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Tour de France 2022 tech trends: Who won with what?

Posted on July 26, 2022 By admin No Comments on Tour de France 2022 tech trends: Who won with what?

Have you caught your breath yet? It felt like an unusually frantic Tour de France this year, with outright favorite Tadej Pogačar in seemingly unbeatable form in the early stages of the race before being dethroned in the high mountains by a dominant team performance by Jumbo-Visma and the eventual winner Jonas Vingegaard .

As always the racing provides the main headlines, but in the background, there are trends, winners and losers aside from the crop of riders. Disc brakes finally put rim brakes to the sword, and tubeless tires made big in-roads too against their established rivals.

As well as the nerdy tech trends there was the standard menu of new bikes, strange tech, and special edition kit and paint jobs to gawp at as you imagine yourself as part of the peloton for three weeks.

Stage by stage: The winners
Stage Winner (Team) Bike Wheels Tires Tire technology Groupset Brakes
1 Yves Lampaert (QuickStep-AlphaVinyl) S-Works Shiv TT Roval

S-Works (Unreleased)

Tubeless Shimano Disc
2 Fabio Jakobsen (QuickStep-AlphaVinyl)

S-Works Tarmac SL7

Roval

S-Works (Unreleased)

Tubeless Shimano Disc
3

Dylan Groenewegen (Team BikeExchange-Jayco)

Giant Propeller Cadex Vittoria Corsa Tubular Shimano Disc
4 Wout van Aert (Team Jumbo-Visma) Cervélo S5 Shimano

Vittoria Corsa TLR

Tubeless Shimano Disc
5 Simon Clarke (Israel-Premier Tech) Ostro Factor Black Inc Maxxis Tubeless Shimano Disc
6 Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) Colnago V3Rs Campagnolo

Pirelli P Zero Race

Inner tubes Campagnolo Disc
7 Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) Colnago V3Rs Campagnolo

Pirelli P Zero Race

Inner tubes Campagnolo Disc
8 Wout van Aert (Team Jumbo-Visma) Cervélo S5 Shimano

Vittoria Corsa TLR

Tubeless Shimano Disc
9 Bob Jungels (AG2R Citroën Team)

BMC Teammachine SLR

Campagnolo

Pirelli P Zero Race

Inner tubes Campagnolo Disc
10 Magnus Cort (EF Education-EasyPost) Cannondale SuperSix EVO Vision Vittoria Corsa Tubular Shimano Disc
11 Jonas Vingegaard (Team Jumbo-Visma) Cervélo R5 Shimano Vittoria Corsa Tubular Shimano Disc
12 Tom Pidcock (Ineos Grenadiers)

Pinarello Dogma F

Shimano

Conti GP5000 S TR

Tubeless Shimano Disc
13 Mads Pedersen (Trek-Segafredo) Trek Madone Bontrager

Pirelli P Zero Race

Inner tubes SRAM Disc
14 Michael Matthews (Team BikeExchange-Jayco) Giant Propeller Cadex Vittoria Corsa Tubular Shimano Disc
15 Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck) Aeroad Canyon Shimano

Vittoria Corsa TLR

Tubeless Shimano Disc
16 Hugo Houle (Israel-Premier Tech) Ostro Factor Black Inc Maxxis Tubeless Shimano Disc
17 Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) Colnago V3Rs Campagnolo

Pirelli P Zero Race

Inner tubes Campagnolo Disc
18 Jonas Vingegaard (Team Jumbo-Visma) Cervélo R5 Shimano Vittoria Corsa Tubular Shimano Disc
19 Christophe Laporte (Team Jumbo-Visma) Cervélo S5 Shimano

Vittoria Corsa TLR

Tubeless Shimano Disc
20 Wout van Aert (Team Jumbo-Visma) Cervélo P5 Reserve

Vittoria Corsa Speed ​​TLR

Tubeless Shimano Disc
21 Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck) Aeroad Canyon Shimano

Vittoria Corsa TLR

Tubeless Shimano Disc

and purple and white cervelo s5

The new Cervélo S5, along with the R5 and P5, topped the manufacturers list (Image credit: Cervelo)

Battle of the brands

Of all the brands on show at the Tour, only ten can lay claim to a stage win, which is a more diverse selection than the seven from last year.

An extremely dominant showing from Jumbo-Visma meant that this year Cervélo topped the charts with six stage wins, three for the new Cervélo S5 under Wout van Aert and Christophe Laporte, two for the lightweight R5 under the winner, Jonas Vingegaard, and one for the TT P5, also under Wout van Aert.

