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The Women's Tour

The Women's Tour is a women's cycle stage race held in England and Wales, as part of the UCI Women's World Tour. The race was organised until 2023 by SweetSpot, the company behind the men's Tour of Britain.

The Women's Tour
Race details
DateMay or June
RegionGreat Britain
DisciplineRoad
CompetitionUCI Women's World Tour
TypeStage race
OrganiserSweetSpot
Web sitewww.womenstour.co.uk
History
First edition2014 (2014)
Editions8 (as of 2022)
First winner Marianne Vos (NED)
Most wins Lizzie Deignan (GBR) (2 wins)
Most recent Elisa Longo Borghini (ITA)

History edit

Its origins trace back to 2010 when SweetSpot organised their first women's cycling race, the Horizon Fitness Grand Prix in Stoke-on-Trent. What began as a supporting event for the men's Tour Series – Britain's leading televised cycle race series – grew into a key part of the women's racing scene in Britain, thanks to television coverage on ITV4 in the UK and around the world. In 2018, Britain's leading women's teams took part in the whole series for the first time.[1]

At the launch of the 2013 Tour of Britain, SweetSpot MD Chairman Hugh Roberts and director Guy Elliott announced[2] the company's intentions to create a standalone stage race for the world's top female cyclists in Britain – the first event of its kind.

As a prelude to the inaugural race in 2014, a women's one-day race was held on the final day of the 2013 Tour of Britain in London, won by Hannah Barnes.[3] As history would show, SweetSpot's move was one that the Tour de France and Vuelta a Espana organisers would announce some months later.

Just a week after this SweetSpot received the news that the Women's Tour had been granted a place on the UCI calendar for May 2014, being granted what was the highest possible ranking for a stage race (2.1) at the time.[4] This put it instantly on a par with the world's top races for women. The first edition was a widely acclaimed success, attracting the world's top riders and teams and widespread media coverage for women's cycling in the UK.

While the first edition of the race took place in May (Wednesday 7 - Sunday 11), the second edition in 2015 moved to a mid-June position,[5] a slot it has held on the UCI calendar ever since – with the exception of the 2021 edition, where it was delayed to October due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

In 2016, the race became a part of the inaugural UCI Women's World Tour,[6] the leading series of races for professional women cyclists.

In 2017, the finished in London for the first time in race history,[7] with Belgian rider Jolien D'Hoore winning the stage.[8] Wales hosted the race for the first time in 2018, with the final stage taking place between Dolgellau and Colwyn Bay.[9][10] The Women's Tour expanded to six days for the first time in 2019.[11] The increase in days also heralded a slight shift of event days, as the race ran from Monday to Saturday.[12]

SweetSpot announced in March 2020[13][14] that the planned seventh edition of the race, scheduled to take place between Monday 8 and Saturday 13 June, was postponed owing to the COVID-19 pandemic. The race's Grand Départ in Bicester, Oxfordshire[15] and final stage in Suffolk[16] had already been announced. Organisers said that they "hope to work with the UCI and British Cycling to find an alternative date in the international cycling calendar for the race to take place should conditions permit."[17] On 4 May, the 2020 Tour was cancelled.[18] In February 2021, the 2021 Women's Tour was postponed from June to October.[19]

The 2022 race returned to its traditional calendar slot in June, with a mountain top finish at Black Mountain in the Brecon Beacons.

SweetSpot announced the 2023 race route on 9 March 2023, but warned that the loss of key sponsors (such as previous vehicle partner Škoda) and increased running costs (20% higher than 2022 race) had left a shortfall in funding and that urgent additional income was required to ensure that the race could go ahead.[20] On 31 March 2023, SweetSpot announced that the race would go on hiatus in 2023, in light of the above financial issues.[21] In January 2024, organiser and promoter SweetSpot entered liquidation and the race was removed from the 2024 calendar.[22][23] The following month, British Cycling took over the running of the race, which was to be renamed as the Tour of Britain Women, and the race returned to the calendar but over a shorter four-day itinerary.[24][25]

Overall winners edit

Classification leaders jerseys edit

Classification 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2021 2022
General        
Points            
Youth   Jersey replaced by sprints jersey
Sprints No award  
Mountains      
British       Trophy
Team   No award     No award   No award

Women's Tour facts and figures edit

Overall winners[26]

