Jenkin Road, Yorkshire
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Jenkin Road was the final climb of stage two of this year's Tour de France (Pic: Marc, via Flickr Creative Commons)
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Jenkin Road, Yorkshire
Perhaps one of the most eagerly awaited climbs of the Tour de France Grand Depart in Yorkshire, don’t be fooled by the category-four rating given by ASO to this ascent.
Yorkshire-based rider Dean Downing was among those to have talked up its killer reputation before the Tour peloton tackled it as the final climb en-route from York to Sheffield on stage two. For one afternoon this residential road took centre stage.
The whole climb , which rises 86 metres in just over 0.8km, has a relatively modest average gradient of 11 per cent but it is the wall-like ramps of three times that which make it stand out from the crowd and prompted huge crowds assemble as the Tour rolled in town.
A 25 per cent corner and a nasty sting in the tail just shy of the summit mean the ascent is certainly not one for the weak-willed and Vincenzo Nibali (Astana) attacked on the descent to setup his stage two victory in July.
Vital statistics
Length: 0.8km
Elevation: 86m
Average gradient: 11 per cent
Maximum gradient: 33 per cent
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