44 km h 27 3 mph With 55 kilometres 34 2 miles remaining the escapees had a minute s lead Domont took the maximum points atop the first climb of the day As they crossed the line for the last time with 37 kilometres 23 0 miles to go the breakers were resisting as the time difference was still around a minute 58 On the second lap of the finishing circuit Domont was dropped from the breakaway and was absorbed in by the peloton 57 The now three rider break had a thirty second advantage with 10 kilometres 6 2 miles remaining 59 Team Katusha controlled the front of the field in the final kilometres With 2 kilometres 1 2 miles to go the peloton almost pulled back the all unyielding breakers as Kwiatkowski decided to go alone He was caught in sight of the finish line 59 The uphill sprint was won by Alexander Kristoff of Team Katusha with Peter Sagan Tinkoff Saxo being a close second Sagan got out of Kristoff s slipstream to try to out sprint him in the final metres but to no avail 57 This was Kristoff s eighteenth victory of the season Through bad positioning Pinot lost a further five seconds to Geraint Thomas Team Sky in the overall classification 60 It was a hard day I haven t felt super in this Tour de Suisse but I did a good sprint today said the winner I got ahead of Sagan and I was able to go again at the end to hold off his run 58 Stage 7 result 59 Rank Rider Team Time1 Alexander Kristoff NOR Team Katusha 3h 38 07 2 Peter Sagan SVK Tinkoff Saxo 0 3 Davide Cimolai ITA Lampre Merida 0 4 Greg Van Avermaet BEL BMC Racing Team 0 5 Arnaud Demare FRA FDJ 0 6 Jurgen Roelandts BEL Lotto Soudal 0 7 Sep Vanmarcke BEL LottoNL Jumbo 0 8 Michael Albasini SWI Orica GreenEDGE 0 9 Marco Marcato ITA Wanty Groupe Gobert 0 10 Jose Joaquin Rojas SPA Movistar Team 0 General classification after stage 7 59 Rank Rider Team Time1 Thibaut Pinot FRA FDJ 25h 55 03 2 Geraint Thomas GBR Team Sky 37 3 Domenico Pozzovivo ITA AG2R La Mondiale 50 4 Simon Spilak SLO Team Katusha 50 5 Miguel Angel Lopez COL Astana 1 07 6 Jakob Fuglsang DEN Astana 1 22 7 Tom Dumoulin NED Team Giant Alpecin 1 27 8 Steve Morabito SWI FDJ 2 29 9 Sebastien Reichenbach SWI IAM Cycling 2 43 10 Sergio Henao COL Team Sky 2 46 Stage 8 Edit 20 June 2015 Bern to Bern 152 5 km 94 8 mi Stage eight s 38 7 kilometre 24 0 mile circuit in and around Bern was navigated four times The stage was ridden in and around Bern the first time the Tour de Suisse had been to the national capital since 2009 61 This was another stage which featured a lot of uncategorised rises It however contained four Category 3 ascents The event featured four circuits of 38 7 kilometres 24 0 miles around town on the same course that was to be used in the stage nine time trial The two climbs present in the loops gave mountain points on the last two laps only The riders first took on the 800 metre 2 624 7 foot Category 3 Liebewill then it was the 400 metre 1 312 3 foot Aargauerstalden climb The stage finished on the flat a plateau after the latter ascent featuring a number of technical turns 62 A breakaway of twelve formed at the very start but was deemed too dangerous and quickly reabsorbed 63 Citing back problems Trek Factory Racing rider Jasper Stuyven abandoned the race The attackers continued to try to form a break and a move by Etixx Quick Step s Michal Kwiatkowski finally made it A break of nineteen riders emerged 64 containing among others Warren Barguil Team Giant Alpecin the best placed rider of the move in the general classification at 4 52 Team Sky Cannondale Garmin and FDJ led the chase 63 Despite the main field s effort the gap grew to two minutes with 87 kilometres 54 1 miles to cover 64 With 75 kilometres 46 6 miles to go in the stage the gap stood at 2 12 However Team Sky Cannondale Garmin and FDJ were still working to keep the escapees in range The time difference to the escape was remaining stationary at around two minutes at the 40 kilometres 24 9 miles to go marker As the peloton passed through the finish line to undertake the last lap of the circuit Jakob Fuglsang of Astana abandoned the race due to stomach problems The peloton was forming a long single line as the pace was high Maxime Monfort Lotto Soudal crashed and abandoned with bruising on his shoulder and back 64 With 20 kilometres 12 4 miles remaining Astana s Alexey