Züri-Metzgete

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Züri-Metzgete
Race details
Date Early October
Region Zürich, Switzerland
English name Championship of Zürich
Local name(s) Züri-Metzgete (Zürich German)
Meisterschaft von Zürich (German)
Discipline Road race
Competition UCI ProTour
Type One-day race
History
First edition 1914
Editions 89 (as of 2006)
First winner Flag of Switzerland Henri Rheinwald
Most wins Flag of Switzerland Heiri Suter (6 wins)
Most recent Flag of Spain Samuel Sánchez

Züri-Metzgete (also called the Championship of Zürich and the Meisterschaft von Zürich) is a European Classic cycle race held annually in Zürich, Switzerland. Although perhaps not as prestigious as the five one-day cycling “Monuments” (Milan-Sanremo, Ronde van Vlaanderen, Paris-Roubaix, Liège-Bastogne-Liège and the Giro di Lombardia) it is a race with a long history and a tough parcours. The Züri-Metzgete was a round of the former UCI Road World Cup (which ran from 1989-2004) and is now a round of the UCI ProTour, the World Cup's successor. The 2007 edition of the race was canceled after organizers failed to attract enough sponsors.[1] A 2008 edition is scheduled for September 7th, but the format has been changed to an amateur competition.

Contents

[edit] History and background

The Züri-Metzgete was first held in 1914 and has been held annually since 1917, including the second World War years, giving it the longest continued existence of any of cycling's major races. Originally, the race was billed as "Meisterschaft von Zürich" (Championship of Zurich), and this designation is still being used in some places. However, the colloquial expression "Züri Metzgete" soon became popular and has long been adapted by the organisers themselves and also by the UCI. "Züri" is Swiss dialect for Zurich. "Metzgete" (from "metzgern", to butcher) is a dialect word as well and a tongue-in-cheek reference to the supposedly ruthless character of the race. (Originally, a "Metzgete" is a special form of agricultural festivity usually held in autumn when farmers had to reduce their livestock to get through the winter. The fresh meat was then sold and distributed in barbecue-like village festivals.)

For many years the event was held in early May, not an ideal date as the majority of the top classic riders were jaded after contesting the “Monuments” in March and April. Also during the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s the race was often held the day after the Rund um den Henninger Turm in Frankfurt and this affected the quality of the field and the racing. In 1988 the race was switched to a date in mid August which attracted many of the Tour de France stars and gave the race a new lease of life. The 2005 edition of the race has been switched to yet another new date in early October, as the UCI rearranges the cycling calendar to bring the World Championships a few weeks earlier in the season.

In the early days, the Züri-Metzgete was dominated by home riders with the race being won on 34 occasions by the Swiss in the first 41 editions of the race between 1914 and 1956. The most notable foreign winner in this period was Gino Bartali in 1946, the Italian beat arch rival Fausto Coppi in a contentious race, the two Italians rode together at a breakneck pace shaking off all their rivals with Bartali winning in controversial circumstances, sprinting away while Coppi was tightening his toe straps. Many people say this incident was the start of the “war” between Bartali and Coppi. That 1946 race was won at an average speed of 42.228 km/h, a record speed which stood for over 50 years. Spaniard Juan Antonio Flecha won the 2004 edition of the race in a record average speed of 42.707 km/h

Many of the Swiss winners at this time never went on to win another major race but two of Switzerland’s greatest riders Ferdi Kubler (1943) and Hugo Koblet (1952 and 1954) were triumphant at Zürich in this era, another Swiss Henri Suter set the record for the most victories at six between 1919 and 1929. After 1956 the race winners have become more international with only five Swiss winners in this period compared to 15 victories for Italy and 13 for Belgium. The quality of the race winners has been very high with classic specialists such as Paolo Bettini, Francesco Moser, Roger De Vlaeminck, Freddy Maertens, Giuseppe Saronni and Johan Museeuw all winning while the switch to an August date in 1988 allowed Tour de France riders such as Lance Armstrong, Jan Ullrich and Laurent Dufaux to do well in the race.

[edit] The route

The present day race starts and finishes in Zürich, in previous years the finish was on the Oerlikon velodrome in Zürich but that was abandoned a number of years ago. The race is held over a distance of 241 km with over 3000 metres of climbing, consisting of one 72.5 km lap and four 42.1 km circuits, this shorter lap includes four ascents of both the Pfannenstiel and Forch climbs, the final climb of the Pfannenstiel is just 15 km from the finish in Zürich and is often the launching point for the winning move in the race. Between 1993 and 1999 the race started in Basel and finished in Zürich and was known as the Grand Prix Suisse.

