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2017–18 UCI Cyclo-cross World Cup

The 2017–18 Telenet UCI Cyclo-cross World Cup was a season long cyclo-cross competition, organised by the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI). The UCI Cyclo-cross World Cup took place between 17 September 2017 and 28 January 2018, over a total of nine events. The defending champions were Wout van Aert in the men's competition and Sophie de Boer in the women's competition.

2017–18 UCI Cyclo-cross World Cup
Details
Location
  • United States
  • Belgium
  • Denmark
  • Germany
  • France
  • Netherlands
Races9
Champions
Male individual champion Mathieu van der Poel (NED) (Beobank–Corendon & Corendon–Circus[a])
Female individual champion Sanne Cant (BEL) (IKO–Beobank)

Both elite titles were won at the penultimate round of the season at Nommay. Despite finishing twelfth in the race, Sanne Cant won the women's title after her closest rival Kaitlin Keough finished the Nommay race in second behind compatriot Katie Compton.[1] Cant was the only female rider to win more than once, winning five times during the season. Other races were won by Kateřina Nash, Maud Kaptheijns and Evie Richards, who became the first under-23 woman to win an elite race, when she won at Namur.

In the men's competition, Mathieu van der Poel won each of the first four races to build up a lead on van Aert and the rest. Van Aert won the next two races in Germany and at Namur, but with wins at Heusden-Zolder and Nommay,[2] van der Poel gathered an unassailable lead going into the final round at Hoogerheide; he won that race as well, garnering podium finishes at all nine events during the campaign.

The men's under-23 title was won by Tom Pidcock, having won four World Cup races in as many starts, giving him an unassailable lead after the Grand Prix Erik De Vlaeminck at Circuit Zolder,[3] as a rider's best four scores (from seven races) counted towards the classification.[4] The women's under-23 title was won by Fleur Nagengast, while the junior men's title went to Tomáš Kopecký.

Points distribution edit

Points were awarded to all eligible riders each race. The top ten finishers received points according to the following table:

Points awarded
Position 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Elite riders[5][b] 80 70 65 60 55 50 48 46 44 42
U23/Junior riders[5] 60 50 45 40 35 30 28 26 24 22
  • Elite riders finishing in positions 11 to 50 also received points, going down from 40 points for 11th place by one point per place to 1 point for 50th place.[5]
  • For the age group riders (excluding under-23 women), those finishing in positions 11 to 30 also received points, going down from 20 points for 11th place by one point per place to 1 point for 30th place.[5] As well as this, only the top four scores for each rider count towards the World Cup standings.[4]

Events edit

In comparison to last season, the races in Las Vegas, Rome (Fiuggi) and Valkenburg were replaced by Bogense, Nommay and Waterloo. The race in Bogense marked the first ever Cyclo-cross World Cup in Denmark, as a precursor to the 2019 UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships being held there.[8]

Date Race Location Winners
Elite men Elite women Under-23 men Junior men
17 September Jingle Cross   Iowa City, United States   Mathieu van der Poel (NED)   Kateřina Nash (CZE) No under-23 or junior race
24 September World Cup Waterloo   Waterloo, United States   Mathieu van der Poel (NED)   Sanne Cant (BEL)
2 October Duinencross   Koksijde, Belgium   Mathieu van der Poel (NED)   Maud Kaptheijns (NED)   Tom Pidcock (GBR)   Pim Ronhaar (NED)
19 November CrossDenmark   Bogense, Denmark   Mathieu van der Poel (NED)   Sanne Cant (BEL)   Tom Pidcock (GBR)   Tomáš Kopecký (CZE)
25 November Poldercross Zeven   Zeven, Germany   Wout van Aert (BEL)   Sanne Cant (BEL)   Eli Iserbyt (BEL)   Pim Ronhaar (NED)
17 December Citadelcross   Namur, Belgium   Wout van Aert (BEL)   Evie Richards (GBR)   Tom Pidcock (GBR)   Loris Rouiller (SUI)
26 December Grand Prix Erik De Vlaeminck   Heusden-Zolder, Belgium   Mathieu van der Poel (NED)   Sanne Cant (BEL)   Tom Pidcock (GBR)   Tomáš Kopecký (CZE)
21 January Grand Prix Nommay   Nommay, France   Mathieu van der Poel (NED)   Katie Compton (USA)   Thijs Aerts (BEL)   Mees Hendrikx (NED)
28 January Grand Prix Adri van der Poel   Hoogerheide, Netherlands   Mathieu van der Poel (NED)   Sanne Cant (BEL)   Eli Iserbyt (BEL)   Niels Vandeputte (BEL)

