Region South Australia Type Stage race Editions 19 (as of 2017) Competition UCI World Tour Race director Mike Turtur Discipline Road bicycle racing | English name Tour Down Under First edition 1999 (1999) Date January Most recent Richie Porte (AUS) First winner Stuart O'Grady (AUS) | |
![]() | ||
Most wins Simon Gerrans (AUS) (4 wins) |
Tour down under stage 5 race report
The Tour Down Under is a cycling race in and around Adelaide, South Australia. The race attracts riders from all over the world. The race was established in 1999 with the support of then Premier of South Australia John Olsen as part of an effort to fill the gap in the state's sporting calendar left by the move of the Australian Grand Prix from Adelaide to Melbourne, Victoria. In 2005, the Tour Down Under was promoted by the Union Cycliste Internationale to the highest ranking outside Europe. In 2007 Premier Mike Rann and tourism minister Jane Lomax Smith launched a campaign for the Tour Down Under to become the first race outside of Europe to secure ProTour status from the UCI. ProTour status would guarantee all the world's top teams. In 2008 the Tour Down Under became the first UCI ProTour in Australia, and the following year it became the inaugural event of the UCI World Ranking calendar.
Contents
- Tour down under stage 5 race report
- Tour down under stage 2 race report
- List of overall winners
- Tour directors
- Course
- Jerseys
- Current jerseys
- Be Active Tour
- Womens Criterium Series
- Obscure Pro
- References

In September 2008 Rann said Lance Armstrong would make his comeback at the 2009 race. Armstrong's participation saw visitor numbers doubled, the economic impact more than doubled (from $17.3 million in 2008 to $39 million in 2009) and media coverage increased five-fold. The 2010 Tour Down Under was named Australia's Best Major Event for the second year in a row in the Qantas Tourism Awards. Armstrong participated in three successive Tour Down Under events, retiring after 2011. The 2011 Tour Down Under had an economic impact of $43 million and crowds of more than 782,000. In 2013, it attracted more than 760,400 people to Adelaide and regional South Australia across eight days, including 40,000 interstate and international visitors who travelled there for the event.

Tour down under stage 2 race report
List of overall winners

Simon Gerrans has won the Tour four times (2006, 2012, 2014, and 2016). Stuart O'Grady (1999 and 2001) and André Greipel (2008 and 2010) have won the Tour Down Under twice. No winner has successfully defended his title.
Tour directors
Course

The Tour generally features stages surrounding Adelaide, from flat to undulating. There are no high mountains, giving pure climbers few opportunities. The penultimate stage involves two laps of Willunga Hill, a 3 km climb at an average of 7.6%. However most tour stages finish as a bunch sprint.

South Australia in late January is often hot. Daily maximum temperatures approaching or exceeding 40 °C (104 °F) are not uncommon.
Jerseys
Leaders of competitions within the race wear a distinctive jersey.
Current jerseys

Be Active Tour
The Tour Down Under has a companion event, the Be Active Tour, a recreational events held over the route. The inaugural event in 2003 was known as the Breakaway Tour and attracted more than 600 riders. In 2004 riders increased to 1,400 and the event was known as the Be Active Tour. The 2005 tour saw more than 1,900 riders leave Salisbury, Williamstown and Angaston in 30 °C (86 °F) to tackle the hills and roads of stage 2. In 2006, riders rode 154 km from Strathalbyn to Yankalilla in temperatures in excess of 40 °C (104 °F). The heat took its toll on riders and a heat policy now exists.
In 2007 the name changed to Mutual Community Challenge Tour and it was joined by the Mutual Community Fun Tour and Powerade mini-tour for children. The new events are to increase the popularity of the event and attract people who do not ride regularly. In 2010 there were over 8,000 participants.
Women's Criterium Series
There used to be a women's criterium series of three street circuits. This was sponsored by UniSA and held at the same place as the men's race, or at the end of the men's race. For 2011 there was a two-race series called the Rendition Homes Santos Women’s Cup. As of 2016 the women's race has been upgraded to UCI 2.2, giving it the highest level of status available for road racing internationally.
Obscure Pro
In this local tradition fans treat one unknown rider as a star, mobbing him at hotels and painting his name on the road. The rider must be a non-English speaking domestique who typically acts as a bottle carrier.
Previous Obscure Pros have been: