2013 UCI Road World Championships
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Host city |
Tuscany, Italy |
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Date(s) |
22–29 September 2013 |
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Nations participating |
76 |
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Cyclists participating |
elite, under-23, junior |
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Events |
12 |
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The 2013 UCI Road World Championships took place in Tuscany, Italy, between 22 and 29 September 2013.[1][2]
The Championships consisted of 12 events for elite, under-23 and junior cyclists. It was the 86th Road World Championships, the 13th in Italy and the first time that the event took place in Tuscany. The different events finished near the Nelson Mandela Forum in Florence. Host cities for the starts were Florence, Pistoia, Lucca and Montecatini Terme.
Marketing
Sponsors of the Championships |
Main partners of the 2013 UCI Road World Championships:
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Other partners:
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Tickets for crucial points of the course in Florence and Fiesole could be bought in advance. Ticket prices ranged from 20 Euro to 100 Euro for seating near the finish line of the men's road race.[3] Related to the Championships, many events were organized including expositions, exhibitions, a cyclosportive, and the Bicycle Film Festival.[4] Poste italiane made a stamp dedicated to the Championships in 3.290,000 pieces and Chianti Classico produced wine bottles with special Championships labels.[5][6]
Mascot Pinocchio
The organizers showed the mascot for the event, Pinocchio the brainchild of Florentine writer Carlo Collodi, on 26 October 2012. The wooden figure is dressed in a rainbow sweater and a hat with the same motif. The choice of Pinocchio, whose nose grows when he lies, appeared to be significant after the cycling world was rocked by the doping case of Lance Armstrong. The decision for the mascot however, was taken much earlier according to the organizers.[7]
Traveling
To promote the public transport, more trains ran during the Championships to Florence and a special ticket was produced to ride on all regional trains.[8][9] For safety reasons, all schools in Fiesole were closed on 27 and 28 September, because reaching schools was complicated.[10]
Schedule
Location of Tuscany, Italy
Events summary
Elite events
The finish of all events
On the first day, the team time trial events were for the second consecutive year won by Specialized–lululemon (women) and Omega Pharma–Quick-Step (men). The men's squad's victory in the men's team time trial came by 0.81 seconds over Orica–GreenEDGE. Ellen van Dijk from the Netherlands, who won a gold medal in the women's team time trial, won her second gold medal in the women's time trial. Van Dijk won with an advantage of 24 seconds over Linda Villumsen, who finished on the podium for the fourth successive Championships. Van Dijk became the second Dutch woman to win in the discipline, after Leontien van Moorsel's victories in 1998 and 1999.[11] Tony Martin, who also won with his team a gold medal in the team time trial, won his third successive men's time trial gold medal, beating main rivals Bradley Wiggins and Fabian Cancellara. In the last weekend of the championships, Marianne Vos won her third gold and her eighth medal in the women's road race. With help from Anna van der Breggen who helped close down the breakaway attempts, Vos made her break on the final ascent of the 600 m (2,000 ft) long Via Salviati – with around 5 km (3.1 mi) to go – and soloed to a 15-second victory over Emma Johansson and Rossella Ratto.[12] On the last day of the Championships, Rui Costa from Portugal won the rain-soaked Men's road race as he beat Spain's Joaquim Rodríguez by a bike-length on the finish line, with Alejandro Valverde from Spain taking bronze.[13]
Under-23 events
Junior events
After winning the women's junior time trial at the European Championships, Séverine Eraud won the women's junior time trial at the Road World Championships. European runner-up Igor Decraene won the gold medal in the men's junior time trial. In the women's junior road race won Amalie Dideriksen the sprint from Alexandria Nicholls and Alexandra Manly. The three riders escaped with one other rider on the first lap. Mathieu van der Poel won the men's junior road race. He attacked in the closing stage and soloed to the finish. It was van der Poel's first road world title, having previously won two junior world titles in cyclo-cross, in 2012 and 2013.[19]
Participating nations
76 nations participated.[20] Two riders from Uganda were on the start list for the men's and women's time trial but did not start. One rider from Iran was registered for the women's team time trial, but did not start.[21] The number of cyclists per nation (exclusive riders in the team time trials) is shown in parentheses.
Participating national federations Click on a nation to go to the nations' 2013 UCI Road World Championships page |
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Medals table
Team time trials are included under the UCI registration country of the team.
Prize money
2013 UCI Road World Championships
The UCI assigned premiums in all of the twelve events.[22]
|
Rank |
Men elites |
Women elites |
Men U23 |
Men juniors |
Women juniors |
Total |
Road races |
1 |
€7,667 |
€7,667 |
€3,833 |
€1,533 |
€1,533 |
€22,233 |
2 |
€5,367 |
€5,367 |
€2,683 |
€1,150 |
€1,150 |
€15,717 |
3 |
€3,067 |
€3,067 |
€1,533 |
€767 |
€767 |
€9,201 |
Total |
€16,101 |
€16,101 |
€8,049 |
€3,450 |
€3,450 |
€47,151 |
Time trials |
1 |
€3,833 |
€3,833 |
€3,067 |
€767 |
€767 |
€12,267 |
2 |
€2,300 |
€2,300 |
€1,533 |
€383 |
€383 |
€6,899 |
3 |
€1,633 |
€1,633 |
€767 |
€230 |
€230 |
€4,493 |
Total |
€7,766 |
€7,766 |
€5,367 |
€1,380 |
€1,380 |
€23,659 |
Team time trials |
1 |
€33,333 |
€10,666 |
N/A |
€43,999 |
2 |
€20,833 |
€6,666 |
€27,499 |
3 |
€16,666 |
€4,166 |
€20,832 |
4 |
€8,333 |
€2,500 |
€10,833 |
5 |
€4,166 |
€1,666 |
€5,832 |
Total |
€83,331 |
€25,664 |
€108,995 |
Total |
€107,198 |
€49,531 |
€13,416 |
€4,830 |
€4,830 |
€179,805 |
Broadcasting
- Australia: SBS 2 (Internet Broadcast)
- Belgium: Canvas, Eén, La Deux
- Brazil: SporTV
- Canada: Rogers Sportsnet, RDS
- China: CCTV
- Colombia: RCN, Win Sports
- Czech Republic: ČT Sport
- Denmark: TV3+, TV3 Sport 1 (Internet Broadcast)
- France: France 3, beIN Sport
- Hungary: Sport 1
- Israel: Sport 1
- Italy: Rai Sport 2, Rai 3
- Middle East: Al Jazeera
- Japan: NHK BS 1, NHK
- Netherlands: NOS
- Norway: Viasat 4, Viasat Sport
- Pan Asia: Eurosport Asia/Pacific
- Poland: Polsat Sport
- Slovakia: Dvojka
- Slovenia: RTV Slovenia
- South Africa: SuperSport
- South America: Direct TV, TDN
- Sweden: TV10 / Viasat Sport, Viasat 14 HD
- Switzerland: RSI, RTS, SRF
- United Kingdom: BBC Television (Internet Broadcast)
- United States: Universal Sports (Internet Broadcast)
- Worldwide: UCI YouTube channel (Internet Broadcast)
Source[23]
References
External links
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| UCI World Circuits | |
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