Final points standings edit

Elite men edit

Pos. Rider JIN
 
WAT
 
KOK
 
BOG
 
ZEV
 
NAM
 
ZOL
 
NOM
 
HOO
 
Points
1   Mathieu van der Poel (NED) 1 1 1 1 2 3 1 1 1 695
2   Wout van Aert (BEL) 14 7 3 2 1 1 3 2 2 585
3   Toon Aerts (BEL) 7 8 11 3 3 2 8 3 7 493
4   Michael Vanthourenhout (BEL) 6 4 8 9 5 5 9 5 3 474
5   Laurens Sweeck (BEL) 2 21 4 7 19 8 2 6 4 466
6   Kevin Pauwels (BEL) 4 6 12 10 6 4 12 10 5 437
7   Corné van Kessel (NED) 12 2 14 6 4 6 6 18 12 428
8   Tim Merlier (BEL) 17 5 22 5 13 12 7 4 6 408
9   Lars van der Haar (NED) 5 17 2 4 11 19 4 Ret 9 395
10   Daan Soete (BEL) 11 3 6 20 17 9 5 13 13 395
120 riders scored points[9]

Elite women edit

Pos. Rider JIN
 
WAT
 
KOK
 
BOG
 
ZEV
 
NAM
 
ZOL
 
NOM
 
HOO
 
Points
1   Sanne Cant (BEL) 3 1 3 1 1 12 1 12 1 608
2   Kaitlin Keough (USA) 2 2 8 3 11 6 16 2 5 501
3   Eva Lechner (ITA) 10 13 11 4 7 3 3 7 2 476
4   Nikki Brammeier (GBR) 9 19 9 10 8 2 11 14 8 401
5   Katie Compton (USA) 19 42 5 DNS 3 4 2 1 22 400
6   Kateřina Nash (CZE) 1 6 6 4 7 14 11 20 396
7   Helen Wyman (GBR) 16 25 7 2 2 15 27 4 27 393
8   Ellen Van Loy (BEL) 12 7 12 5 23 11 8 9 15 375
9   Maud Kaptheijns (NED) 5 10 1 28 18 9 19 10 351
10   Sophie de Boer (NED) 4 4 2 11 5 13 37 337
123 total riders[c] scored points[10]

Under-23 men edit

Pos. Rider KOK
 
BOG
 
ZEV
 
NAM
 
ZOL
 
NOM
 
HOO
 
Points
1   Tom Pidcock (GBR) 1 1 1 1 (2) 240
2   Eli Iserbyt (BEL) (3) (2) 1 2 2 1 220
3   Thijs Aerts (BEL) 4 (8) 2 (10) 5 1 (7) 185
4   Adam Ťoupalík (CZE) 2 5 8 (9) 4 (21) 151
5   Yannick Peeters (BEL) (7) 7 4 (28) (18) 4 5 143
6   Sieben Wouters (NED) 8 3 (Ret) 4 6 (16) (11) 141
7   Toon Vandebosch (BEL) 6 4 6 (19) (11) (14) 4 140
8   Joris Nieuwenhuis (NED) 11 (16) (Ret) (Ret) 3 7 3 138
9   Joshua Dubau (FRA) (28) (10) 5 6 9 3 (18) 134
10   Jakob Dorigoni (ITA) (22) (Ret) 5 7 12 8 108
72 riders scored points[11]

Under-23 women edit

Pos. Rider JIN
 
WAT
 
KOK
 
BOG
 
ZEV
 
NAM
 
ZOL
 
NOM
 
HOO
 
Points
1   Fleur Nagengast (NED) 24 18 18 16 20 28 23 16 28 268
2   Ceylin del Carmen Alvarado (NED) 20 14 14 27 15 17 9 243
3   Laura Verdonschot (BEL) 15 9 10 7 Ret 170
4   Emma White (USA) 11 8 21 18 31 169
5   Inge van der Heijden (NED) 34 30 Ret 23 22 26 12 159
6   Evie Richards (GBR) 1 3 145
7   Nadja Heigl (AUT) 36 32 37 20 30 31 40 131
8   Marion Norbert-Riberolle (FRA) 33 24 34 36 41 20 46 123
9   Nikola Nosková (CZE) 22 22 21 38 101
10   Manon Bakker (NED) 41 32 45 21 29 87
43 riders scored points[10]