  • Seven riders have won the eight editions of the Women's Tour since its inaugural 2014 race
  • Lizzie Deignan (GBR) is the sole double champion in race history to date: she won the 2016 and 2019 editions.
  • Coryn Rivera (USA) became the first non-European rider to win the race overall when she triumphed in the 2018 edition.
  • Katarzyna Niewiadoma (POL, 2017) is the only rider to lead an edition of the race from start to finish.
  • The 2022 edition had the closest winning margin, with only one second separating winner Elisa Longo Borghini and runner-up Grace Brown.[27] Longo Borghini's victory made her the oldest winner at 30 years, 184 days.
  • Niewiadoma won the 2017 edition by the biggest margin to date: one minute and 18 seconds. She was also the youngest winner at 22 years, 256 days.

Stage winners[26]

  • Marianne Vos (NED), Lorena Wiebes (NED) and Jolien D'Hoore (BEL) have won the most stages of the race to date: five.
  • Vos (three in 2014), Wiebes (three in 2022, two in 2021), and D'Hoore (two in 2019) are the only riders to win multiple stages of the race in the same year.
  • Nine riders have won stages in more than one edition of the race: Vos (2014, 2016 and 2019); D'Hoore (2015, 2017 and 2018); Deignan (GBR, 2015, 2016 and 2019); Wiebes (NED, 2021 and 2022); Christine Majerus (LUX, 2015 and 2016); Amy Pieters (NED, 2016, 2017 and 2019); Lotta Henttala (2016 and 2018); Sarah Roy (AUS, 2017 and 2018) and Niewiadoma (POL, 2017 and 2019).
  • Five different riders won stages in each of the race editions except 2014 and 2021.
  • Twenty-two different riders have won stages of the Women's Tour – the most recent addition to the list being Longo Borghini at Black Mountain in 2022.
  • Thirteen different nationalities have won stages of the Women's Tour. Dutch riders have won the most (fifteen), ten ahead of Belgium.
  • Sarah Roy (AUS, stage four 2017 and stage three 2018), Chloe Hosking (AUS, stage three, 2017), Grace Brown (AUS, stage four, 2022), and Coryn Rivera (USA, stage two 2018) are the only non-European stage winners in race history to date.

Host venues[26]

  • On average, 300,000 people watch the Women's Tour from the roadside each year.
  • An estimated 125,000 fans watched the race's finale in London in 2017 – the race used the same 6.2 km circuit around Regent Street St James, Piccadilly, Strand and Whitehall that featured in the Tour of Britain in 2015, 2016 and 2018.
  • Atherstone (four stage starts and one finish) has hosted the race more than any other venue.
  • Suffolk has hosted the race more times than any other county: seven.
  • Wales hosted its first stage when stage five of the 2018 edition took place between Dolgellau and Colwyn Bay. The country then welcomed the final two days of the 2019 race, which took place in Powys and Carmarthenshire. It again hosted two stages in 2022.