The defending champion from 2021, Tadej Pogačar, valiantly helped Colnago to second place with three stage wins atop the V3Rs.

Incredibly, considering it bagged a whopping seven stages last year, the giant that is Specialized only managed two stages – the first two – this time around.

Which bike brand won the most Tour de France stages?
Brand Stage wins
Cervelo 6
Colnago 3
Canyon, Factor, Giant, Specialized 2
BMC, Cannondale, Pinarello, Trek 1

Campagnolo Bora Ultra WTO

Campagnolo came a valiant second in the wheel power rankings (Image credit: Graham Cottingham)

Wheels of fortune

By playing a part not only in Jumbo-Visma’s stage wins but also those of Ineos Grenadiers and Alpecin-Deceuninck, Shimano sits head and shoulders above the other wheel brands with eight wins, twice as many as it had last year. It would have been nine had Van Aert not run Reserve wheels (a sister brand to Cervélo) on his TT bike for the penultimate stage.

As with the bikes, the Italians came in second, with Campagnolo picking up three wins under Pogačar, and one more under Bob Jungels.

Which wheel brand won the most Tour de France stages?
Brand Stage wins
Shimano 8
Campagnolo 4
Roval, Cadex, Black Inc. 2
Vison, Bontrager, Reserve 1

Tom Pidcock railing a corner on the Galibier

Vittoria may have won the most stages, but the Continental GP5000 S TR was the most impressive tire of the Tour under Tom Pidcock (Image credit: Getty Images)

Winning the tire war

This is big news: More than half the stages on the 2022 Tour de France were won on tubeless tyres.

The same number of stages, 11, were also won by riders using Vittoria tyres, although not the same eleven.

This wasn’t a case of a single brand using one system and skewing the results either, as Jumbo-Visma used a mix of both tubulars and tubeless depending on the terrain; tubulars for Vingegaard’s high mountain victories, and tubeless for Van Aert and Laporte on the flats.

Pogačar and Jungels were still resolutely flying the flag for inner tubes on their Campagnolo wheels, but it’s beginning to feel like, despite posh TPU inner tubes being used, it’s a dying tech, along with tubulars. Specialized teams have moved away from the brand’s ‘inner tubes are faster’ line and have gone tubeless too.

An honorable mention has to go to the set of GP5000 S TR tires that Tom Pidcock descended like a man possessed on to set himself up for a historic victory on Alpe d’Huez.

Which tires won the most Tour de France stages?
Brand Stage wins Tire type Stage wins
Victoria 11 Tubeless 11
Pirelli 5 Clincher, Tubular 5
Maxxis, Specialized 2

Trek-Segafredo Trek Madone at the Tour de France 2022

One win for the new Madone and the only win for SRAM, too (Image credit: Peter Stuart)

A(nother) bad year for SRAM

Sixteen stage wins again for Shimano this year, which isn’t a huge surprise given it’s the largest equipment sponsor. Pogačar and Jungels again teamed up to ensure second place went to the Italian contingent, and Mads Pedersen saved the blushes of SRAM by bagging them a single-stage victory. This is the second year running that the Americans have only netted a single win. Considering Campagnolo only had three teams in the race, compared to the 16 of Shimano, it has a better strike rate despite fewer actual wins.

For stats nerds, this is exactly the same split as the 2021 edition of the race.

Which groupset brand won the most Tour de France stages?
Brand Stage wins
Shimano 16
Campagnolo 4
SRAM 1

A close up image of Tadej Pogačar's new Colnago Prototipo bike

Even rim brake stalwart Pogačar went with discs this year (Image credit: Josh Croxton)

Rim brakes are dead

Pour one out for the valiant rim brake, for its time at the very top of the sport is done. This is it. It’s finally happened. Every stage of the 2022 Tour de France was won on disc brakes, and the eventual winner rode discs for every stage of the race.

Despite the best efforts of Chris Froome in video format, and a few wins from Pogačar last year, it’s time for some of us to admit defeat.

Which braking technology won the most Tour de France stages?
Brakes Stage wins
Disc brakes 21

Wins and losses for new bikes

The new Trek Madone and the new Cervélo S5 were the only new bikes to bag a stage win, with the new Pinarello Bolide, Colnago TT-1, Canyon Ultimate, Cube Litening, and KTM Revelator coming away empty-handed.

All the tech and trends from the 2022 Tour de France

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