Herald Sun Tour

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Herald Sun Tour
2016 Herald Sun Tour
Race details
Date February
Region Victoria, Australia
Local name(s) Jayco Herald Sun Tour
Discipline Road
Competition UCI Oceania Tour (2.1)
Type Stage race
Race director John Trevorrow
History
First edition 1952 (1952)
Editions 63 (as of 2016)
First winner  Keith Rowley (AUS)
Most wins  Barry Waddell (AUS) (5 wins)
Most recent  Chris Froome (GBR)

The Herald Sun Tour is an Australian professional bicycle race held in Melbourne and provincial Victoria, sanctioned by the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI). The first tour was held in October 1952 as a six-day event. It is now held annually over five days in February. It is named after the Herald Sun, Melbourne's only daily tabloid newspaper. It was originally known as the Sun Tour after The Sun News-Pictorial, and changed its name when The Sun News-Pictorial merged with The Herald in 1990.

History

In 1952 the first general classification winner was Keith Rowley, a Maffra sheep farmer, in a time of 42 hr 57 min 55 sec. The first King of the Mountain and Sprint champion was Jack (John) McDonough from Coburg.

Australian cyclists dominated the first 30 editions of the race, before its status rose and began attracting overseas stars. By the year 2000, the race had shifted to October and Australia's cyclists racing in Europe began to compete in the race. The resulting rise in the event's standard saw the race become rated by the UCI for the first time in 2005. Several notable Australian cyclists have won the General classification including Stuart O'Grady in 2008, Baden Cooke in 2002, Neil Stephens in 1986, and Russell Mockridge in 1957.

The 2004 race was conducted from 14 to 24 October 2004 and involved 85 cyclists in seventeen teams of five. Thirteen stages were completed with a total distance of 1110.7 km, 119 intermediate sprints and 37 hill climbs, including the two category one climbs of Mount Baw Baw and in the Otway Ranges. Swedish rider Jonas Ljungblad won the General classification in the time of 26 hr 39 min 55 sec. Karl Menzies won the sprint classification and Phillip Thuaux won the Mountains classification.

After the 2009 race, the organisers of the Herald Sun Tour proposed moving the race from its traditional October date to February, with no edition in 2010. Cycling Australia approved the move,[1] but in the face of opposition from the UCI,[2] the plans never came to fruition. In the end, the 2010 race was "held over" due to the 2010 UCI Road World Championships being held in Geelong and Melbourne, and the race returned to the calendar in October 2011.[3] The UCI accepted a change of date the following year, with a January 2013 date instead of October 2012, but downgraded the race from 2.1 to a National Event, preventing most professional teams from across the world from taking part.[4]

2014

The next edition of the Tour was held from 5–9 February 2014, and regained a UCI 2.1 ranking, permitting top level trade teams to again compete.[5] Due to numerous bushfires across Victoria the last stage of the race was cancelled, with Orica–GreenEDGE rider Simon Clarke declared the winner.[6]