References edit

  1. ^ Bull, Nick (5 April 2018). "Tour Series 2018 race dates". Tour Series.
  2. ^ "Tour of Britain organisers announce plans for five-day women's race". RoadCyclingUK. 22 March 2013.
  3. ^ Bull, Nick (22 September 2013). "Hannah Barnes wins Westminster GP". Cycling Weekly.
  4. ^ "Women's Tour awarded top status by UCI for 2014". British Cycling. 10 October 2013.
  5. ^ "Friends Life Women's Tour 2015 dates". Women's Tour. 24 November 2014.
  6. ^ "Aviva Women's Tour named on UCI Women's WorldTour for 2016". Women's Tour. 25 September 2015.
  7. ^ "Spectacular Sunday London finale for The Women's Tour in 2017". Women's Tour. 21 February 2017.
  8. ^ "Katarzyna Niewiadoma wins the OVO Energy Women's Tour". Women's Tour. 11 June 2017.
  9. ^ Bull, Nick (7 March 2018). "North Wales to host final stage of the OVO Energy Women's Tour". Women's Tour.
  10. ^ Bull, Nick (17 June 2018). "Coryn Rivera wins 2018 OVO Energy Women's Tour as Lotta Lepistö claims Welsh finale". Women's Tour.
  11. ^ Bull, Nick (21 September 2018). "Tour of Britain 2015 route unveiled". Women's Tour.
  12. ^ "2019 race dates: 10 to 15 June". Women's Tour. 20 December 2018.
  13. ^ Bull, Nick (13 March 2020). "Women's Tour 2020 postponed". Women's Tour.
  14. ^ "Women's Tour 2020 postponement statement". Women's Tour. 13 March 2020.
  15. ^ Bull, Nick (13 February 2020). "Bicester to host 2020 Women's Tour Grand Départ". Women's Tour.
  16. ^ Bull, Nick (16 January 2020). "Suffolk to host final stage of the Women's Tour in 2020". Women's Tour.
  17. ^ Bull, Nick (13 March 2020). "Women's Tour 2020 postponed". Women's Tour.
  18. ^ a b "The Women's Tour cancelled for 2020 because of coronavirus pandemic". BBC Sport. 4 May 2020. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  19. ^ "Women's Tour postponed from June to October". Cyclingnews.com. 16 February 2021. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  20. ^ "Women's Tour cycling at risk of cancellation if sponsorship not found". The Guardian. 9 March 2023. Retrieved 16 March 2023.
  21. ^ a b Bull, Nick (31 March 2023). "Women's Tour 2023 postponed". The Women's Tour. Retrieved 31 March 2023.
  22. ^ Whittle, Jeremy (18 January 2024). "Women's Tour under threat as British cycling promoter goes into liquidation". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 31 January 2024.
  23. ^ "Tour of Britain and Women's Tour no longer listed on UCI calendar". road.cc. 30 January 2024. Retrieved 31 January 2024.
  24. ^ Ostanek, Daniel (2 February 2024). "British Cycling take over organisation of men's and women's Tour of Britain". Cyclingnews.com. Future plc. Retrieved 18 February 2024.
  25. ^ "Tour of Britain Women". UCI.org. Union Cycliste Internationale. Retrieved 18 February 2024.
  26. ^ a b c "Women's Tour 2020 media guide" (PDF). Women's Tour.
  27. ^ Rogers, Owen (11 June 2022). "Elisa Longo Borghini wins the Women's Tour by slender bonus seconds margin". cyclingweekly.com. Retrieved 24 June 2022.

