User:Green-eyed girl/Style guide/Grand Tour

For an article on a Grand Tour (that is, the Tour de France, Vuelta a España, or the Giro d'Italia), the following style guidelines should apply.

Lead edit

The lead should give the name of the race, which (numerical) edition of the race it is, what dates over which it took place, and the overall winner. Because the events take place in Europe, all dates should be in the "day-month" European style. As these are very long events, some overall detail of the race, such as when the winner took the overall lead and perhaps the winners of the other classifications, should be mentioned in the lead.

Every cycling event should include {{Infobox Cycling race report}}. Wikilink riders' names in the palmarès section of the infobox, and use {{ct}} as much as possible for the teams. If the team does not have a code associated with {{ct}}, either set it up or just list the team name textually, and wikilink it. It is not necessary to link nations, as this is done automatically. The full name of the nation and its three-letter abbreviation are equivalent - enter either ESP or Spain, for example, in the infobox. Remove any unused fields from the infobox, but do not remove fields for an image or average speed, as these are likely or at least potentially to be filled in the future.

Question for consensus edit

Might it be better to devote an entire section to details of the race, in prose? There should still be a little in the lead, but there is a lot more to say about these Grand Tours than short stage races.

Stage summary table edit

Since there are 20 or more stages in a Grand Tour, including all of them in the article on the event would bloat the article past Wikipedia's recommended article size of 30-50K. The stage profiles are to be put into two new articles (more on that in a moment), but as a summary of the stages should be presented in table form. This should show the date, distance and start/end points of each stage, and it should also note the rest days.

Questions for consensus edit

There are quite a lot of them as it relates to the stage summary table. The most basic question is what type of table to use. Disregarding the precise elements of each example for the moment, which style of stage summary table do you think is best?

Stage Date Route Distance Type
1 30 Aug Granada - Granada 7 km   Team time trial
2 31 Aug Granada - Jaén 167 km   Flat stage
3 1 Sept Jaén - Córdoba 168 km   Flat stage
4 2 Sept Córdoba - Puertollano 170 km   Flat stage
5 3 Sept Ciudad Real - Ciudad Real 42 km   Individual time trial
6 4 Sept Ciudad Real - Toledo 150 km   Flat stage
5 Sept Rest day
7 6 Sept Barbastro -   Andorra (Naturlandia-La Rabassa) 223 km   Mountain stage
8 7 Sept   Andorra (Escaldes-Engordany) - Pla de Beret 151 km   Mountain stage
9 8 Sept Vielha e Mijaran - Sabiñánigo 200 km   Mountain stage
10 9 Sept Sabiñánigo - Zaragoza 151 km   Flat stage
11 10 Sept Calahorra - Burgos 178 km   Flat stage
12 11 Sept Burgos - Suances 186 km   Intermediate stage
12 Sept Rest day
13 13 Sept San Vicente de la Barquera - Alto de El Angliru 209 km   Mountain stage
14 14 Sept Oviedo - Fuentes de Invierno 158 km   Mountain stage
15 15 Sept Cudillero - Ponferrada 202 km   Mountain stage
16 16 Sept Ponferrada - Zamora 186 km   Flat stage
17 17 Sept Zamora - Valladolid 146 km   Flat stage
18 18 Sept Valladolid - Las Rozas 167 km   Flat stage
19 19 Sept Las Rozas - Segovia 145 km   Mountain stage
20 20 Sept La Granja de San Ildefonso - Alto de Navacerrada 17 km   Individual time trial
21 21 Sept San Sebastián de los Reyes - Madrid 102 km   Flat stage

or

Stage Date Start Finish Km Type Stage winner Yellow Jersey
1 4 July   Monaco   Monaco 15   Individual Time Trial
2 5 July   Monaco   Brignoles 182   Flat Stage
3 6 July   Marseille   La Grande-Motte 196   Flat Stage
4 7 July   Montpellier   Montpellier 38   Team Time Trial
5 8 July   Le Cap d'Agde   Perpignan 197   Flat Stage
6 9 July   Girona   Barcelona 175   Flat Stage
7 10 July   Barcelona   Andorra 224   Mountain Stage
8 11 July   Andorra la Vella   Saint-Girons 176   Mountain Stage
9 12 July   Saint-Gaudens   Tarbes 160   Mountain Stage
R 13 July N/A N/A N/A Rest Day
10 14 July   Limoges   Issoudun 193   Flat Stage
11 15 July   Vatan   Saint-Fargeau 192   Flat Stage
12 16 July   Tonnerre   Vittel 200   Flat Stage
13 17 July   Vittel   Colmar 200   Intermediate Stage
14 18 July   Colmar   Besançon 199   Flat Stage
15 19 July   Pontarlier   Verbier 207   Mountain Stage
R 20 July N/A N/A N/A Rest Day
16 21 July   Martigny   Bourg-Saint-Maurice 160   Mountain Stage
17 22 July   Bourg-Saint-Maurice   Le Grand-Bornand 169   Mountain Stage
18 23 July   Annecy   Annecy 40   Individual Time Trial
19 24 July   Bourgoin-Jallieu   Aubenas 195   Flat Stage
20 25 July   Montélimar   Mont Ventoux 167   Mountain Stage
21 26 July   Montereau-Fault-Yonne   Paris Champs-Élysées 160   Flat Stage

Once the style table is decided, we need to decide the elements.

