Trisha Shetty (Editor)

London–Surrey Classic

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Date
  
August

Discipline
  
Road

Region
  
Great Britain

Type
  
One-day

London–Surrey Classic

Competition
  
UCI Europe Tour (Cat 1.HC)

Organiser
  
London & Surrey Cycling Partnership (LSCP)

The London–Surrey Classic (also known as the RideLondon–Surrey Classic) is an annual 193 km (119.9 mi) men's professional one-day road bicycle racing starting and finishing in London and routed via the picturesque Surrey Hills. The first race of its kind was the London–Surrey Cycle Classic, on 14 August 2011, a 1.2 classification 140 km preparatory event for the London 2012 Olympics, which was won by sprinter Mark Cavendish. The men's and women's Olympic road races were held on a longer variation of the same course the following year. On 4 August 2013, the race found a permanent home as part of the Prudential RideLondon weekend, a two-day cycling festival held in London, a legacy event of the Olympics. The Prudential RideLondon–Surrey Classic is part of the UCI Europe Tour and is classified as a 1.HC category event.

Contents

London-Surrey Cycle Classic

A part of the London Prepares series a one-off one-day 140 km (87.0 mi) cycle race was organised for the 14 August 2011 acting as a test event for the Olympic Road Cycling events to be held the following year. The race was named the London-Surrey Cycle Classic and was part of the 2010–11 UCI Europe Tour as a 1.2 category event.

The race started and finished on The Mall in London and featured two laps of a 15.5 km (9.6 mi) circuit centred on Box Hill in Surrey. 138 riders from 19 national teams and 10 trade teams took part in the race, and was won by Mark Cavendish in a sprint finish.

2012 Summer Olympics

The 2012 Summer Olympics held road cycling races for both men and women on a largely similar course to that of the London-Surrey Cycle Classic held the previous year.

RideLondon–Surrey Classic

The RideLondon weekend, including the RideLondon–Surrey Classic, was announced by the Mayor of London Boris Johnson on the 10 August 2012, less than two weeks after the Olympic Road Cycling races. RideLondon is managed by the London & Surrey Cycling Partnership, a joint venture between the organisers of the London Marathon and The Tour of Britain.

The inaugural RideLondon–Surrey Classic was run as a 1.1 category event on the 2013 UCI Europe Tour. The UCI upgraded the classification for the 2014 race which was run as a 1.HC category event on the 2014 UCI Europe Tour; the same classification as Paris–Tours and Milano–Torino.

Route

The RideLondon–Surrey Classic route is a variation of the course used for the 2012 Summer Olympics. The route features both categorised climbs and intermediate sprint points.

Riders start 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 passes through Richmond Park, Kingston upon Thames and Hampton Court Palace. In Surrey the route passes through Weybridge and Ripley on the way to the first of the categorised climbs and the leafy villages of the Surrey Hills.

Multiple laps of hilly terrain in the vicinity of Dorking incorporate further categorised climbs, including Leith Hill - the highest point in South-East England. On the return to London the route takes in the final categorised climb of Box Hill before the largely flat run-in via Oxshott, Kingston upon Thames, Wimbledon and Putney. The final kilometres follow the Embankment, past the Palace of Westminster, along Whitehall and turning right through Admiralty Arch before the finish on The Mall.

Sprints classification

Intermediate Sprints count towards the sprints classification; the points distribution for this classification is as follows:

Note that points are not awarded at the finish line.

King of the Mountains classification

Categorised climbs count towards the King of the Mountains classification; the points distribution for this classification is as follows:

The categorised climbs that have featured in the RideLondon–Surrey Classic include:

Records

  • The fastest RideLondon–Surrey Classic was in 2013, by Arnaud Démare at a speed of 43.09 km/h (26.77 mph).
  • The highest number of finishers was in 2013 - 131 out of 147 starters completed the course within the time limit.
  • Future

    Surrey County Council has agreed to support the RideLondon events until 2018, with an option of a further two-year extension. The RideLondon event director, Hugh Brasher, has stated his ambitions to attain UCI World Tour status for the RideLondon–Surrey Classic by 2016. This was backed up by positive rider reaction following the inaugural race, including from Arnaud Démare's teammate Dominique Rollin. In March 2016 the race organisation applied for WorldTour status from the 2017 event and in August 2016 the UCI confirmed that the race would be promoted to the WorldTour from 2017.

    References

    London–Surrey Classic Wikipedia