External links edit

  • Official website

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This article is about the cycle race in Britain For the cycle race in Australia see Santos Women s Tour The Women s Tour is a women s cycle stage race held in England and Wales as part of the UCI Women s World Tour The race was organised until 2023 by SweetSpot the company behind the men s Tour of Britain The Women s TourRace detailsDateMay or JuneRegionGreat BritainDisciplineRoadCompetitionUCI Women s World TourTypeStage raceOrganiserSweetSpotWeb sitewww wbr womenstour wbr co wbr ukHistoryFirst edition2014 2014 Editions8 as of 2022 First winner Marianne Vos NED Most wins Lizzie Deignan GBR 2 wins Most recent Elisa Longo Borghini ITA Contents 1 History 2 Overall winners 3 Classification leaders jerseys 4 Women s Tour facts and figures 5 References 6 External linksHistory editIts origins trace back to 2010 when SweetSpot organised their first women s cycling race the Horizon Fitness Grand Prix in Stoke on Trent What began as a supporting event for the men s Tour Series Britain s leading televised cycle race series grew into a key part of the women s racing scene in Britain thanks to television coverage on ITV4 in the UK and around the world In 2018 Britain s leading women s teams took part in the whole series for the first time 1 At the launch of the 2013 Tour of Britain SweetSpot MD Chairman Hugh Roberts and director Guy Elliott announced 2 the company s intentions to create a standalone stage race for the world s top female cyclists in Britain the first event of its kind As a prelude to the inaugural race in 2014 a women s one day race was held on the final day of the 2013 Tour of Britain in London won by Hannah Barnes 3 As history would show SweetSpot s move was one that the Tour de France and Vuelta a Espana organisers would announce some months later Just a week after this SweetSpot received the news that the Women s Tour had been granted a place on the UCI calendar for May 2014 being granted what was the highest possible ranking for a stage race 2 1 at the time 4 This put it instantly on a par with the world s top races for women The first edition was a widely acclaimed success attracting the world s top riders and teams and widespread media coverage for women s cycling in the UK While the first edition of the race took place in May Wednesday 7 Sunday 11 the second edition in 2015 moved to a mid June position 5 a slot it has held on the UCI calendar ever since with the exception of the 2021 edition where it was delayed to October due to the COVID 19 pandemic In 2016 the race became a part of the inaugural UCI Women s World Tour 6 the leading series of races for professional women cyclists In 2017 the finished in London for the first time in race history 7 with Belgian rider Jolien D Hoore winning the stage 8 Wales hosted the race for the first time in 2018 with the final stage taking place between Dolgellau and Colwyn Bay 9 10 The Women s Tour expanded to six days for the first time in 2019 11 The increase in days also heralded a slight shift of event days as the race ran from Monday to Saturday 12 SweetSpot announced in March 2020 13 14 that the planned seventh edition of the race scheduled to take place between Monday 8 and Saturday 13 June was postponed owing to the COVID 19 pandemic The race s Grand Depart in Bicester Oxfordshire 15 and final stage in Suffolk 16 had already been announced Organisers said that they hope to work with the UCI and British Cycling to find an alternative date in the international cycling calendar for the race to take place should conditions permit 17 On 4 May the 2020 Tour was cancelled 18 In February 2021 the 2021 Women s Tour was postponed from June to October 19 The 2022 race returned to its traditional calendar slot in June with a mountain top finish at Black Mountain in the Brecon Beacons SweetSpot announced the 2023 race route on 9 March 2023 but warned that the loss of key sponsors such as previous vehicle partner Skoda and increased running costs 20 higher than 2022 race had left a shortfall in funding and that urgent additional income was required to ensure that the race could go ahead 20 On 31 March 2023 SweetSpot announced that the race would go on hiatus in 2023 in light of the above financial issues 21 In January 2024 organiser and promoter SweetSpot entered liquidation and the race was removed from the 2024 calendar 22 23 The following month British Cycling took over the running of the race which was to be renamed as the Tour of Britain Women and the race returned to the calendar but over a shorter four day itinerary 24 25 Overall winners editYear Country Rider Team2014 nbsp Netherlands Marianne Vos Rabo Liv2015 nbsp Germany Lisa Brennauer Velocio SRAM2016 nbsp Great Britain Lizzie Armitstead Boels Dolmans2017 nbsp Poland Katarzyna Niewiadoma WM3 Pro Cycling2018 nbsp United States Coryn Rivera Team Sunweb2019 nbsp Great Britain Lizzie Deignan Trek Segafredo2020 No race due to the COVID 19 pandemic in the United Kingdom 18 2021 nbsp Netherlands Demi Vollering SD Worx2022 nbsp Italy Elisa Longo Borghini Trek Segafredo2023 No race due to lack of funding 21 Classification leaders jerseys editClassification 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2021 2022General nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Points nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Youth nbsp Jersey replaced by sprints jerseySprints No award nbsp Mountains nbsp nbsp nbsp British nbsp nbsp nbsp TrophyTeam nbsp No award nbsp nbsp