Grand Départ and journey south passing through the town of
Panazol on the fourth stage, which ended with a
bunch sprint won by
Marcel Kittel of The first stage's bunch sprint finish was won by Mark Cavendish, who gained the race leader's yellow
jersey; he also claimed the green jersey as the leader of the points classification, with
Paul Voss () taking the
polka dot jersey as the leader of the
mountains classification. Alberto Contador crashed and lost 55 seconds. Peter Sagan took victory in stage two with an uphill sprint in Cherbourg, putting him in the yellow and green jerseys.
Jasper Stuyven of led the mountains classification. General classification rivals Contador and Richie Porte both lost time. The bunch sprint in Angers was won by Cavendish in a
photo finish with André Greipel. Cavendish's win was his 28th in the Tour and drew him level with
Bernard Hinault at second on the
all-time list; Cavendish also took the green jersey. Another photo finish followed in the next stage with Marcel Kittel beating 's
Bryan Coquard. Sagan claimed back the green and
Thomas De Gendt () the polka dot.
Greg Van Avermaet of won the fifth stage after he was the only rider to survive from an early
breakaway. He took the lead of the general classification by over five minutes. Stage six was won by Cavendish, who beat Kittel and claimed the green jersey.
Pyrenees and transition In stage seven, the first in the Pyrenees,
Steve Cummings () soloed over the final climb, the
Col d'Aspin, and descended into the finish at
Lac de Payolle where he took victory. Van Avermaet came fifth and extended his lead. 's
Adam Yates attacked the chasing group and as he passed underneath the one kilometre to go arch it collapsed on top of, and injured, him. In the following stage Chris Froome attacked the front of the race of overall favourites as they passed the summit of the
Col de Peyresourde, descending to the finish in
Bagnères-de-Luchon to take a solo victory by thirteen seconds. This put him in the yellow jersey, sixteen seconds ahead of Yates in second, with
Rafał Majka () taking the polka dot. In the Tour's
queen stage, the ninth,
Tom Dumoulin of broke clear of the large breakaway to claim the win at the Andorra-Arcalis. Thibaut Pinot took the lead of the mountains classification. Contador abandoned the race, citing a fever which had developed overnight. The next day was the first rest day of the Tour. (
yellow jersey) and
Peter Sagan (
green jersey), along with one teammate each, formed a
breakaway in the final kilometers of stage eleven, with Sagan victorious and Froome gaining time on his rivals. On stage eleven, Sagan forced a move in the final with his teammate
Maciej Bodnar, who were followed by Froome and his teammate
Geraint Thomas. They opened up a lead of over twenty seconds and held it to six seconds at the finish, where Sagan beat Froome in a sprint. A successful breakaway saw De Gendt win stage twelve at the finish at Chalet Reynard, which was changed from the intended summit finish at Mont Ventoux, later, due to dangerous winds. In the chasing group of overall favourites, a leading group of Porte, Froome and
Bauke Mollema () crashed into the back of a camera motorbike that was stopped by the encroaching spectators. Froome's bike was unrideable and he was forced to run until he was given a bike from a neutral service car; although it did not fit him he managed to ride until he received his team bike. The race jury gave Froome and Porte the same time as Mollema, who later criticised the jury's decision, suggesting that they would have acted differently if he was the one to go down. De Gendt took the lead of the mountains classification. Cavendish won his fourth stage the next day with a bunch sprint at the
Parc des Oiseaux.
Alps and finale rider
Jarlinson Pantano won stage fifteen after a sprint with fellow surviving breakaway rider Majka. In next stage, Sagan won his third stage from a select group of sprinters that had traversed a cobbled climb from the finish in Bern. The next day was the second rest day. In the following stage's mountain time trial Froome beat second-placed Dumoulin by 21 seconds and extended his lead to three minutes and 52 seconds overall, with Mollema keeping second. In stage nineteen, the general classification leaders descended the wet roads of the unclassified penultimate climb at the head of the race, with only Costa surviving from the breakaway. Romain Bardet attacked after a series of crashes that included Froome and Mollema. Froome took Thomas's bike and got back to the group, but Mollema was left isolated and finished over four minutes behind the stage winner Bardet, who had passed Costa in the final and soloed to the finish at the Le Bettex ski station. Froome's lead was increased to 4' 11", with Bardet moving up from fifth to second. In stage twenty
Jon Izaguirre () took the win in
Morzine, attacking on the wet descent from a three rider group that led over the final climb of
Col de Joux Plane. (left) celebrates winning the Tour's final stage on the
Champs-Élysées in Paris The final stage in Paris was won by Greipel, his second consecutive Champs-Élysées stage win. Froome finished the race to claim his third Tour de France, becoming the first man since
Miguel Induráin in
1995 Tour to officially defend his title. He beat second-placed Bardet by four minutes and five seconds, with Nairo Quintana third, a further sixteen seconds down. Sagan won the points classification with a total of 470, 242 ahead of Greipel in second. Majka won the mountains classification with De Gendt and Pantano second and third respectively. The
best young rider was Yates, two minutes and sixteen seconds ahead of second-placed
Louis Meintjes (). finished as the winners of the
team classification, over eight minutes ahead of second-placed . Of the 198 starters, 174 reached the finish of the last stage in Paris, beating the previous record high of 170 set in the
2010 Tour. ==Classification leadership and minor prizes==