Milano–Torino

Milano–Torino is a semi classic European single day cycling race, between the northern Italian cities of Milan and Turin over a distance of 199 kilometres. The event was first run in 1876[1] making it the oldest classic race in the world. The event is owned by the RCS media group which owns the Italian sports daily La Gazzetta dello Sport. RCS also organises other top Italian cycling events such as the Giro d'Italia, Milan–San Remo and Tirreno–Adriatico. The race is ranked UCI ProSeries on the UCI continental calendar. The race was not run between the spring of 2007 and the autumn of 2012.[2]

Milano–Torino
Race details
DateMid October
RegionNorth of Italy
English nameMilan–Turin
Local name(s)Milano–Torino (in Italian)
DisciplineRoad
CompetitionUCI ProSeries
TypeOne-day
OrganiserRCS Sport
Web sitewww.milanotorino.it Edit this at Wikidata
History
First edition1876 (1876)
Editions104 (as of 2024)
First winner Paolo Magretti (ITA)
Most wins Costante Girardengo (ITA) (5 wins)
Most recent Alberto Bettiol (ITA)

Race dates edit

The position of the race in the European calendar has changed several times. Prior to 1987 the event was always seven days before Milan–San Remo and was seen as an important preparation race for the Spring Classics, however in 1987 Milano–Torino was switched to a date in October just before the Giro di Lombardia because the race organisers were not happy with the inclement weather conditions characterised by early March in northern Italy. In October the race became part of the "Trittico di Autunno" (Autumn Treble) along with the Giro del Piemonte and the Giro di Lombardia which were all run in the same week. In 2005 Milan–Torino returned to its traditional date in early March, however the 2008 edition again returned to a date in October exchanging dates with the Monte Paschi Eroica race which is now run in March. However the race did not take place in October 2008 and it was not run for the next four years until an agreement was reached in February 2012 between the race owners (RCS) and the Associazione Ciclistica Arona to organise the race for the next three years.[2]

The 2000 edition of the race was not held because of torrential rain which caused catastrophic mud slides in the Piedmont area.

The route edit

The race starts in Novate Milanese, just north west of Milan, and crosses the Ticino river at Vigevano after 40 kilometres, leaving the region of Lombardy and entering Piedmont. The first 95 kilometres of the race are run in a south westerly direction on broad flat roads, the climb of Vignale Monferrato (293 metres) is encountered and then a series of small undulations take the race to Asti after 130 kilometres. The race route crosses four railway level crossings at 70, 75, 129 and 133 kilometres and these can be important in helping any breakaways if the peloton is held up by a train. At Asti the race swings north westerly towards Turin climbing steadily before tackling the tough climb of the Superga Hill (620 metres) just 16 kilometres from the finish. The Superga climb is often the springboard for a group of riders to escape before the finish. From the top of the Superga it is a fast picturesque descent into Turin down the Strada Panoramica dei Colli through the Parco Naturale della Collina di Superga to finish in the Fausto Coppi velodrome on Corso Casale in Turin.

In the 2012 and 2021 edition the finish was moved to the top of Superga (repeated two times).

The 2020 edition was a flat race for the sprinters.

Significant winners edit

Milano–Torino is one of the fastest of the classics, Walter Martin won the 1961 edition at an average speed of 45.094 kilometres per hour and this stood for a time as the fastest speed in a classic race until beaten by Marinio Vigna in the 1964 edition of the Tre Valli Varesine. Swiss rider Markus Zberg now holds the record average speed for the race when he won in 1999 at a speed of 45.75 kilometres per hour. The record for the most wins in Milano–Torino stands to the Italian Costante Girardengo who took five victories between 1914 and 1923. Pierino Favalli took a hat trick of wins between 1938 and 1940. Tour de France and Giro d'Italia winner, the late Marco Pantani almost died in the 1995 edition of Milano–Torino when police allowed a four-wheel drive vehicle onto the course by mistake; Pantani and two other riders ploughed into the vehicle. Pantani sustained multiple leg breaks and missed the entire 1996 season. In 2012 the winner was Alberto Contador, who won the first single day race in his pro career.

Races edit

During the first race in 1876, there were only 10 competitors, however, there were an estimated 10,000 spectators.

Winners edit

[3]