[edit] Winners

Rider Team
1914 Flag of Switzerland Henri Rheinwald
1917 Flag of Switzerland Charles Martinet
1918 Flag of Switzerland Anton Sieger
1919 Flag of Switzerland Heiri Suter
1920 Flag of Switzerland Heiri Suter
1921 Flag of Italy Ricardo Maffeo
1922 Flag of Switzerland Heiri Suter
1923 Flag of Germany Adolf Huschke
1924 Flag of Switzerland Heiri Suter
1925 Flag of Switzerland Hans Kaspar
1926 Flag of Switzerland Albert Blattmann
1927 Flag of Switzerland Kastor Notter
1928 Flag of Switzerland Heiri Suter
1929 Flag of Switzerland Heiri Suter
1930 Flag of Belgium Omer Taverne
1931 Flag of Austria Max Bulla
1932 Flag of Switzerland Auguste Erne
1933 Flag of Switzerland Walter Blattmann
1934 Flag of Switzerland Paul Egli
1935 Flag of Switzerland Paul Egli
1936 Flag of Switzerland Werner Buchwalder
1937 Flag of Switzerland Leo Amberg
1938 Flag of Switzerland Hans Martin
1939 Flag of Switzerland Karl Litschi
1940 Flag of Switzerland Robert Zimmermann
1941 Flag of Switzerland Walter Diggelmann
1942 Flag of Switzerland Paul Egli
1943 Flag of Switzerland Ferdi Kubler
1944 Flag of Switzerland Ernst Naef
1945 Flag of Switzerland Léo Weilenmann
1946 Flag of Italy Gino Bartali
1947 Flag of Switzerland Charles Guyot
1948 Flag of Italy Gino Bartali
1949 Flag of Switzerland Fritz Schaer
1950 Flag of Switzerland Fritz Schaer
1951 Flag of Switzerland Jean Brun
1952 Flag of Switzerland Hugo Koblet
1953 Flag of Switzerland Eugène Kamber
1954 Flag of Switzerland Hugo Koblet
1955 Flag of Switzerland Max Schellenberg
1956 Flag of Switzerland Carlo Clerici
1957 Flag of Germany Hans Junkermann
1958 Flag of Italy Giuseppe Cainero
1959 Flag of Italy Angelo Conterno
Rider Team
1960 Flag of Switzerland Alfred Ruegg
1961 Flag of Switzerland Rolf Maurer
1962 Flag of the Netherlands Jan Janssen
1963 Flag of Italy Franco Balmamion
1964 Flag of Belgium Guido Reybrouck
1965 Flag of Italy Franco Bitossi
1966 Flag of Italy Italo Zilioli
1967 Flag of Switzerland Robert Hagmann
1968 Flag of Italy Franco Bitossi
1969 Flag of Belgium Roger Swerts
1970 Flag of Belgium Walter Godefroot
1971 Flag of Belgium Herman Van Springel
1972 Flag of Belgium Willy Van Neste
1973 Flag of Belgium André Dierickx
1974 Flag of Belgium Walter Godefroot
1975 Flag of Belgium Roger De Vlaeminck
1976 Flag of Belgium Freddy Maertens
1977 Flag of Italy Francesco Moser
1978 Flag of Germany Dietrich Thurau
1979 Flag of Italy Giuseppe Saronni
1980 Flag of Belgium Gerry Verlinden
1981 Flag of Switzerland Beat Breu
1982 Flag of the Netherlands Adri van der Poel
1983 Flag of the Netherlands Johan van der Velde
1984 Flag of Australia Phil Anderson
1985 Flag of Belgium Ludo Peeters
1986 Flag of Portugal Acacio Da Silva Mura
1987 Flag of Germany Rolf Gölz
1988 Flag of the Netherlands Steven Rooks
1989 Flag of Canada Steve Bauer
1990 Flag of France Charly Mottet
1991 Flag of Belgium Johan Museeuw
1992 Flag of Russia Viatcheslav Ekimov
1993 Flag of Italy Maurizio Fondriest
1994 Flag of Italy Gianluca Bortolami
1995 Flag of Belgium Johan Museeuw
1996 Flag of Italy Andrea Ferrigato
1997 Flag of Italy Davide Rebellin
1998 Flag of Italy Michele Bartoli
1999 Flag of Poland Grzegorz Gwiazdowski
2000 Flag of Switzerland Laurent Dufaux
2001 Flag of Italy Paolo Bettini
2002 Flag of Italy Dario Frigo
2003 Flag of Italy Daniele Nardello
2004 Flag of Spain Juan Antonio Flecha
2005 Flag of Italy Paolo Bettini
2006 Flag of Spain Samuel Sánchez
2007 No race

[edit] Links

Official website

[edit] References