Use flag logos
  1. For stages that leave France, Spain, or Italy (for the respective race)
  2. For every stage
  3. Never
Do we include the "stage type" icons? (      )
Do we include the stage winner and race leader in this table?
If we opt to use the "Vuelta" table, are the stage start and end points described accurately enough, or would other sorts of punctuation be better?

Participating teams edit

List the teams participating alphabetically. Don't use qualifiers such as "wild card" next to team names in the list, as this is only meaningful for UCI ProTour events, and none of the Grand Tours are UCI ProTour events. Do mention in prose above the list which teams are not UCI ProTour teams, as they will nonetheless comprise the majority of the event's peloton.

Stages edit

There are too many stages in a Grand Tour to put the profiles for all of them in the same article as the race. Put them into two new articles, half and half. The most common splits are 1-11 and 12-21, and Prologue-10 and 11-20 if the race has a Prologue. If a race doesn't have 21 stages, just make the split as evenly as possible, with any odd stage in the first article. These articles should be namen Tour name, first stage in description to last stage in description. Some examples:

In each of these new articles should be a profile for each stage, in its own subsection. The top line, in bold, should give the date of the stage, its start point and end point (if a stage starts and ends in the same place, such as a time trial or circuit race, just give the place name once), the length in kilometers, and the type of the stage if it's not a simple road race. If the stage starts or ends in a nation other than the one in which it mostly takes place, denote this in the header by giving the nation in parentheses after the city. If the start or end city has a Wikipedia article that is slightly different in title from what the race uses, pipe the correct link to the name given by the race (exception: always use common English names instead of foreign versions). Use an endash between the date and the start down and a comma before the stage length.

For example

;23 July 2008 – [[Embrun, Hautes-Alpes|Embrun]] to [[Alpe d'Huez]], 210 km

which gives

23 July 2008 – Embrun to Alpe d'Huez, 210 km

but

20 May 2009 – Turin to Arenzano, 214 km

rather than Torino, which the race organizers use.

Occasionally, the name given by race organizers for a start or finish location will be a location so specific that Wikipedia has an article about a larger area that includes the place named by the race. Link to the best Wikipedia article and pipe it to the name used by the race. If the race organizers use two names to describe a start or finish town (a prominent example occurs yearly in the Tour de France - the final stage is always said to be "Paris Champs Élysées"), link to the more specific location and give both names in the visible link. Do NOT use two consecutive wikilinks - this is contrary to the MOS.

Example of both of the above:

24 May 2009 – Centre d'Alt Rendiment to Circuit de Catalunya Montmeló, 110.8 km

Include a brief preview of each stage, discussing its physical profile and length. This need not be more than a sentence or two in most cases.

After the stage has been run, summarize it. Discuss, for road stages, any major breakaways on the day, when they were caught, and the character of the finish (breakaway/mass sprint/riders finishing two or three at a time). For particularly mountainous stages, include brief detail on the day's major climbs. If any leader's jerseys change hands, note this. For time trials, mention who set times early on that stood for a particularly long time (or if none did, mention that). If anything that took place during the stage seems notable for a non-competitive reason (for example, riders hitting dogs or particularly spectacular crashes in the past have been widely disseminated videos on the web), consider mentioning that. The summary should comprise about 1-3 paragraphs, and at least the top of the subsequent tables should be visible while the entire summary is still on the screen.

Below the textual summary, include two tables, side-by-side, one for the top on the stage and one of the top ten in the GC as it stood after that stage. Indicate in the stage result table which jerseys were worn by classification leaders on the stage with the icon correct for that jersey
(           ), and alternative text describing that the cyclist wore that jersey as classification leader. Place the icon next to the rider's name, separated by only one space. For the intermediate GC table, indicate any and all jerseys awarded to the cyclist on the podium with those same icons, and alternative text describing that the cyclist was awarded the jersey as classification leader.

Always use the {{flagathlete}} template, with any use of a rider in a table (it is excessive in prose), and not just {{flagicon}} and the rider's name. This used to be the predominant practice, but per the Manual of Style, flags should always be explanatory and never simply decorative.