The Superga hill, historic decisive point of the race
YearCountryRiderTeam
1876  ItalyPaolo Magrettiindividual
1877–
1893
No race
1894  ItalyLuigi Airaldiindividual
1895No race
1896  ItalyGiovanni Moroindividual
1897–
1902
No race
1903  ItalyGiovanni GerbiMaino
1904No race
1905  ItalyGiovanni RossignoliBianchi
1906–
1910
No race
1911  FranceHenri Pélissierindividual
1912No race
1913  ItalyGiuseppe AzziniOtav
1914  ItalyCostante GirardengoMaino–Dunlop
1915  ItalyCostante GirardengoBianchi
1916No race
1917   SwitzerlandOscar EggBianchi
1918  ItalyGaetano BelloniBianchi
1919  ItalyCostante GirardengoStucchi–Dunlop
1920  ItalyCostante GirardengoStucchi–Dunlop
1921  ItalyFederico GayBianchi–Dunlop
1922  ItalyAdriano ZanagaGanna–Dunlop
1923  ItalyCostante GirardengoMaino
1924  ItalyFederico GayAlcyon–Dunlop
1925  ItalyAdriano ZanagaIdeor
1926–
1930
No race
1931  LuxembourgGiuseppe Gragliaindividual
1932  ItalyGiuseppe Olmoindividual
1933  LuxembourgGiuseppe GragliaBestetti–D'Alessandro
1934  ItalyMario CiprianiFréjus
1935  ItalyGiovanni GottiLegnano–Wolsit
1936  ItalyCesare Del CanciaGanna
1937  ItalyGiuseppe MartanoTendil
1938  ItalyPierino FavalliLegnano
1939  ItalyPierino FavalliLegnano
1940  ItalyPierino FavalliLegnano
1941  ItalyPietro ChiappiniOlympia
1942  ItalyPietro ChiappiniLegnano
1943-
1944
No race
1945  ItalyVito OrtelliBenotto
1946  ItalyVito OrtelliBenotto–Superga
1947  ItalyItalo De ZanLygie–Pirelli
1948  ItalySergio MagginiWilier Triestina
1949  ItalyLuigi CasolaBenotto–Superga
1950  ItalyAdolfo GrossoWilier Triestina
1951  ItalyFiorenzo MagniGanna–Ursus
1952  ItalyAldo BiniBianchi–Pirelli
1953  ItalyLuciano MagginiAtala–Pirelli
1954  ItalyAgostino ColettoFréjus
1955  ItalyCleto MauleTorpado–Ursus
1956   SwitzerlandFerdinand KüblerCarpano–Coppi
1957  SpainMiguel PobletIgnis–Doniselli
1958  ItalyAgostino ColettoCarpano
1959  ItalyNello FabbriBianchi–Pirelli
1960  ItalyArnaldo PambiancoLegnano
1961  ItalyWalter MartinCarpano
1962  ItalyFranco BalmamionCarpano
1963  ItalyFranco CribioriGazzola
1964  SpainValentín UrionaKas–Kaskol
1965  ItalyVito TacconeSalvarani
1966  ItalyMarino VignaVittadello
1967  ItalyGianni MottaMolteni
1968  ItalyFranco BitossiFilotex
1969  ItalyClaudio MichelottoMax Meyer
1970  ItalyLuciano ArmaniScic
1971  BelgiumGeorges PintensHertekamp–Magniflex
1972  BelgiumRoger De VlaeminckDreher
1973  ItalyMarcello BergamoFilotex
1974  BelgiumRoger De VlaeminckBrooklyn
1975  ItalyWladimiro PanizzaBrooklyn
1976  ItalyEnrico PaoliniScic
1977  BelgiumRik Van LindenBianchi–Campagnolo
1978  ItalyPierino GavazziZonca–Santini
1979  ItalyAlfio VandiMagniflex–Famcucine
1980  ItalyGiovanni BattaglinInoxpran
1981  ItalyGiuseppe MartinelliSantini–Selle Italia
1982  ItalyGiuseppe SaronniDel Tongo–Colnago
1983  ItalyFrancesco MoserGis Gelati–Campagnolo
1984  ItalyPaolo RosolaBianchi–Piaggio
1985  ItalyDaniele CaroliSantini–Krups
1986No race
1987  AustraliaPhil AndersonPanasonic–Isostar
1988  West GermanyRolf GölzSuperconfex–Yoko–Opel–Colnago
1989  West GermanyRolf GölzSuperconfex–Yoko–Opel–Colnago
1990   SwitzerlandMauro GianettiHelvetia–La Suisse
1991  ItalyDavide CassaniAriostea
1992  ItalyGianni BugnoGatorade–Château d'Ax
1993  DenmarkRolf SørensenCarrera Jeans–Tassoni
1994  ItalyFrancesco CasagrandeMercatone Uno–Medeghini
1995  ItalyStefano ZaniniGewiss–Ballan
1996  ItalyDaniele NardelloMapei–GB
1997  FranceLaurent JalabertONCE
1998   SwitzerlandNiki AebersoldPost Swiss Team
1999   SwitzerlandMarkus ZbergRabobank
2000No race due to flooding
2001  ItalyMirko CelestinoSaeco
2002  ItalyMichele BartoliFassa Bortolo
2003  ItalyMirko CelestinoSaeco
2004  SpainMarcos SerranoLiberty Seguros
2005  ItalyFabio SacchiFassa Bortolo
2006  SpainIgor AstarloaBarloworld
2007  ItalyDanilo Di LucaLiquigas
2008–
2011
No race
2012  SpainAlberto ContadorSaxo Bank–Tinkoff Bank
2013  ItalyDiego UlissiLampre–Merida
2014  ItalyGiampaolo CarusoTeam Katusha
2015  ItalyDiego RosaAstana
2016  ColombiaMiguel Ángel LópezAstana
2017  ColombiaRigoberto UránCannondale–Drapac
2018  FranceThibaut PinotGroupama–FDJ
2019  CanadaMichael WoodsEF Education First
2020  FranceArnaud DémareGroupama–FDJ
2021  SloveniaPrimož RogličTeam Jumbo–Visma
2022  Great BritainMark CavendishQuick-Step Alpha Vinyl Team
2023  NetherlandsArvid de KleijnTudor Pro Cycling Team
2024  ItalyAlberto BettiolEF Education–EasyPost

Wins per country edit

WinsCountry
74  Italy
5  Spain
 Switzerland
4  Belgium
 France
2  Colombia
 Luxembourg
 West Germany
1  Australia
 Canada
 Denmark
 Great Britain
 Netherlands
 Slovenia

References edit

  1. ^ "Milano-Torino past winners". Cycling News. Retrieved 5 October 2017.
  2. ^ a b Cyclingnews.com Gives details of race return in 2012.
  3. ^ "Roll of Honour Milano Torino: All the winners".

External links edit