Race details | |
---|---|
Date | October |
Region | Victoria, Australia |
Local name(s) | Jayco Herald Sun Tour |
Discipline | Road |
Type | Stage race |
History | |
First edition | 1952 |
Editions | 59 |
First winner | Keith Rowley Australia |
Most wins | Barry Waddell Australia (5) |
Most recent | Nathan Haas Australia |
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 and it is held annually in October. 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 merged with The Herald in 1990.
Contents |
The first general classification winner was Keith Rowley, a Maffra sheep farmer, in a time of 42hr 57min 55sec. 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 attacting 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 26hr 39min 55sec. 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].
Rider | Team | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
1952 | Keith Rowley (AUS) | |||
1953 | Basil Halsall (AUS) | |||
1954 | Hec Sutherland (AUS) | |||
1955 | Allan Geddes (AUS) | |||
1956 | George Goodwin (AUS) | |||
1957 | Russell Mockridge (AUS) | |||
1958 | John Young (AUS) | |||
1959 | Peter Panton (AUS) | |||
1960 | Peter Panton (AUS) | |||
1961 | John Young (AUS) | |||
1962 | Bill Knevitt (AUS) | |||
1963 | Bill Lawrie (AUS) | |||
1964 | Barry Waddell (AUS) | |||
1965 | Barry Waddell (AUS) | |||
1966 | Barry Waddell (AUS) | |||
1967 | Barry Waddell (AUS) | |||
1968 | Barry Waddell (AUS) | |||
1969 | Keith Oliver (AUS) | |||
1970 | Trevor Williamson (AUS) | |||
1971 | Graham McVilly (AUS) | |||
1972 | Ken Evans (AUS) | |||
1973 | Graham McVilly (AUS) | |||
1974 | Graham McVilly (AUS) | |||
1975 | John Trevorrow (AUS) | |||
1976 | Peter Besanko (AUS) | |||
1977 | John Trevorrow (AUS) | |||
1978 | Terry Hammond (AUS) | |||
1979 | John Trevorrow (AUS) | Warracknabeal | ||
1980 | David Allan (AUS) | Pony Sport Holland | ||
1981 | Clyde Sefton (AUS) | Mansfield | ||
1982 | Terry Hammond (AUS) | Clemenso-Mavic | ||
1983 | Shane Sutton (AUS) | Clemenso-Mavic | ||
1984 | Gary Sutton (AUS) | Clarence Street Cyclery | ||
1985 | Malcolm Elliott (GBR) | Raleigh-Weinmann | ||
1986 | Neil Stephens (AUS) | Repco | ||
1987 | Stefano Tomasini (ITA) | Remac-Fanini | ||
1988 | Adri van der Poel (NED) | PDM-Ultima-Concorde | ||
1989 | Marcel Arntz (NED) | Paternina | ||
1990 | Udo Bölts (GER) | Caltex | ||
1991 | Michael Engleman (USA) | Coors Light | ||
1992 | Bart Bowen (USA) | Subaru-Montgomery | ||
1993 | David Mann (GBR) | Coors Light-Serotta | ||
1994 | Christian Henn (GER) | Team Telekom | ||
1995 | Andy Bishop (USA) | Echuca-Moama | ||
1996 | Scott Moninger (USA) | Tattersall's | ||
1997 | Norman Alvis (USA) | Sweethearts Oranges | ||
1998 | Alessandro Pozzi (ITA) | Sweethearts Oranges | ||
1999 | Michael Blaudzun (DEN) | Team home-Jack & Jones | ||
2000 | Eugen Wacker (KGZ) | Mróz-Supradyn Witaminy | ||
2001 | Peter Wrolich (AUT) | Gerolsteiner | ||
2002 | Baden Cooke (AUS) | Française des Jeux | ||
2003 | Tim Johnson (USA) | Saturn Cycling Team | ||
2004 | Jonas Ljungblad (SWE) | Amore & Vita-Beretta | ||
2005 | Simon Gerrans (AUS) | AG2R Prévoyance | ||
2006 | Simon Gerrans (AUS) | AG2R Prévoyance | ||
2007 | Matthew Wilson (AUS) | Unibet.com | ||
2008 | Stuart O'Grady (AUS) | Team CSC Saxo Bank | ||
2009 | Bradley Wiggins (GBR) | Garmin-Slipstream | ||
2010 | No race | |||
2011 | Nathan Haas (AUS) | Genesys Wealth Advisers |