Chris Froome says the way riders fuel for the Tour de France has shifted dramatically since his Grand Tour victories, noting that modern cyclists arrive in peak shape and eat like machines.
How did Froome’s old strategy work?
In the late 2010s Froome would start a three‑week race slightly under‑cooked, aiming to build form as the weeks progressed. He recalled arriving at the 2018 Giro d’Italia overweight and five minutes off the leader, then climbing back to win by the final stage. The British rider believed “riding into form” gave him a decisive edge in the latter half of a Grand Tour.
What’s different now?
Today’s champions, including Tadej Pogačar, stress arriving at the Tour in top condition and maintaining it with relentless carbohydrate intake. Pogačar told reporters on 6 July that riders must “eat food like a robot and go with the flow.” Nutritionists like Julien Louis now prescribe 120 g of carbs per hour – roughly six bananas or 200 g of dried pasta – to keep energy stores full on mountain stages.
Why did the shift happen?
Earlier riders, Froome among them, often limited sugars during training to stay light, surviving on two eggs for breakfast and long, low‑fuel rides. Retired Simon Yates recalled the exhaustion that came from such deprivation. The new approach avoids those energy crashes, a lesson learned after Yates ran out of fuel on the 2018 Giro.
How does this affect current rivals?
Frenchman Warren Barguil, who turned pro in 2013, notes that stages are now shorter but more intense, making constant fueling essential. Even Olympic champion Remco Evenepoel highlighted the rise of high‑sugar drinks and gels as a game‑changer for riders who can sustain 7,000‑calorie days on the toughest climbs.
What can we expect for future Tours?
With nutrition science advancing, teams will likely fine‑tune carb delivery even further. Froome’s era taught the sport that under‑fueling hurts performance; today’s riders treat every gram of carbohydrate as a strategic asset, shaping how the Tour will be contested for years to come.