2013 RideLondon–Surrey Classic explained

2013 RideLondon–Surrey Classic
Series:2013 UCI Europe Tour
Date:4 August 2013
Stages:1
Distance:221
Unit:km
Time:5h 07' 44"
Speed:43.09
First:Arnaud Démare
First Nat:FRA
Second:Sacha Modolo
Second Nat:ITA
Third:Yannick Martinez
Third Nat:FRA
Mountains:Ramon Sinkeldam
Mountains Nat:NED
Sprints:Ramon Sinkeldam
Sprints Nat:NED
Next:2014

The 2013 RideLondon–Surrey Classic (also known as the 2013 Prudential RideLondon–Surrey Classic for sponsorship reasons) was the inaugural running of the RideLondon–Surrey Classic one-day cycling race. It was held on 4 August 2013 as a 1.1 category event within the 2013 UCI Europe Tour.

The race was won by rider Arnaud Démare in a sprint finish from a large main group of 96 riders.[1] Sacha Modolo of finished second, having also finished second on The Mall in the 2011 London-Surrey Cycle Classic. The podium was completed by Yannick Martinez of .

Pre-race favourite Peter Sagan failed to finish together with Matthew Goss . The highest place Briton was Ben Swift who having been edged out in the final sprint, rolled in tenth, ahead of Gerald Ciolek - winner of the 2013 Milan – San Remo.

Route

The 221km (137miles) route chosen for the 2013 edition of the RideLondon–Surrey Classic was a variation of the course used for the 2012 Summer Olympics.[2] The route featured five categorised climbs and three intermediate sprint points.

Riders started from the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park close to the Olympic Velodrome before passing close to Canary Wharf and the Tower of London on the way through central London. Leaving London by the A4 the route passed through Richmond Park, Kingston upon Thames and Hampton Court Palace.

In Surrey the route passed through Weybridge and Ripley on the way to the first categorised climb of Newlands Corner near Guildford before heading along the A25 to Abinger Hammer. The route then featured three 27.3km (17miles) laps of a hilly section routed through Holmbury St Mary, Forest Green and Ockley which included the climb of Leith Hill - the highest point in South-East England.

The route back to London travelled through Dorking and included a single ascent of Box Hill before the largely flat run-in via Cobham, Kingston upon Thames, Wimbledon and Putney. The final kilometres followed the Embankment, past the Palace of Westminster, along Whitehall and turned right through Admiralty Arch 400m from the finish on The Mall.

Sprints classification

There were three Intermediate Sprints that counted towards the sprints classification:

SprintRace distance
Hampton Court Palace 35.2km (21.9miles)
Dorking High Street 160.3km (99.6miles)
Cobham High Street 185.7km (115.4miles)
Note that points were not awarded at the finish line.

King of the Mountains classification

There were five categorised climbs that counted towards the King of the Mountains classification:

ClimbRace distanceCategoryLengthAscentAverage gradeMax. grade
Newlands Corner[3] 69.2km (43miles) Cat 3 1.8km (01.1miles) 84m (276feet) 4.7% 9.6%
Leith Hill (1st Passage)[4] 95.3km (59.2miles) Cat 2 2.1km (01.3miles) 139m (456feet) 6.6% 11.8%
Leith Hill (2nd Passage) 122.6km (76.2miles) Cat 2 2.1km (01.3miles) 139m (456feet) 6.6% 11.8%
Leith Hill (3rd Passage) 149.9km (93.1miles) Cat 2 2.1km (01.3miles) 139m (456feet) 6.6% 11.8%
Box Hill[5] 165.9km (103.1miles) Cat 2 2.5km (01.6miles) 123m (404feet) 4.9% 10.9%

Teams

25 teams were invited to the 2013 RideLondon–Surrey Classic: 8 UCI ProTeams, 6 UCI Pro Continental Teams, 10 UCI Continental Teams along with the British national team.[6]

Each of the 25 teams were due to enter six riders to the race, making up a starting peloton of 150 riders. and both entered teams of five riders, and Vegard Breen of did not start, making a starting field of 147 riders.