Example:

Stage 4 results
Cyclist Team Time
1   Julián Sánchez (ESP) Contentpolis-Ampo 4h 46' 29"
2   Daniel Martin (IRL) Garmin–Slipstream + 6"
3   Alejandro Valverde (ESP)   Caisse d'Epargne + 8"
4   Haimar Zubeldia (ESP) Astana + 12"
5   Mikel Astarloza (ESP) Euskaltel–Euskadi + 21"
6   José Ángel Gómez Marchante (ESP) Cervélo TestTeam + 21"
7   Alexsandr Dyachenko (KAZ) Astana + 25"
8   Jakob Fuglsang (DEN) Team Saxo Bank + 31"
9   Xavier Tondó (ESP)   Andalucía-Cajasur + 37"
10   John Gadret (FRA) Ag2r–La Mondiale + 1' 06"
General Classification after stage 4
Cyclist Team Time
1   Alejandro Valverde (ESP)   Caisse d'Epargne 13h 49' 38"
2   Daniel Martin (IRL) Garmin–Slipstream + 15"
3   Haimar Zubeldia (ESP) Astana + 22"
4   Mikel Astarloza (ESP) Euskaltel–Euskadi + 34"
5   José Ángel Gómez Marchante (ESP) Cervélo TestTeam + 38"
6   Jakob Fuglsang (DEN) Team Saxo Bank + 45"
7   Alexsandr Dyachenko (KAZ) Astana + 49"
8   Xavier Tondó (ESP)   Andalucía-Cajasur + 56"
9   Samuel Sánchez (ESP) Euskaltel–Euskadi + 1' 42"
10   David de la Fuente (ESP) Fuji–Servetto + 1' 52"

Jersey progress table edit

Prior to 2008, a table like is seen in this revision was the one that was regularly used. This has now been specifically discouraged, after conversation during the 2008 Tour de France. You may still find it on articles about old races; if so, you're encouraged to convert it to the new one, such as is seen on almost any event currently. The names on the same horizontal row as a stage should reflect the jerseys awarded on the podium after that stage. The table colors should be based on the colors for the jerseys awarded; there can be some guesswork as to what hexadecimal code best represents a particular color jersey, but for the most part, the colors have been decided, on articles about previous years' races. Do not change colors without discussion. The top and bottom of each vertical column should be a shade darker than the colors on the inside, with the top naming each competition (with the name linked to something explanatory where possible) and the bottom listing the overall winner of each competition.

The table should show who is awarded a jersey, not who wears one. If a rider is awarded two or more jerseys on the podium after a certain stage, list the rider in each column accurately and denote below the table who the "caretaker" wearer of each jersey is. Use the phrase "Jersey wearers when one rider is leading two or more competitions" and precede it with a semicolon. Put an asterisk in front of each line explaining who the caretaker is.

The consensus for the looks of the table is shown in the example below:

Stage Winner General classification
 
Maillot jaune
Points classification
 
Maillot vert
Mountains classification
 
Maillot grimpeur
Young rider classification
 
Maillot blanc
Team classification
 
Classement par équipe
Combativity award
 
Prix de combativité
1 Fabian Cancellara Fabian Cancellara Fabian Cancellara Alberto Contador Roman Kreuziger Astana no award
2 Mark Cavendish Mark Cavendish Jussi Veikkanen Stef Clement
3 Mark Cavendish Tony Martin Samuel Dumoulin
4 Astana no award
Final

In the 2009 Tour de France article, this has been changed by User:196.30.79.194 to the table below. Major differences: the headers have lost their background colors, the font size is changed from "smaller" to "95%", which increases the font size, and the stage numbers are bold. This is not consensus, but can be discussed in the talk page.

Stage Winner General
 
Maillot jaune
Points
 
Maillot vert
Mountains
 
Maillot grimpeur
Young rider
 
Maillot blanc
Team
 
Classement par équipe
Combativity
 
Prix de combativité
1 Fabian Cancellara Fabian Cancellara Fabian Cancellara Alberto Contador Roman Kreuziger Astana no award
2 Mark Cavendish Mark Cavendish Jussi Veikkanen Stef Clement
3 Mark Cavendish Tony Martin Samuel Dumoulin
4 Astana no award
Final

Standings/results edit

When a race is ongoing, this section should be titled Standings, as the information is not final.

Give standings and results tables in a two-column format (there should not be more than five or six total tables), with the top ten in each classification listed. Give the General Classification first. When the race ends, standings become results. Past history has shown that there is sufficient editor interest to update these tables daily. While Wikipedia is not news, it is not unreasonable to have the most up-to-date information of surely encyclopedic significance as soon as possible.

The format of these tables should be identical to the format described above for standings and results after stages, with the exception of the jerseys: each table should have the appropriate jersey icon next to the rider's name to show the jersey awarded for it (and the jerseys awarded to anyone else in the top ten in that classification). Do not use multiple icons if one rider is leading/has won multiple competitions - just give the appropriate icon for the lead of the particular classification in the table. For example, if a rider leads the General classification and the Youth classification, just give for the correct jersey icon in the General classification table and the correct icon for the Youth classification in that table. If a rider leads/wins two competitions and is also in the top ten for a third, give his more prestigious jersey in his cell for that third classification. For example, if a rider leads the General and Youth classifications and is sixth in the Mountains classification, put the GC jersey icon on his cell on the Mountains classification table. Boldface each entry (name, team, and points/time) for the leading rider or team in each table.

See also, references, and external links edit

Briefly, these sections should be in this order. All internal content should come before any external content. Each Grand Tour has a navigational infobox associated with it; it should go below the external links. Each edition can also have a navigational infobox, this should be below the overall navigational infobox. Example:

If anything else needs discussion edit

other than what's still listed at User:Nosleep/Style guide/Short stage race, list it here.