Junior men edit

Pos. Rider KOK
 
BOG
 
ZEV
 
NAM
 
ZOL
 
NOM
 
HOO
 
Points
1   Tomáš Kopecký (CZE) (3) 1 2 (7) 1 3 (4) 215
2   Pim Ronhaar (NED) 1 3 1 (8) (7) 5 200
3   Mees Hendrikx (NED) (6) 2 3 (6) (8) 1 3 200
4   Loris Rouiller (SUI) (7) (6) 4 1 5 4 (12) 175
5   Jarno Bellens (BEL) 4 (5) 5 (12) 2 (9) 2 175
6   Niels Vandeputte (BEL) (10) 8 (25) (10) 3 6 1 161
7   Ryan Kamp (NED) 2 (7) (14) 2 (9) 7 7 156
8   Ryan Cortjens (BEL) (12) 7 4 (22) 2 10 140
9   Ben Tulett (GBR) 16 16 3 4 (Ret) 115
10   Luke Verburg (NED) (17) 4 6 (37) 11 (22) 16 105
74 riders scored points[12]

Notes edit

  1. ^ In the 2017 races, van der Poel rode for Beobank–Corendon, and for Corendon–Circus in the 2018 races.
  2. ^ Women's under-23 riders were awarded points on the elite scale, as all women competed within the same race.[6] Two jerseys were awarded; one for the leading elite woman and one for the leading under-23 woman.[7]
  3. ^ This tally included 43 under-23 riders, which the UCI awarded a separate jersey for.[7]

References edit

  1. ^ Decaluwé, Brecht (21 January 2018). "Compton dominates in Nommay World Cup". Cyclingnews.com. Immediate Media Company. Retrieved 28 January 2018. In the World Cup standings, Cant clinched the overall win as she enjoys a bonus of more than 80 points on Keough, with only 80 points at stake for the winner at the final round in Hoogerheide next week.
  2. ^ Decaluwé, Brecht (21 January 2018). "Van der Poel reigns yet again in the mud". Cyclingnews.com. Immediate Media Company. Retrieved 28 January 2018. Thanks to his sixth World Cup win of he season, Van der Poel also racked up the overall victory in the World Cup.
  3. ^ "Pidcock guarantees 2017/18 Telenet UCI Cyclo-Cross World Cup U23 crown with Belgium victory". British Cycling. British Cycling Federation. Sportsbeat. 26 December 2017. Retrieved 28 January 2018.
  4. ^ a b Rules 2017, p. 21.
  5. ^ a b c d Rules 2017, p. 20.
  6. ^ Rules 2017, p. 2.
  7. ^ a b Rules 2017, p. 22.
  8. ^ "2017-2018 Telenet UCI Cyclo-cross World Cup: All you need to know". UCI.ch. Union Cycliste Internationale. 13 September 2017. Retrieved 27 December 2017. Almost one year before hosting the 2019 UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships, Bogense will be hosting its first ever UCI World Cup round.
  9. ^ "Men Elite: Individual Standings" (PDF). Chronorace.be. ChronoRace - Electronic Timing SPRL. 28 January 2018. Retrieved 28 January 2018.
  10. ^ a b "Women Elite: Individual Standings" (PDF). Chronorace.be. ChronoRace - Electronic Timing SPRL. 28 January 2018. Retrieved 28 January 2018.
  11. ^ "Men Under 23: Individual Standings" (PDF). Chronorace.be. ChronoRace - Electronic Timing SPRL. 28 January 2018. Retrieved 28 January 2018.
  12. ^ "Men Junior: Individual Standings" (PDF). Chronorace.be. ChronoRace - Electronic Timing SPRL. 28 January 2018. Retrieved 28 January 2018.

