Posts tagged "events"

2010 Tour of Missouri Not A Sure Thing

Even though the Tour of Missouri was listed as part of the 2010 USA Cycling Pro Tour,  a recent news story suggests the race is not sure to happen without state funding:

ST. LOUIS (KMOX)  — Lieutenant governor Peter Kinder remains hopeful the dollars will be in place soon enough for 2010 Tour of Missouri planning to begin in earnest.

As chairperson, Kinder says the professional cycling event could still go on, even if state funding falls through, “It’s possible, but it becomes much more challenging because the $1.5 million in tourism tax money is about 45% of our budget.”   

This would be the fourth year for the event, which has grown in popularity each year.

Kinder says last year’s Tour of Missouri drew 500-thousand spectators and provided a $38.1 million economic impact for the state and its host communities.

The International Cycling Union calendar shows the 2010 event would begin August 31st and end September 6th.

Hopefully the Tour of Missouri will not go the way of the Tour de Georgia.

2010 USA Cycling Pro Tour Calendar Unveiled

USA Cycling has unveiled their Pro Tour Calendar for 2010:

The 2010 Pro Tour features four major multi-day stage races across the country, giving spectators around the nation an opportunity to witness the sport at its highest level of competition. With Tours of California, New York, Missouri and the Univest Grand Prix (Pa.) on the calendar, cycling enthusiasts from the West Coast to New England to the Midwest can see world-class athletes as they race through local communities across America.

In addition to the multi-day races on the 2010 Pro Tour, road cycling athletes will also compete in six additional single-day events, including five road races, one criterium and one time trial. Collectively, the calendar offers 28 days of racing for the world’s best on U.S. soil.

“We are excited to see the USA Cycling Professional Tour continue to expand so that our professional teams have even more opportunities to showcase their riders and sponsors and compete against some of the best teams and riders in the world,” said Sean Petty, USA Cycling chief operating officer. “We applaud and thank the communities and organizers who continue to provide the venues for these world class events.”

For the first time the calendar will begin with the self-billed “America’s Queen of the Classics,” the Tour of The Battenkill. The one-day race will kick off the calendar on Sunday, April 18 featuring rolling countryside, covered bridges and passes through the small villages of Upstate New York’s Washington County. This race adds a unique element in that approximately 25% of the race is contested on sections of dirt roads.

A mainstay on the USA Cycling Professional Tour, the Amgen Tour of California is an eight-day stage race in the Golden State that has historically attracted the sport’s top international teams and athletes. The event moves from February to May 16 – 23 and will feature a much more challenging overall course and several new stages, most notably the opening stage in Nevada City and the final stage, a circuit race throughout Thousand Oaks, Westlake Village and Agoura Hills.

Next up will be the 26th edition of the TD Bank Philadelphia International Championship on June 6.  To steal a term from the Rose Bowl, the “Granddaddy of Them All” in Philadelphia is the longest running professional race in the country. Past winners of “Philly” include the who’s who of American and international cycling over the past quarter century.

The circuit will then move to Providence, RI for the U.S. Open of Cycling on July 4. Moving west across New England the 2.2-rated Tour de New York will mark the second all-new event and the fifth overall event on the Pro Tour, Aug. 7-12. The six-day stage race will begin with a short, circuit race in Rochester on Saturday, a 10-mile individual time trial on Sunday and will continue through August 12th with three road races and one circuit race. The USA Cycling Professional Criterium Championships will then take place Aug. 14 in a location still to be determined.

The previously traditional close of the calendar, the Tour of Missouri will this year serve as the seventh of 10 total events, Aug. 31- Sept. 6. , Many of the world’s top international teams are expected to again return to Missouri for the world-class, multiple-day professional cycling race and rolling festival.

Another long-time event, the Univest Grand Prix will bring the best back to Pennsylvania as riders look to accumulate late-season points towards an overall Pro Tour championship. The 2.2-rated event will consist of a circuit race on Saturday, Sept. 11 and a road race in and around Souderton, Pa. on Sept. 12. 

For the fifth consecutive year, Greenville, S.C. will welcome the top American road pros for the USA Cycling Professional Road and Time Trial National Championships. This year scheduled for Sept. 18 and 19, the event will welcome America’s best as they gear up for the 2010 UCI Road World Championships set for late September in Melbourne, Australia.

Following the donning of the Stars-and-Stripes in Greenville, the overall Pro Tour standings will be used to determine an individual and a team champion who are considered the best and most consistent performers in international-caliber racing in the U.S. To view a complete wrap and winners of the 2009 USA Cycling Professional Tour, click here.

2010 USA Cycling Professional Tour:

April 18: Tour of the Battenkill - Cambridge, NY
May 16 – 23: Amgen Tour of California - California
June 6: TD Bank Philadelphia International Championship - Philadelphia, PA
July 4: US Open of Cycling - Providence, RI
Aug. 7 – 12: Tour de New York – Rochester, NY
Aug. 14: USA Cycling Professional Criterium Championships - TBD
Aug. 31 – Sept. 6: Tour of Missouri - Missouri
Sept. 11 – 12: Univest Grand Prix - Souderton, PA
Sept. 18: USA Cycling Professional Time Trial Championship - Greenville, SC
Sept. 19: USA Cycling Professional Road Race Championship - Greenville, SC

Cycle Oregon Announces 2010 Route »

Cylce Oregon includes a weekend ride in July, and a week long tour in September.

Race founder and longtime master of ceremonies Jonathan Nicholas said the weekend ride in July will be at Monmouth, based at Western Oregon University. This is more of a family ride, with a kids camp and activities for younger riders. It will also include covered bridges and an option for a 100-mile ride on the first day.

The week-long ride in September will include a loop in Eastern Oregon and Idaho, and a stopover at the 100th anniversary edition of the Pendleton Round-Up rodeo. Starting Sept. 12 in Elgin, the route includes a night in Enterprise, a cross of the state border into Washington for layovers in Clarkston and Waitsburg, a cross back into Oregon for a two-night stop in Pendleton (with an optional 55-mile run in the morning) and a final day of serious climbing back to Elgin.

Details and maps are available at the Cycle Oregon Web site.

Rapha will be promoting a Hell of the North ride on April 11, 2010 in North London.  The ride will be followed by a viewing the live race coverage. Thanks to @bikehugger for bringing this cool ride poster to our attention.

Rapha will be promoting a Hell of the North ride on April 11, 2010 in North London.  The ride will be followed by a viewing the live race coverage. Thanks to @bikehugger for bringing this cool ride poster to our attention.

Poster design for Portland’s Tweed Bicycle Ride on January 30, 2010 via gabriel amadeus on Flickr

Poster design for Portland’s Tweed Bicycle Ride on January 30, 2010 via gabriel amadeus on Flickr