Lutsenko attacked the escapees followed by Jan Bakelants AG2R La Mondiale they opened a gap holding off their former breakaway companions 65 Bakelants led for the last few kilometres except under the flamme rouge and Lutsenko outsprinted him to claim the victory 63 He described the win as the biggest of his career 66 The main field arrived in small groups with the first one containing Team Sky s Geraint Thomas and Tom Dumoulin of Team Giant Alpecin 64 who made a marginal time gain of three seconds on overall leader Thibaut Pinot 63 67 Stage 8 result 67 Rank Rider Team Time1 Alexey Lutsenko KAZ Astana 3h 28 11 2 Jan Bakelants BEL AG2R La Mondiale 1 3 Warren Barguil FRA Team Giant Alpecin 17 4 Marco Haller AUT Team Katusha 22 5 Daniele Bennati ITA Tinkoff Saxo 22 6 Michael Albasini SWI Orica GreenEDGE 22 7 Matteo Trentin ITA Etixx Quick Step 22 8 Danilo Wyss SWI BMC Racing Team 22 9 Winner Anacona COL Movistar Team 22 10 Stijn Devolder BEL Trek Factory Racing 22 General classification after stage 8 67 Rank Rider Team Time1 Thibaut Pinot FRA FDJ 29h 25 28 2 Geraint Thomas GBR Team Sky 34 3 Simon Spilak SLO Team Katusha 47 4 Domenico Pozzovivo ITA AG2R La Mondiale 50 5 Miguel Angel Lopez COL Astana 1 14 6 Tom Dumoulin NED Team Giant Alpecin 1 24 7 Steve Morabito SWI FDJ 2 29 8 Sebastien Reichenbach SWI IAM Cycling 2 43 9 Sergio Henao COL Team Sky 2 46 10 Warren Barguil FRA Team Giant Alpecin 2 51 Stage 9 Edit 21 June 2015 Bern to Bern 38 4 km 23 9 mi individual time trial ITT Bern hosted the last two stages of the 2015 Tour de Suisse The lengthy individual time trial featured a climb in the middle of it but no mountains classification points were on offer The course was technical and featured several turns It was the same course that was raced four times in stage eight except that the finish line was not situated at the same place Midway through the stage the riders took on the difficulty of the day the 800 metre 2 624 7 foot Liebewill climb There were other small climbs situated on the course 68 The final general classification of the race was decided on this stage and a majority of the observers believed that Pinot would lose his lead since he is not a great time trialist Geraint Thomas of Team Sky was only 34 seconds down coming into the stage and was among the favourites to take the overall victory Tom Dumoulin Team Giant Alpecin won the short prologue and was a contender for overall victory as a time trial specialist but he had 1 24 to make up Another contender for the overall win was Simon Spilak of Team Katusha 47 seconds down 69 Fourth placed Domenico Pozzovivo AG2R La Mondiale was an enigma as he had mixed performances in time trials throughout his career 70 71 As far as the stage win was concerned solo effort specialists Fabian Cancellara Trek Factory Racing and Adriano Malori Movistar Team were to be considered but they had no chance of a victory in the general classification since they were too far down in the rankings 65 72 73 Tom Dumoulin of Team Giant Alpecin won the ninth stage he is seen here celebrating his victory in the opening stage The riders started in reverse order of the general classification so Pinot was the last one to start 74 The riders went off the starting ramp in two minute intervals Cancellara got on course early as he was the seventh man to start He clocked a time of 48 55 which would stay a reference for most of the day He was followed out of the starting area by Matthias Brandle IAM Cycling who came in 2 28 after Cancellara somewhat surprisingly as he is a time trial specialist 75 Malori set the best time at the 21 kilometre 13 0 mile intermediate point but faded a little bit in the end coming to the finish line only 15 seconds off Cancellara s time 73 Cancellara would stay as a reference for a while now that some time trial specialists had finished their effort and failed to beat him Damien Gaudin AG2R La Mondiale clocked in a time of 50 46 which put him in sixth position 76 Cameron Meyer Orica GreenEDGE put in a time of 49 43 48 seconds off Cancellara s mark Around that time general classification hopeful Dumoulin started his time trial Silvan Dillier BMC Racing Team provisionally slotted into sixth position with a time of 50 19 and minutes later race leader Pinot rolled down the starting ramp Jerome Coppel IAM Cycling crossed the finish line with a rapid time only 25 seconds off Cancellara s performance Meanwhile in early time splits Pinot had already lost twelve seconds to Thomas The previous day s stage winner Alexey Lutsenko of Astana confirmed his good form with a time of 50 32 76 77 At the 21 kilometre 13 0 mile marker Dumoulin beat Malori s best time by eleven seconds Spilak was also doing a fast time trial being equal to the best time at the 15 5 kilometre 9 6 mile mark and passing the 21 kilometre 13 0 mile arch faster than Dumoulin by four tenths of a second By that time Pinot had virtually lost his lead Dumoulin took a very focused corner and he almost slammed into spectators upon exiting it but no accident occurred 73 Spilak needed fourteen seconds over Thomas to get in front of him in the general classification Dumoulin came in with a time nineteen seconds better than Cancellara s and won the stage with an average speed of 47 407 km h 29 5 mph 78 Spilak came in with a time of 48 54 and Thomas registered 49 12 a difference of 18 seconds Therefore Spilak won the race overall by five seconds 79 I m really happy and want to thank my teammates who helped me too much during the race This is the biggest win of my career so far Spilak said The time trial was really hard but I liked it It was up and down all the way and that helped me I gave it everything 79 It was the Slovenian s tenth victory in the professional ranks 79 Stage 9 result 79 Rank Rider Team Time1 Tom Dumoulin NED Team Giant Alpecin 48 36 2 Simon Spilak SLO Team Katusha 18 3 Fabian Cancellara SWI Trek Factory Racing 19 4 Adriano Malori ITA Movistar Team 34 5 Geraint Thomas GBR Team Sky 36 6 Bob Jungels LUX Trek Factory Racing 41 7 Jerome Coppel FRA IAM Cycling 44 8 Cameron Meyer AUS Orica GreenEDGE 1 07 9 Rafal Majka POL Tinkoff Saxo 1 26 10 Robert Gesink NED LottoNL Jumbo 1 32 Final general classification 79 Rank Rider Team Time1 Simon Spilak SLO Team Katusha 30h 15 09 2 Geraint Thomas GBR Team Sky 5 3 Tom Dumoulin NED Team Giant Alpecin 19 4 Thibaut Pinot FRA FDJ 45 5 Domenico Pozzovivo ITA AG2R La Mondiale 2 21 6 Bob Jungels LUX Trek Factory Racing 2 58 7 Miguel Angel Lopez COL Astana 3 06 8 Steve Morabito SWI FDJ 3 17 9 Robert Gesink NED LottoNL Jumbo 3 19 10 Rafal Majka POL Tinkoff Saxo 3 20 Classification leadership EditIn the 2015 Tour de Suisse three different jerseys were awarded For the general classification calculated by adding each cyclist s finishing times on each stage and the leader received a yellow jersey This classification was considered the most important of the Tour de Suisse and the winner of the classification was considered the winner of the race There was also a mountains classification the leadership of which was marked by a light blue jersey In the mountains classification points were won by reaching the top of a climb before other cyclists with more points available for the higher categorised climbs Hors Category gave 20 points to the first rider crossing 20 15 10 6 4 34 a Category 1 was worth 12 points 12 8 6 4 2 29 a Category 2 was worth 8 points 8 6 4 2 1 34 and a Category 3 was worth 5 points 5 3 2 1 34 The third jersey represented the points classification marked by a white and red jersey In the points classification cyclists got points for finishing highly in a stage A stage victory awarded 10 points with 8 points for second 6 for third 4 for fourth and 2 for fifth 34 Points could also be earned at intermediate sprints location for finishing in the top three during each stage on a 6 3 1 scale 34 There was also a classification for teams in which the times of the best three cyclists per team on each stage were added together the leading team at the end of the race was the team with the lowest total time 80 A combativity award was also attributed for the rider who had ridden the most aggressively in the eyes of the judges at the end of every stage It could have been a rider who featured in breakaways or a cyclist who attacked often 80 Classification leadership by stage Stage Winner General classification Mountains classification Points classification Team classification Combativity award1 Tom Dumoulin Tom Dumoulin not awarded Tom Dumoulin IAM Cycling Tom Dumoulin2 Kristijan Đurasek Luka Pibernik Astana Cameron Meyer3 Peter Sagan Stefan Denifl a Daniel