Sources edit

  • Part 5 Cyclo-cross (PDF). 28 June 2017. Retrieved 27 December 2017. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)

External links edit

  • Official website

2017, cyclo, cross, world, 2017, telenet, cyclo, cross, world, season, long, cyclo, cross, competition, organised, union, cycliste, internationale, cyclo, cross, world, took, place, between, september, 2017, january, 2018, over, total, nine, events, defending,. The 2017 18 Telenet UCI Cyclo cross World Cup was a season long cyclo cross competition organised by the Union Cycliste Internationale UCI The UCI Cyclo cross World Cup took place between 17 September 2017 and 28 January 2018 over a total of nine events The defending champions were Wout van Aert in the men s competition and Sophie de Boer in the women s competition 2017 18 UCI Cyclo cross World CupDetailsLocationUnited StatesBelgiumDenmarkGermanyFranceNetherlandsRaces9ChampionsMale individual champion Mathieu van der Poel NED Beobank Corendon amp Corendon Circus a Female individual champion Sanne Cant BEL IKO Beobank 2016 20172018 2019 Both elite titles were won at the penultimate round of the season at Nommay Despite finishing twelfth in the race Sanne Cant won the women s title after her closest rival Kaitlin Keough finished the Nommay race in second behind compatriot Katie Compton 1 Cant was the only female rider to win more than once winning five times during the season Other races were won by Katerina Nash Maud Kaptheijns and Evie Richards who became the first under 23 woman to win an elite race when she won at Namur In the men s competition Mathieu van der Poel won each of the first four races to build up a lead on van Aert and the rest Van Aert won the next two races in Germany and at Namur but with wins at Heusden Zolder and Nommay 2 van der Poel gathered an unassailable lead going into the final round at Hoogerheide he won that race as well garnering podium finishes at all nine events during the campaign The men s under 23 title was won by Tom Pidcock having won four World Cup races in as many starts giving him an unassailable lead after the Grand Prix Erik De Vlaeminck at Circuit Zolder 3 as a rider s best four scores from seven races counted towards the classification 4 The women s under 23 title was won by Fleur Nagengast while the junior men s title went to Tomas Kopecky Contents 1 Points distribution 2 Events 3 Final points standings 3 1 Elite men 3 2 Elite women 3 3 Under 23 men 3 4 Under 23 women 3 5 Junior men 4 Notes 5 References 5 1 Sources 6 External linksPoints distribution editPoints were awarded to all eligible riders each race The top ten finishers received points according to the following table Points awarded Position 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10Elite riders 5 b 80 70 65 60 55 50 48 46 44 42U23 Junior riders 5 60 50 45 40 35 30 28 26 24 22Elite riders finishing in positions 11 to 50 also received points going down from 40 points for 11th place by one point per place to 1 point for 50th place 5 For the age group riders excluding under 23 women those finishing in positions 11 to 30 also received points going down from 20 points for 11th place by one point per place to 1 point for 30th place 5 As well as this only the top four scores for each rider count towards the World Cup standings 4 Events editIn comparison to last season the races in Las Vegas Rome Fiuggi and Valkenburg were replaced by Bogense Nommay and Waterloo The race