| Race details | |
|---|---|
| Date | August |
| Region | Poggiana |
| Discipline | Road race |
| Competition | UCI Europe Tour |
| Type | Single day race |
| Web site | www |
| History | |
| First edition | 1975 |
| Editions | 47 (as of 2023) |
| First winner | |
| Most wins | |
| Most recent | |
The Gran Premio Sportivi di Poggiana is a professional one day cycling race held annually in Poggiana, Italy. It has been part of the UCI Europe Tour since 2011 in category 1.2U.[1]
Winners
| Year | Country | Rider | Team | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2009 | Mattia Cattaneo | Bottoli Nordelettrica Ramonda | ||
| 2010 | Luke Rowe | Rapha Condor–Sharp | ||
| 2011 | Mattia Cattaneo | U.C. Trevigiani–Dynamon–Bottoli | ||
| 2012 | Adam Phelan | Drapac Cycling | ||
| 2013 | Andrea Zordan | Zalf Euromobil Désirée Fior | ||
| 2014 | Robert Power | Jayco-AIS World Tour Academy | ||
| 2015 | Stefano Nardelli | Unieuro–Wilier | ||
| 2016 | Michael Storer | Jayco-AIS World Tour Academy | ||
| 2017 | Nicola Conci | Zalf Euromobil Désirée Fior | ||
| 2018 | Robert Stannard | Mitchelton–BikeExchange | ||
| 2019 | Fabio Mazzucco | Sangemini–MG.K Vis | ||
| 2020 | No race | |||
| 2021 | Riccardo Ciuccarelli | Biesse–Arvedi | ||
| 2022 | Nicolò Buratti | Cycling Team Friuli ASD | ||
| 2023 | Nicolò Pettiti | Sias–Rime | ||
References
- ↑ "Gran Premio Sportivi di Poggiana". ProCyclingStats. Retrieved 2 August 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.