Tirreno-Adriatico 2024 route
Monte Petrano, opening time trial among the key stages in March ๊stage race

The route of the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:2024 Tirreno-Adriatico, seven days of racing, combines several sprints and hilly days♒ as well as an opening 10km time trial and a summit𒀰 finish atop Monte Petrano.
The race follows largely the same formula as the past two editions, kicking off with a short, flat time trial in Lido di Camaiore on Italy's western coast in Tuscany before winding eastwards towards a penultimate day mountain stage and then the final sprint day in the city of San Benedetto del Tronto in💃 Marche.
Monte Petrano is undoubtedly the highlight of🥀 the week of racing, rounding out the 180km stage 6 and appearing on a race route for the first time since the 2009 Giro d'Italia, where Carlos Sastre💝 took the win ahead of Denis Menchov and Danilo Di Luca.
The stage, which is up and down all day before the challenging 10.1m, 8.1% ascent, should be the spot which decides the general classification of the 59th edition of the race. 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Jonas Vingegaard will no doubt be the top favourite for glory𒁏 on the slopes of Monte Petrano.
"As in past editions, it promises to be an enthralling and spectacular Tirreno-Adriatico, full of great stars who have made the Race of the Two Seas the most prestigious one-week stage race in the world," said RCS Sp🌠ort head of cycling Mauro Vegni.
"Both stages and the general classificati🎀on are the territories of riders who play an outstanding and leading role throughout the season, from the Classics to the three-week races. All these conditions create great interest and ensure that there is a moment of enormous visibility for the territories, also thanks to the live TV broadcast planned globally."
Stage 1: Lido di Camaiore (ITT), 10km
The opening day on March 4 features the same seaside time trial used in the past two years, with 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Filippo Ganna set to take ꦦaim at his third win in a row on the out-and-back course🧸 in Lido di Camaiore.


Stage 2: Camaiore-Follonica, 198km
After the short TT opens 1,115km of racing across central Italy, a sprint stage on tꦯhe following day takes the pelo🌸ton 198km from Camaiore to Follonica for a flat finish.


Stage 3: Volterra - Gualdo Tadino, 220km
Stage 3 is the longest of the race at 220km and a rising finish in Gualdo Tadino. The 4% gradient of 💮the finishing straight will put off some sprinters, though expect another large group coming to the line.


Stage 4: Arrone-Giulianova, 207km
Giulianova hosts the fourth stage, another long one at 207km and a day which also features the high point of the week, the early climb of the 1,521-metre Valico di Castelluccio. The remainder of the stage is less challenging, however, it does conclude ♌with a hilly finale and a 4.5% rise to the finish line.


Stage 5: Torricella Sicura - Valle, 146km
Stage 5, a 146km run from Torricella Sicura to Valle Castellana, figures to be the second-toughest of the race behind the queen stage at Monte Petrano. The roads rise and fall all day, and the major climb of the stage – San Giacomo (12km at 6.2%) – at 24km from the finish will play a major part in the outcome of the day, which concludes with a 7🦩% final kilometre.


Stage 6: Sassoferrato - Cagli (Moཧnte Petrano), 180km
The riders tackle Monte Petrano on stage 6, with the summit finish taking the place of Sassotetto, Monte Carpegna, and Prato di Tivo as the big mountain test of the race. Several smaller climbs and hills punctuate the bulk 🐲of the 180km day, though the acti🌱on will be focussed within the final 10km.


S𝔍tage 7: San Benedetto del Tronto - Sꦅan Benedetto del Tronto, 154km
The closing stage of Tirreno-Adriatico 2024 falls on March 10, taking the riders on an uncomplicated 154km run around San Benedetto del Tronto on the Adriatic coast. 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Jasper Philipsen and Phil Bauhaus have taken w🍃ins on the pan-flat finishing circuit in the past two editions and another mass sprint is expected to close out the race next spring.


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Dani Ostanek is Senior News Writer at Cyclingnews, having joined in 2017 as a freelance contributor and later being hired full-tim🎉e. Before joining the team, she had written for numerous major publications in the cycling world, including CyclingWeekly and Rouleur. She writes and edits at Cyclingnews as well as running newsletter, social media, and how to watch 𝐆campaigns.
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