in Bogense marked the first ever Cyclo cross World Cup in Denmark as a precursor to the 2019 UCI Cyclo cross World Championships being held there 8 Date Race Location WinnersElite men Elite women Under 23 men Junior men17 September Jingle Cross nbsp Iowa City United States nbsp Mathieu van der Poel NED nbsp Katerina Nash CZE No under 23 or junior race24 September World Cup Waterloo nbsp Waterloo United States nbsp Mathieu van der Poel NED nbsp Sanne Cant BEL 2 October Duinencross nbsp Koksijde Belgium nbsp Mathieu van der Poel NED nbsp Maud Kaptheijns NED nbsp Tom Pidcock GBR nbsp Pim Ronhaar NED 19 November CrossDenmark nbsp Bogense Denmark nbsp Mathieu van der Poel NED nbsp Sanne Cant BEL nbsp Tom Pidcock GBR nbsp Tomas Kopecky CZE 25 November Poldercross Zeven nbsp Zeven Germany nbsp Wout van Aert BEL nbsp Sanne Cant BEL nbsp Eli Iserbyt BEL nbsp Pim Ronhaar NED 17 December Citadelcross nbsp Namur Belgium nbsp Wout van Aert BEL nbsp Evie Richards GBR nbsp Tom Pidcock GBR nbsp Loris Rouiller SUI 26 December Grand Prix Erik De Vlaeminck nbsp Heusden Zolder Belgium nbsp Mathieu van der Poel NED nbsp Sanne Cant BEL nbsp Tom Pidcock GBR nbsp Tomas Kopecky CZE 21 January Grand Prix Nommay nbsp Nommay France nbsp Mathieu van der Poel NED nbsp Katie Compton USA nbsp Thijs Aerts BEL nbsp Mees Hendrikx NED 28 January Grand Prix Adri van der Poel nbsp Hoogerheide Netherlands nbsp Mathieu van der Poel NED nbsp Sanne Cant BEL nbsp Eli Iserbyt BEL nbsp Niels Vandeputte BEL Final points standings editElite men edit Pos Rider JIN nbsp WAT nbsp KOK nbsp BOG nbsp ZEV nbsp NAM nbsp ZOL nbsp NOM nbsp HOO nbsp Points1 nbsp Mathieu van der Poel NED 1 1 1 1 2 3 1 1 1 6952 nbsp Wout van Aert BEL 14 7 3 2 1 1 3 2 2 5853 nbsp Toon Aerts BEL 7 8 11 3 3 2 8 3 7 4934 nbsp Michael Vanthourenhout BEL 6 4 8 9 5 5 9 5 3 4745 nbsp Laurens Sweeck BEL 2 21 4 7 19 8 2 6 4 4666 nbsp Kevin Pauwels BEL 4 6 12 10 6 4 12 10 5 4377 nbsp Corne van Kessel NED 12 2 14 6 4 6 6 18 12 4288 nbsp Tim Merlier BEL 17 5 22 5 13 12 7 4 6 4089 nbsp Lars van der Haar NED 5 17 2 4 11 19 4 Ret 9 39510 nbsp Daan Soete BEL 11 3 6 20 17 9 5 13 13 395120 riders scored points 9 Elite women edit Pos Rider JIN nbsp WAT nbsp KOK nbsp BOG nbsp ZEV nbsp NAM nbsp ZOL nbsp NOM nbsp HOO nbsp Points1 nbsp Sanne Cant BEL 3 1 3 1 1 12 1 12 1 6082 nbsp Kaitlin Keough USA 2 2 8 3 11 6 16 2 5 5013 nbsp Eva Lechner ITA 10 13 11 4 7 3 3 7 2 4764 nbsp Nikki Brammeier GBR 9 19 9 10 8 2 11 14 8 4015 nbsp Katie Compton USA 19 42 5 DNS 3 4 2 1 22 4006 nbsp Katerina Nash CZE 1 6 6 4 7 14 11 20 3967 nbsp Helen Wyman GBR 16 25 7 2 2 15 27 4 27 3938 nbsp Ellen Van Loy BEL 12 7 12 5 23 11 8 9 15 3759 nbsp Maud Kaptheijns NED 5 10 1 28 18 9 19 10 35110 nbsp Sophie de Boer NED 4 4 2 11 5 13 37 337123 total riders c scored points 10 Under 23 men edit Pos Rider KOK nbsp BOG nbsp ZEV nbsp NAM nbsp ZOL nbsp NOM nbsp HOO nbsp Points1 nbsp Tom Pidcock GBR 1 1 1 1 2 2402 nbsp Eli Iserbyt BEL 3 2 1 2 2 1 2203 nbsp Thijs Aerts BEL 4 8 2 10 5 1 7 1854 nbsp Adam Toupalik CZE 2 5 8 9 4 21 1515 nbsp Yannick Peeters BEL 7 7 4 28 18 4 5 1436 nbsp Sieben Wouters NED 8 3 Ret 4 6 16 11 1417 nbsp Toon Vandebosch BEL 6 4 6 19 11 14 4 1408 nbsp Joris Nieuwenhuis NED 11 16 Ret Ret 3 7 3 1389 nbsp Joshua Dubau FRA 28 10 5 6 9 3 18 13410 nbsp Jakob Dorigoni ITA 22 Ret 5 7 12 8 10872 riders scored points 11 Under 23 women edit Pos Rider JIN nbsp WAT nbsp KOK nbsp BOG nbsp ZEV nbsp NAM nbsp ZOL nbsp NOM nbsp HOO nbsp Points1 