Moreno Team Sky Stefan Denifl a 4 Michael Matthews Peter Sagan Thomas De Gendt5 Thibaut Pinot Thibaut Pinot Stefan Denifl a 6 Peter Sagan Marek Rutkiewicz7 Alexander Kristoff Michal Kwiatkowski8 Alexey Lutsenko Alexey Lutsenko9 Tom Dumoulin Simon Spilak Tom DumoulinFinal Simon Spilak Thomas De Gendt a Peter Sagan Team Sky not awardedClassification standings EditLegend Denotes the leader of the general classification Denotes the leader of the mountains classification Denotes the leader of the points classification Denotes the leader of the teams classificationGeneral classification Edit Result of general classification 79 Rank Rider Team Time1 Simon Spilak SLO Team Katusha 30h 15 09 2 Geraint Thomas GBR Team Sky 5 3 Tom Dumoulin NED Team Giant Alpecin 19 4 Thibaut Pinot FRA FDJ 45 5 Domenico Pozzovivo ITA AG2R La Mondiale 2 21 6 Bob Jungels LUX Trek Factory Racing 2 58 7 Miguel Angel Lopez COL Astana 3 06 8 Steve Morabito SWI FDJ 3 17 9 Robert Gesink NED LottoNL Jumbo 3 19 10 Rafal Majka POL Tinkoff Saxo 3 20 Points classification Edit Result of points classification 79 Rank Rider Team Points1 Peter Sagan SVK Tinkoff Saxo 432 Tom Dumoulin NED Team Giant Alpecin 283 Alexey Lutsenko KAZ Astana 234 Thibaut Pinot FRA FDJ 205 Jurgen Roelandts BEL Lotto Soudal 206 Jan Bakelants BEL AG2R La Mondiale 177 Alexander Kristoff NOR Team Katusha 168 Daniel Moreno SPA Team Katusha 169 Simon Spilak SLO Team Katusha 1410 Fabian Cancellara SWI Trek Factory Racing 14 Mountains classification Edit Result of mountains classification 79 81 Rank Rider Team PointsDSQ Stefan Denifl a AUT IAM Cycling 631 Thomas De Gendt BEL Lotto Soudal 333 Thibaut Pinot FRA FDJ 224 Luka Pibernik SLO Lampre Merida 225 Daryl Impey RSA Orica GreenEDGE 216 Axel Domont FRA AG2R La Mondiale 187 Cameron Meyer AUS Orica GreenEDGE 168 Branislau Samoilau BLR CCC Sprandi Polkowice 169 Marco Marcato ITA Wanty Groupe Gobert 1610 Jan Bakelants BEL AG2R La Mondiale 15Teams classification Edit Result of teams classification 79 Rank Team Time1 Team Sky 90h 55 38 2 Trek Factory Racing 11 49 3 IAM Cycling 15 08 4 Astana 18 43 5 BMC Racing Team 22 33 6 Team Giant Alpecin 26 44 7 AG2R La Mondiale 31 04 8 Orica GreenEDGE 31 15 9 FDJ 31 35 10 LottoNL Jumbo 38 49 Notes Edit a b c d e f g Stefan Denifl s results were expunged following his four year suspension for blood doping in June 2019 3 4 a b c The stage was due to be held over a distance of 174 5 kilometres 108 4 miles and was due to start in Brunnen but a landslide resulted in the start being moved to Quinto 19 The race was initially scheduled to be held over 1 319 8 kilometres 820 1 miles but was altered due to the shortening of the third stage 19 References Edit 2015 UCI Calendar UCI Archived from the original on 7 January 2015 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Axelgaard Emil 21 June 2015 Dumoulin wins TT Spilak takes overall win after huge drama CyclingQuotes com JJnet dk A S Archived from the original on 21 June 2015 Retrieved 21 June 2015 Clarke Stuart 21 June 2015 Geraint Thomas falls just short of Tour de Suisse title as Spilak wins overall Cycling Weekly Archived from the original on 21 June 2015 Retrieved 21 June 2015 Stage 9 ITT ProCyclingStats Archived from the original on 13 June 2015 Retrieved 21 June 2015 a b c d e f g h i Simon Spilak wins Tour de Suisse Cyclingnews com 21 June 2015 Archived from the original on 21 June 2015 Retrieved 21 June 2015 a b Gunter Joel 16 July 2012 The Tour de France a guide to the basics The Telegraph Limited 2015 Archived from the original on 10 July 2015 Retrieved 1 July 2015 2015 Tour de Suisse Mountain Classification UCI ch Union Cycliste Internationale 21 June 2015 Retrieved 26 June 2022 Sources Edit Technischer Guide Technical Guide PDF 2015 Archived from the original PDF on 2 July 2015 Retrieved 2 July 2015 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Statistik Dokument Tour de Suisse Tour of Switzerland Statistical Document PDF December 2020 Archived from the original PDF on 24 June 2022 Retrieved 25 June 2022 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2015 Tour de Suisse Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2015 Tour de Suisse amp oldid 1140386715, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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