The 25 teams that competed in the race were:[7]

UCI ProTeamsUCI Pro Continental TeamsUCI Continental TeamsNational Teams

Race report

A breakaway of eight riders formed after 44 km, although their advantage did not increase beyond five minutes. The breakaway contained Ramon Sinkeldam of who would subsequently amass enough points at the intermediate sprints and on the categorised climbs to win both the Sprints Classification and the King of the Mountains Classification.

With, and controlling the peloton the gap to the breakaway reduced to a little over two minutes after the three laps of the Leith Hill circuit. The peloton briefly splintered on the last categorised climb of Box Hill as David Millar of set a furious pace which led to the escape of his teammate Jack Bauer together with Yoann Offredo and Simon Yates (Great Britain Cycling Team) - who eventually caught the early breakaway.

With the peloton approaching Yoann Offredo and Zico Waeytens attacked the remnants of the breakaway on the approach to Kingston upon Thames and built a lead of over a minute with 20 km left to race, however on the approach to London (within the final 6 km) they too were caught by the peloton — resulting in the widely expected bunch sprint on The Mall.

David Millar led the peloton through Westminster, but as the teams passed under the flamme rouge with 1 km to go it was who were the better organised, delivering Arnaud Démare to the line to win by a bike length from Sacha Modolo.[8]

Results

General classification

Of the 147 starters 131 completed the course within the time limit and 96 riders finished on the same time. The top 10 finishers were:[9]

CyclistTeamTime
1
2s.t.
3s.t.
4s.t.
5s.t.
6s.t.
7s.t.
8s.t.
9s.t.
10s.t.

Sprints classification

The results of the Sprints Classification were:

CyclistTeamPoints
110
26
35
4Great Britain Cycling Team3
5=2
5=2
5=2
8=1
8=1
8=1

King of the Mountains classification

The results of the King of the Mountains Classification were:

CyclistTeamPoints
126
223
320
412
57
65
71

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Arnaud Démare wins Prudential RideLondon-Surrey Classic. Cycling Weekly. 4 August 2013. 11 August 2013.
  2. Web site: Britain gets set to host its biggest ever one-day race. Prudential RideLondon. 6 February 2013. 2014-06-01. https://web.archive.org/web/20140829035641/http://www.prudentialridelondon.co.uk/News/Newsroom/Britain_gets_set_to_host_its_biggest_ever_one-day_race_s1_p14415.htm. 2014-08-29. dead.
  3. Web site: Newlands Corner GPX Track. Ride With GPS. 14 September 2013.
  4. Web site: Leith Hill GPX Track. Ride With GPS. 14 September 2013.
  5. Web site: Box Hill GPX Track. Ride With GPS. 14 September 2013.
  6. Web site: Prudential RideLondon Media Guide — The Events. https://web.archive.org/web/20140829095759/http://www.prudentialridelondon.co.uk/Assets/London+Marathon+Digital+Assets/Prudential+RideLondon/London+Marathon+Digital+Assets/Downloadable/Prudential+RideLondon+Media+Guide+-+The+Events.pdf. dead. 29 August 2014. PDF. 11 August 2013.
  7. Web site: Prudential RideLondon-Surrey Classic 2013 - Start List . Cycling News . 31 July 2013 . 15 March 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211023135718/https://www.cyclingnews.com/features/prudential-ridelondon-surrey-classic-start-list/ . 23 October 2021 .
  8. Web site: Inspired Frenchman wins first Prudential RideLondon–Surrey Classic. 4 August 2013. 11 August 2013. https://archive.today/20130811223558/http://www.prudentialridelondon.co.uk/News/Newsroom/Inspired_Frenchman_wins_first_Prudential_RideLondon-Surrey_Classic_s1_p16624.htm. 11 August 2013. dead. dmy-all.
  9. Web site: Prudential RideLondon–Surrey Classic 2013 - Official Results. https://web.archive.org/web/20130810024744/http://www.prudentialridelondon.co.uk/Assets/London+Marathon+Digital+Assets/Prudential+RideLondon/Results+PDFs/Prudential-RideLondon-Surrey-Classic-Official-Results.pdf. dead. 10 August 2013. PDF. 11 August 2013.