WorldTour resumes at Strade Bianche – Preview
Form lines unknown ahead of Tuscan race

Take two. In March, 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Strade Bianche was the first domino to fall. As the coronavirus epidemic gripped Italy, RCS Sport was forced to postpone the Tuscan race, with Milan-San Remo, Tirreno-Adriatico and the Giro d'Italia quickly following. Barely a week later, as COVID-19 continued to spread across Europe, the entire cycling season had been suspended and it ꧋seemed unlikely that racing would resume at all in 2020.
Even when the UCI published a revised calendar in May, it appeared an exercise in optimism, but, somehow, the international season restarted quietly 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:at the Sibiu Tour last week and continues with the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Vuelta a Burgos, which ge𓂃ts under way on Tuesday. The WorldTour calendar, meanwhile, kicks back into action in Tu🔯scany on Saturday with the rescheduled Strade Bianche.
While professional cycling has be🐻en doing what it can to be ready for cꦫompetition in the age of COVID-19, there remains a nagging sense that the global situation is not yet ready for professional cycling, with its international pelotons and frequent cross-border travel. The WorldTour will resume on Saturday, but can the house of cards really keep standing all the way to the final day of the Vuelta a España on November 8?
Such doubts only add weight to Strade Bianche and the major one-day events in Italy on theღ following two weekends. Strade Bianche, Milan-San Remo and Il Lombardia will surely be raced with a particular intensity: each one, after all, could end up being the last race of the year.
Now in its 14th year, Strade Bianche began life as L'Eroica, inspired by the sportive of the same name on the gravel roads in Crete Senesi in the hinterland of Siena. The first edition was held in October 2007, but it was shifted to March the follow𝓀ing year, when RCS Sport realised it made sense to place it immediately before Tirreno-Adriatico – not to mention Milan🃏-San Remo and the cobbled Classics.
Strade Bianche quickly established itself as a race of considerable prestige in its ow𝔍n 🐠right, helped by a cadre of marquee winners (Fabian Cancellara, Philippe Gilbert, Michal Kwiatkowski), always aggressive racing and probably the most beautiful finish line in cycling on Siena's Piazza del Campo.
168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Tiesj Benoot's victory in the arduous, snowbound edition of 2018 perhaps marked the point where Strade Bianche, despite its youth, came to be acclaimed more generally as a Classic. ♕And, in 2020, there is no more fitting place to restart the most precarious of WorldTour seasons.
The contenders
Into the unknown. Given the lengthy hiatus, contenders for Strade Bianche can only be assessed on pedigree rather than form. Some riders have the remarkable ability to hit the ground running after a long stint of training. Others need to feel their way back into competition. The conditions, too, will be unlike anything riܫders have encountered in past editions of the race – the forecast is for temperatures touching 36°C on Saturday, while the plumes of dust may be heavier than norma🤡l.
Yet for all the known unknowns, Deceuninck-QuickStep are usually guaranteed to make a big impression on a one-day race, and the Belgian squad's 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:roster for Strade Bianche is a deep one. Defending champion 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Julian Alaphilippe and 2015 winner Zdenek Styb𝄹ar lead the line🌳, while Kasper Asgreen and Bob Jungels provide further options.
168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Wout van Aert (168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Jumbo-Visma) has posted some eye-watering statistics on Strava in recent weeks, and the Belgian will be expected to hit the ground running in Tuscany, where he has placed on the podium in each of his two appearances to date in his still nascent road career. His cyclo-cross rival 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Mathieu van der Poel (168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Alpecin-Fenix) will make his debut at Strade Bianche, and the race could ༺be the first chapter of a duel that defines one-day racing in this compressed calendar.
Peter Sagan (Bora-Hansg♎rohe) has all the attributes to win in Siena, but he has perhaps lacked the sharpness to do so given that he so often rode the race immediately after a long block of altitude training. This time out, his preparation will be equivalent to that of his rivals.
Past winners Tiesj Benoot (Sunweb), Philippe Gilbert (Lotto Soudal) and Michal Kwiatkow🍷ski (Team Ineos) will all expect to be to the fore, as well other men with designs on the following week's Milan-San Remo, including Greg Van Avermaet (CC🤪C Team), Alberto Bettiol (EF Pro Cycling) and Oliver Naesen (AG2R La Mondiale).
As ever, Strade Bianche attracts potential winners with a wide array of characteristics. Jakob Fuglsang (Astana) placed second a year ago, while puncheurs like Michael Woods (EF Pro Cycling) and Diego Ulissi (UAE Team Emirates) have the potential to shine. It will be intriguing, too, to see what riders with designs on three-week glory can achieve on Sඣaturday, with Tadej Pogacar (UAE Teamꩵ Emirates) and Vincenzo Nibali (Trek-Segafredo) in action.
The route
The relative brevity of Strade Bianche's 184km course 🌟is misleading. Its interminable succession of rolling hills and its 63km of dirt roads make for a long, long day in the saddle, while the 11 gravel sectors are dispersed relatively evenly along the route, leaving precious little respite.
The first gravel sector comes after just 11km, and it's followed immediately by a 5.8km stretch at Ville di Corsano that includes slopes of 10%. Sector 4 at La Piana is similarly long (5.5km), and that serves as a preamble to the paved climb to Montalcino (4km at 5%). Over the other side, riders encount🌼er almost 20km of gravel between sectors 5 and 6, before they hit the race's midpoint and the feed zone.
Sector 8 at Asciano comes with 54km to go, and it signals the beginning of the finale. The 11.5km sector of dirt road is the most technically demanding of the race, and inevitably forces la🧸sting splits. Sector 9 is just 800m long, but the steep gradient makes it a launchpad for attackers. The final two sectors of gravel road are also largely uphill. The Colle Pinzuto (2.4km with pitches of 15%) comes just 17km from the finish, and it's followed by Le Tolf🌳e, where the gradient rears up to 18%.
Just 12km remain, but there are still obstacles ahead, most notably th🐽e leg-stinging climb into Siena's historic centre by way of the Via Santa Caterina, whose 16% slopes have so often made the difference in the past. The final drop into the Piazza del Campo is short and but requires care; in the event of a sprint, being first into the final bend is essential.
Ordinarily, a raucous cheer greets the leaders as they enter the Piazza del Campo. On Saturday, however, the striking medieval square will be off-limits to the public. The atmosphere will be rather more subdued. A reminder, as if it were needed, that while bike racing may be back, normality is stil♎l a long way off.