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BUILD PHASE · 8 WEEKS OUT

ÉTAPE DU TOUR8 WEEKS OUT

Structured intensity enters. Threshold + VO2 max work. Built around the 175km / 4,500m profile of the Étape du Tour in France.

175 km·4,500 m climbing·8-12 hours·July

THE FOCUS RIGHT NOW

BUILD THE INTENSITY.

Eight weeks out, the build phase kicks in. One threshold session, one VO2 max session, and the long ride all in a week. Volume stays high, but now intensity layers on top. This is where your FTP should start climbing — if it doesn't, distribution is wrong, not effort.

THIS WEEK'S ANCHOR SESSION

2X20MIN THRESHOLD

Warm up 15min. 2x20min at 91-105% FTP with 5min recovery between. Cool down. Hit the target power both reps — if you fade the second, you started too hard. This is your bread-and-butter threshold session.

THE WEEK

A TYPICAL WEEK, 8 WEEKS OUT

Monday

REST

Recovery is a session — treat it like one.

Tuesday

THRESHOLD INTERVALS (2X20MIN)

Your key quality session of the week.

Wednesday

90MIN Z2 + STRENGTH

Reduced gym volume — maintenance only.

Thursday

VO2 MAX (4X4MIN @ 106-120% FTP)

Push the ceiling. Rep 4 should be the hardest.

Friday

REST OR 45MIN RECOVERY

Legs up.

Saturday

4-6H LONG RIDE WITH 3X15MIN AT EVENT PACE

Specificity starts here.

Sunday

2H Z2

Active recovery.

DON'T DO THIS

Do not stack threshold and VO2 max back-to-back. 48 hours minimum between quality sessions. Stacking kills the adaptation and makes you fragile.

EVENT INTEL

WHAT THE ÉTAPE DU TOUR ACTUALLY DEMANDS

The Étape du Tour is cycling's mass-participation crown jewel — one stage of the current year's Tour de France, on closed roads, run by ASO. Varies each year but always hard, always mountainous, always an international field.

KEY CHARACTERISTICS

  • Closed roads on full HC / Category-1 climbs
  • 15,000+ riders means the start can take 40 minutes to clear
  • Altitude — many editions cross 2,000m
  • Support unmatched: feed zones every 25-30km, full medical
  • Cut-off times mirror the pro race — strict

COMMON MISTAKES

  • Treating it like a normal sportive — this is mountain racing
  • Underestimating heat at altitude (sun intensity + thin air)
  • Saving legs for the final climb and ending up missing the cut-off

PACING

Étape pacing is pro-race pacing scaled to your FTP. Treat each HC climb as its own threshold effort with rigid wattage ceilings. The summit-to-summit interval is often the crux — don't burn matches on the valley transitions.

FUELLING

8+ hours at altitude demands 100g/hr carbs minimum if gut-trained. Altitude suppresses thirst — force-drink on a timer. Feed zones have baguettes and ham — use them but fuel continuously from your own supplies.

KIT

34x32 minimum — many amateurs run 34x34. Clear lenses for the descents. Full-finger gloves for the summits (even in July). A gilet stashed in the pocket is non-negotiable for the mountain descents.

WANT THIS BUILT AROUND YOUR FTP?

COACHED FOR YOUR EVENT.

Not Done Yet is the coached five-pillar system built around your actual event date. Personalised TrainingPeaks plan, weekly calls, expert masterclasses. 7-day free trial.

$195/month · 7-day free trial · Cancel anytime

FAQ

COMMON QUESTIONS AT 8 WEEKS OUT

Is 8 weeks enough to train for the Étape du Tour?+

Yes, if you already have a reasonable aerobic base. 8 weeks out means peak and taper — we can sharpen and refine, but we can't build new aerobic fitness from scratch. If you're starting from zero now, aim for finishing rather than personal bests.

What's the hardest part of the Étape du Tour?+

Closed roads on full HC / Category-1 climbs. treating it like a normal sportive — this is mountain racing — so pacing discipline is the single biggest lever most amateurs miss. Étape pacing is pro-race pacing scaled to your FTP.

How many hours a week should I train at 8 weeks out from the Étape du Tour?+

Reduce to 8-10 hours with rising intensity quality. This is the peak phase — fewer, sharper sessions. Long weekend ride stays but drops slightly (3-4 hours with event-specific work). Weekday sessions are shorter and more intense.

Do I need a coach to train for the Étape du Tour?+

You don't need a coach to finish. You do need structure. If you're new to sportives, have a target finish time, have a plateau you can't break, or have a history of peaking wrong, a coached plan pays for itself. Inside Not Done Yet the plan is built backwards from your event date — base, build, peak, taper timed to the week the Étape du Tour runs. 7-day free trial, $195/mo.

What gearing should I run for the Étape du Tour?+

34x32 minimum — many amateurs run 34x34. Clear lenses for the descents. Full-finger gloves for the summits (even in July). A gilet stashed in the pocket is non-negotiable for the mountain descents.