nbsp Fleur Nagengast NED 24 18 18 16 20 28 23 16 28 2682 nbsp Ceylin del Carmen Alvarado NED 20 14 14 27 15 17 9 2433 nbsp Laura Verdonschot BEL 15 9 10 7 Ret 1704 nbsp Emma White USA 11 8 21 18 31 1695 nbsp Inge van der Heijden NED 34 30 Ret 23 22 26 12 1596 nbsp Evie Richards GBR 1 3 1457 nbsp Nadja Heigl AUT 36 32 37 20 30 31 40 1318 nbsp Marion Norbert Riberolle FRA 33 24 34 36 41 20 46 1239 nbsp Nikola Noskova CZE 22 22 21 38 10110 nbsp Manon Bakker NED 41 32 45 21 29 8743 riders scored points 10 Junior men edit Pos Rider KOK nbsp BOG nbsp ZEV nbsp NAM nbsp ZOL nbsp NOM nbsp HOO nbsp Points1 nbsp Tomas Kopecky CZE 3 1 2 7 1 3 4 2152 nbsp Pim Ronhaar NED 1 3 1 8 7 5 2003 nbsp Mees Hendrikx NED 6 2 3 6 8 1 3 2004 nbsp Loris Rouiller SUI 7 6 4 1 5 4 12 1755 nbsp Jarno Bellens BEL 4 5 5 12 2 9 2 1756 nbsp Niels Vandeputte BEL 10 8 25 10 3 6 1 1617 nbsp Ryan Kamp NED 2 7 14 2 9 7 7 1568 nbsp Ryan Cortjens BEL 12 7 4 22 2 10 1409 nbsp Ben Tulett GBR 16 16 3 4 Ret 11510 nbsp Luke Verburg NED 17 4 6 37 11 22 16 10574 riders scored points 12 Notes edit In the 2017 races van der Poel rode for Beobank Corendon and for Corendon Circus in the 2018 races Women s under 23 riders were awarded points on the elite scale as all women competed within the same race 6 Two jerseys were awarded one for the leading elite woman and one for the leading under 23 woman 7 This tally included 43 under 23 riders which the UCI awarded a separate jersey for 7 References edit Decaluwe Brecht 21 January 2018 Compton dominates in Nommay World Cup Cyclingnews com Immediate Media Company Retrieved 28 January 2018 In the World Cup standings Cant clinched the overall win as she enjoys a bonus of more than 80 points on Keough with only 80 points at stake for the winner at the final round in Hoogerheide next week Decaluwe Brecht 21 January 2018 Van der Poel reigns yet again in the mud Cyclingnews com Immediate Media Company Retrieved 28 January 2018 Thanks to his sixth World Cup win of he season Van der Poel also racked up the overall victory in the World Cup Pidcock guarantees 2017 18 Telenet UCI Cyclo Cross World Cup U23 crown with Belgium victory British Cycling British Cycling Federation Sportsbeat 26 December 2017 Retrieved 28 January 2018 a b Rules 2017 p 21 a b c d Rules 2017 p 20 Rules 2017 p 2 a b Rules 2017 p 22 2017 2018 Telenet UCI Cyclo cross World Cup All you need to know UCI ch Union Cycliste Internationale 13 September 2017 Retrieved 27 December 2017 Almost one year before hosting the 2019 UCI Cyclo cross World Championships Bogense will be hosting its first ever UCI World Cup round Men Elite Individual Standings PDF Chronorace be ChronoRace Electronic Timing SPRL 28 January 2018 Retrieved 28 January 2018 a b Women Elite Individual Standings PDF Chronorace be ChronoRace Electronic Timing SPRL 28 January 2018 Retrieved 28 January 2018 Men Under 23 Individual Standings PDF Chronorace be ChronoRace Electronic Timing SPRL 28 January 2018 Retrieved 28 January 2018 Men Junior Individual Standings PDF Chronorace be ChronoRace Electronic Timing SPRL 28 January 2018 Retrieved 28 January 2018 Sources edit Part 5 Cyclo cross PDF 28 June 2017 Retrieved 27 December 2017 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help External links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2017 18 UCI Cyclo cross World Cup amp oldid 1172279504, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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