Winners

Rider Team
1952 Australia Keith Rowley (AUS)
1953 Australia Basil Halsall (AUS)
1954 Australia Hector Sutherland (AUS)
1955 Australia Allan Geddes (AUS)
1956 Australia George Goodwin (AUS)
1957 Australia Russell Mockridge (AUS)
1958 Australia John Young (AUS)
1959 Australia Peter Panton (AUS)
1960 Australia Peter Panton (AUS)
1961 Australia John Young (AUS)
1962 Australia Bill Knevitt (AUS)
1963 Australia Bill Lawrie (AUS)
1964 Australia Barry Waddell (AUS)
1965 Australia Barry Waddell (AUS)
1966 Australia Barry Waddell (AUS)
1967 Australia Barry Waddell (AUS)
1968 Australia Barry Waddell (AUS)
1969 Australia Keith Oliver (AUS)
1970 Australia Trevor Williamson (AUS)
1971 Australia Graham McVilly (AUS)
1972 Australia Ken Evans (AUS)
1973 Australia Graham McVilly (AUS)
1974 Australia Graham McVilly (AUS)
1975 Australia John Trevorrow (AUS)
1976 Australia Peter Besanko (AUS)
1977 Australia John Trevorrow (AUS)
1978 Australia Terry Hammond (AUS)
1979 Australia John Trevorrow (AUS) Warracknabeal
1980 Australia David Allan (AUS) Pony Sport Holland
1981 Australia Clyde Sefton (AUS) Mansfield
1982 Australia Terry Hammond (AUS) Clemenso-Mavic
1983 Australia Shane Sutton (AUS) Clemenso-Mavic
1984 Australia Gary Sutton (AUS) Clarence Street Cyclery
1985 United Kingdom Malcolm Elliott (GBR) Raleigh-Weinmann
1986 Australia Neil Stephens (AUS) Repco
1987 Italy Stefano Tomasini (ITA) Remac-Fanini
1988 Netherlands Adri van der Poel (NED) PDM-Ultima-Concorde
1989 Netherlands Marcel Arntz (NED) Paternina
1990 Germany Udo Bölts (GER) Caltex
1991 United States Michael Engleman (USA) Coors Light
1992 United States Bart Bowen (USA) Subaru-Montgomery
1993 United Kingdom David Mann (GBR) Coors Light-Serotta
1994 Germany Christian Henn (GER) Team Telekom
1995 United States Andy Bishop (USA) Echuca-Moama
1996 United States Scott Moninger (USA) Tattersall's
1997 United States Norman Alvis (USA) Sweethearts Oranges
1998 Italy Alessandro Pozzi (ITA) Sweethearts Oranges
1999 Denmark Michael Blaudzun (DEN) Team home–Jack & Jones
2000 Kyrgyzstan Eugen Wacker (KGZ) Mróz-Supradyn Witaminy
2001 Austria Peter Wrolich (AUT) Gerolsteiner
2002 Australia Baden Cooke (AUS) Française des Jeux
2003 United States Tim Johnson (USA) Saturn Cycling Team
2004 Sweden Jonas Ljungblad (SWE) Amore & Vita-Beretta
2005 Australia Simon Gerrans (AUS) AG2R Prévoyance
2006 Australia Simon Gerrans (AUS) AG2R Prévoyance
2007 Australia Matthew Wilson (AUS) Unibet.com
2008 Australia Stuart O'Grady (AUS) CSC–Saxo Bank
2009 United Kingdom Bradley Wiggins (GBR) Garmin–Slipstream
2010 No race
2011 Australia Nathan Haas (AUS) Genesys Wealth Advisers
2012 No race
2013 Australia Calvin Watson (AUS) Jayco-VIS-Apollo
2014 Australia Simon Clarke (AUS) Orica–GreenEDGE
2015 Australia Cameron Meyer (AUS) Orica–GreenEDGE
2016[7] United Kingdom Chris Froome (GBR) Team Sky

References

  1. SBS Cycling Central, "Date change for Jayco Herald Sun Tour", 24 February 2010, [1], accessed 30 May 2011
  2. The Age, "Herald Sun Tour bid appears doomed", 23 January 2010, [2], accessed 30 May 2011
  3. Leo Schlink, "2011 Jayco Herald Sun Tour back with a bang", The Herald Sun, 25 March 2011, [3], accessed 30 May 2011
  4. "Gerrans questions lack of UCI ranking for Jayco Herald Sun Tour", Velonation, [4], accessed 23 December 2012
  5. http://www.sbs.com.au/cyclingcentral/road/news/51277/herald-sun-tour-to-regain-uci-status "Herald Sun Tour to regain UCI status", SBS Cycling Central, 16 September 2013, accessed 17 September 2013
  6. http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/more-sports/jayco-herald-sun-tour-last-stage-cancelled-clarke-declared-winner-with-fire-risk-too-great-and-police-needed-elsewhere/story-fnibbyyv-1226821752824
  7. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links