No award nbsp No awardWomen s Tour facts and figures editOverall winners 26 Seven riders have won the eight editions of the Women s Tour since its inaugural 2014 race Lizzie Deignan GBR is the sole double champion in race history to date she won the 2016 and 2019 editions Coryn Rivera USA became the first non European rider to win the race overall when she triumphed in the 2018 edition Katarzyna Niewiadoma POL 2017 is the only rider to lead an edition of the race from start to finish The 2022 edition had the closest winning margin with only one second separating winner Elisa Longo Borghini and runner up Grace Brown 27 Longo Borghini s victory made her the oldest winner at 30 years 184 days Niewiadoma won the 2017 edition by the biggest margin to date one minute and 18 seconds She was also the youngest winner at 22 years 256 days Stage winners 26 Marianne Vos NED Lorena Wiebes NED and Jolien D Hoore BEL have won the most stages of the race to date five Vos three in 2014 Wiebes three in 2022 two in 2021 and D Hoore two in 2019 are the only riders to win multiple stages of the race in the same year Nine riders have won stages in more than one edition of the race Vos 2014 2016 and 2019 D Hoore 2015 2017 and 2018 Deignan GBR 2015 2016 and 2019 Wiebes NED 2021 and 2022 Christine Majerus LUX 2015 and 2016 Amy Pieters NED 2016 2017 and 2019 Lotta Henttala 2016 and 2018 Sarah Roy AUS 2017 and 2018 and Niewiadoma POL 2017 and 2019 Five different riders won stages in each of the race editions except 2014 and 2021 Twenty two different riders have won stages of the Women s Tour the most recent addition to the list being Longo Borghini at Black Mountain in 2022 Thirteen different nationalities have won stages of the Women s Tour Dutch riders have won the most fifteen ten ahead of Belgium Sarah Roy AUS stage four 2017 and stage three 2018 Chloe Hosking AUS stage three 2017 Grace Brown AUS stage four 2022 and Coryn Rivera USA stage two 2018 are the only non European stage winners in race history to date Host venues 26 On average 300 000 people watch the Women s Tour from the roadside each year An estimated 125 000 fans watched the race s finale in London in 2017 the race used the same 6 2 km circuit around Regent Street St James Piccadilly Strand and Whitehall that featured in the Tour of Britain in 2015 2016 and 2018 Atherstone four stage starts and one finish has hosted the race more than any other venue Suffolk has hosted the race more times than any other county seven Wales hosted its first stage when stage five of the 2018 edition took place between Dolgellau and Colwyn Bay The country then welcomed the final two days of the 2019 race which took place in Powys and Carmarthenshire It again hosted two stages in 2022 References edit Bull Nick 5 April 2018 Tour Series 2018 race dates Tour Series Tour of Britain organisers announce plans for five day women s race RoadCyclingUK 22 March 2013 Bull Nick 22 September 2013 Hannah Barnes wins Westminster GP Cycling Weekly Women s Tour awarded top status by UCI for 2014 British Cycling 10 October 2013 Friends Life Women s Tour 2015 dates Women s Tour 24 November 2014 Aviva Women s Tour named on UCI Women s WorldTour for 2016 Women s Tour 25 September 2015 Spectacular Sunday London finale for The Women s Tour in 2017 Women s Tour 21 February 2017 Katarzyna Niewiadoma wins the OVO Energy Women s Tour Women s Tour 11 June 2017 Bull Nick 7 March 2018 North Wales to host final stage of the OVO Energy Women s Tour Women s Tour Bull Nick 17 June 2018 Coryn Rivera wins 2018 OVO Energy Women s Tour as Lotta Lepisto claims Welsh finale Women s Tour Bull Nick 21 September 2018 Tour of Britain 2015 route unveiled Women s Tour 2019 race dates 10 to 15 June Women s Tour 20 December 2018 Bull Nick 13 March 2020 Women s Tour 2020 postponed Women s Tour Women s Tour 2020 postponement statement Women s Tour 13 March 2020 Bull Nick 13 February 2020 Bicester to host 2020 Women s Tour Grand Depart Women s Tour Bull Nick 16 January 2020 Suffolk to host final stage of the Women s Tour in 2020 Women s Tour Bull Nick 13 March 2020 Women s Tour 2020 postponed Women s Tour a b The Women s Tour cancelled for 2020 because of coronavirus pandemic BBC Sport 4 May 2020 Retrieved 4 May 2020 Women s Tour postponed from June to October Cyclingnews com 16 February 2021 Retrieved 16 February 2021 Women s Tour cycling at risk of cancellation if sponsorship not found The Guardian 9 March 2023 Retrieved 16 March 2023 a b Bull Nick 31 March 2023 Women s Tour 2023 postponed The Women s Tour Retrieved 31 March 2023 Whittle Jeremy 18 January 2024 Women s Tour under threat as British cycling promoter goes into liquidation The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 31 January 2024 Tour of Britain and Women s Tour no longer listed on UCI calendar road cc 30 January 2024 Retrieved 31 January 2024 Ostanek Daniel 2 February 2024 British Cycling take over organisation of men s and women s Tour of Britain Cyclingnews com Future plc Retrieved 18 February 2024 Tour of Britain Women UCI org Union Cycliste Internationale Retrieved 18 February 2024 a b c Women s Tour 2020 media guide PDF Women s Tour Rogers Owen 11 June 2022 Elisa Longo Borghini wins the Women s Tour by slender bonus seconds margin cyclingweekly com Retrieved 24 June 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Women s Tour Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Women 27s Tour amp oldid 1209595404, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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