2012 Grand Prix Cycliste de Montréal explained

Series:2012 UCI World Tour
Race No:26
Season No:28
2012 Grand Prix Cycliste de Montréal
Date:9 September 2011
Stages:1
Distance:205.7
Unit:km
Time:5h 28' 29"
Speed:37.59
First:Lars Petter Nordhaug
First Nat:Norway
Second:Moreno Moser
Second Nat:Italy
Third:Alexandr Kolobnev
Third Nat:Russia
Previous:2011
Next:2013

The 2012 Grand Prix Cycliste de Montréal was the third edition of the Grand Prix Cycliste de Montréal, a single-day professional bicycle road race. It was held on 9 September 2012, over a distance of 205.7km (127.8miles), starting and finishing in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. It was the 26th event of the 2012 UCI World Tour season. The race was one of the only two events which are part of the World Tour calendar in North America, the other one being the Grand Prix Cycliste de Québec contested two days prior.

The race was won by Norwegian Lars Petter Nordhaug, who broke away from the lead group and attacked twice inside the final . He out sprinted Moreno Moser and Alexandr Kolobnev . Simon Gerrans of, who won the 2012 Grand Prix Cycliste de Québec, took the fourth place.[1]

Course

The race consisted of 17 laps of a circuit 12.1km (07.5miles) in length, and followed the same path as the 2011 edition. The circuit, around the main campus of the Université de Montréal, was well-suited for climbers and punchers with three climbs per lap. The finish was on an uphill climb with a small gradient of 4%, that was located on Avenue du Parc. There was a sharp, 180 degrees bend to the right situated 500 meters away from the line. The total vertical climb of the race was 3,893 metres.[2] The major difficulties were:

Teams

As the race was held under the auspices of the UCI World Tour, all eighteen UCI ProTeams were invited automatically. There were also 3 wildcard invitations, which were UCI Professional Continental teams: two French squads (and) and a Canadian one .[3]

The 18 ProTeams that competed were:

The 3 UCI Professional Continental teams that competed were:

Race summary

The first significant breakaway occurred at kilometre 31, when Manuele Boaro got away, soon to be joined by Cyril Gautier and Egoi Martínez . It was the second time that Boaro tried his luck, the first attempt was annulled a little earlier. The trio cruised to a five-minute advantage, while Simone Ponzi of and Kristijan Koren of made an attempt to join them, and their acceleration caused a few riders to drop from the peloton.[1] Before Koren and Ponzi could scheme something, they were brought back with to race, as the leading group became a duet since Boaro was dropped. Martinez and Gauthier were finally caught on the Côte de la Polytechnique during the penultimate lap. Other attacks occurred, but the bunch was back together as they crossed the line to race the last lap.[4]

On the Côte Camilien-Houde, 's David Veilleux attacked, while Janez Brajkovič and Gerald Ciolek collided and crashed during the climb. Canadian Ryder Hesjedal worked to bring the lead group together, which was composed of about 25 riders with to go, when Greg Van Avermaet produced an acceleration that was brought back by the group. Lars Petter Nordhaug then placed an attack of his own, being screamed on by his team via his earpiece to go for the victory since his teammate Edvald Boasson Hagen was out of energy.[1]

Nordhaug was caught by Moreno Moser and Alexandr Kolobnev on the Avenue du Parc, near the flamme rouge. The pair had escaped from the group, Kolobnev produced an acceleration with to race, his chances looked good but Nordhaug passed him to take the victory with an advantage of two seconds, with Moser taking second place and Kolobnev holding on for third. Simon Gerrans, who won the Grand Prix Cycliste de Québec 2 days before, sprinted to fourth place.[5]

Results

CyclistTeamTimeWorld Tour
Points
align=center 1align=right 5h 28' 29"align=center 80
align=center 2align=right + 2"align=center 60
align=center 3align=right + 2"align=center 50
align=center 4align=right + 4"align=center 40
align=center 5align=right + 4"align=center 30
align=center 6align=right + 5"align=center 22
align=center 7align=right + 5"align=center 14
align=center 8align=right + 5"align=center 10
align=center 9align=right + 5"align=center 6
align=center 10align=right + 5"align=center 2

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Nordhaug guts out a victory in Montréal. Cycling News. 9 September 2012. 9 September 2012. Sadhbh O'Shea.
  2. Web site: Parcours. PDF. 11 September 2011. Grand Prix Cycliste de Montréal. Grand Prix Cycliste Québec-Montréal.
  3. Web site: List of teams entered for the Grand Prix Cycliste de Québec. Grand Prix Cyclistes. Grand Prix Cycliste Québec-Montréal. 15 August 2012.
  4. News: Lars Petter Nordhaug nails career best win in GP Cycliste de Montréal. Velo Nation. Velo Nation LLC. 9 September 2012. 10 September 2012. Kyle Moore.
  5. News: Nordhaug remporte le GP de Montréal. La Presse Canadienne. Bell Media. 9 September 2012. 10 September 2012. fr.