Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race Explained

Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race
Date:January (28-29 in 2023)
Region:Australia
Discipline:Road
Competition:UCI World Tour
Type:One-day
Number:8 (as of 2024)
Mostwins:No repeat winners
Number Women:8 (as of 2024)
Mostwins Women:No repeat winners

The Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race also known as Great Ocean Road Race or Cadel Road Race is an annual professional one-day road bicycle racing for both men and women starting and finishing in Geelong, Victoria, Australia, and routed along the picturesque Great Ocean Road. The first race was held in 2015, as the farewell race for Cadel Evans—Australia's only Tour de France winner or Road World Champion.[1] The 2017 edition was added to the UCI World Tour for the first time.[2] [3]

In November 2020, it was announced that the 2021 race would not be held due to the ongoing COVID-19 global pandemic. This was due in part to a number of UCI WorldTour teams making the decision to stay in Europe due to uncertainty around international travel conditions and logistics of quarantine requirements.[4]

The event returned in January 2023, featuring on both the men's and women's World Tour calendars.[5]

Course

The men's version is 176km (109miles), while the women's is 143km (89miles). In 2023, the mass participation People's Ride includes three distance options—35km, 50km, or 125km.[6]

The race starts on the Geelong waterfront in Victoria, and travels westward to the rolling hills of Moriac, turning south toward the famous surf beach of Bells Beach, following the surf coast to Torquay and through Cadel’s hometown of Barwon Heads and Ocean Grove, before heading north back to a Geelong circuit before finishing back around on the waterfront.[7] The course is suited to puncheurs.

Results

Men's race

Wins per country

WinsCountry
2
1


Women's race

Wins per country

WinsCountry
3
1

Melbourne pre-race criterium

In 2017 the pre-race criterium was known as the Race Melbourne - Albert Park, becoming the Towards Zero Race Melbourne in 2018.[8] In 2019 the race was held in a team-based format with points awarded for sprints. Deceuninck-QuickStep won the men's event[9] and Trek Segafredo won the women's event.[10] In 2020 the race was not held and was replaced by Race Torquay.[11]

Women's race

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race 2015. Cyclingnews.com. February 2015 .
  2. Web site: UCI expands WorldTour to 37 events . 2 October 2016 . Cycling News.
  3. Web site: The UCI reveals expanded UCI WorldTour calendar for 2017 . 2 October 2016 . UCI.
  4. Web site: 2020-11-01. Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race 2021 cancelled. 2020-12-13. Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race.
  5. Web site: Jackie Tyson . 2022-09-30 . Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race returns on WorldTour 2023 calendar . 2022-10-03 . cyclingnews.com . en.
  6. Web site: Home . 2022-10-03 . Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race.
  7. Web site: Elite Men's Overview . 2022-10-03 . Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race.
  8. Web site: CQ Ranking. cqranking.com. 2019-05-14.
  9. News: Deceuninck-QuickStep win new-look Race Melbourne . 1 February 2020 . Cycling News . 24 January 2019.
  10. News: Trek-Segafredo Women win Race Melbourne . 1 February 2020 . Cycling News . 24 January 2019.
  11. News: de Neef . Matt . Cadel's Race support event moves from Melbourne to Torquay . 1 February 2020 . Cycling Tips . 14 May 2019.