2020 Strade Bianche Women

2020 Strade Bianche Women
2020 UCI Women's World Tour, race 2
Race details
Dates 7 March 2020
1 August 2020
Stages 1
Distance 136 km (84.51 mi)
Winning time 4h 03' 54"
Results
  Winner Annemiek van Vleuten (NED) (Mitchelton–Scott)
  Second Margarita Victoria García (ESP) (Alé BTC Ljubljana)
  Third Leah Thomas (USA) (Équipe Paule Ka)

Race

Strade Bianche (both the men's race and the women's race) was originally scheduled for 7 March 2020 but was postponed to 1 August 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Route

Starting and finishing in Siena, Italy, Strade Bianche is the second event of the 2020 UCI Women's World Tour. The route is identical to that of the previous years, containing 30 km (19 mi) of gravel roads spread over eight sectors, for a total distance of 136 km (85 mi).

Sectors of strade bianche
No. Name Distance from Length
(km)
Category
Start
(km)
Finish
(km)
1 Vidritta 17.6 118.4 2.1 *
2 Bagnaia 25 111.0 5.8 ****
3 Radi 36.9 99.1 4.4 **
4 La piana 47.6 88.4 5.5 *
5 San Martino in Grania 67.5 68.5 9.5 ***
6 Monteaperti 111.3 24.7 0.8 *
7 Colle Pinzuto 116.6 19.4 2.4 ****
8 Le Tolfe 123.6 12.4 1.1 ***

Teams

Eight UCI Women's WorldTeams and fourteen UCI Women's Continental Teams made up the twenty-two teams that competed in the race. Most teams entered the maximum of six riders; however, Eurotarget–Bianchi–Vittoria and Servetto–Piumate–Beltrami TSA entered five each, while Astana, Cogeas–Mettler–Look, and Tibco–Silicon Valley Bank only entered four each. The day before the race, Ashleigh Moolman of CCC Liv, Ella Harris of Canyon–SRAM, and Clara Koppenburg of Équipe Paule Ka sustained various injuries in separate training ride crashes and were forced to pull out of the race. This reduced the starting peloton to 121 riders. Of these riders, only 45 finished, while a further 13 riders finished over the time limit.

UCI Women's WorldTeams

UCI Women's Continental Teams

Result

Result
Rank Rider Team Time
1 Annemiek van Vleuten (NED) Mitchelton–Scott 4h 03' 54"
2 Mavi García (ESP) Alé BTC Ljubljana + 22"
3 Leah Thomas (USA) Équipe Paule Ka + 1' 53"
4 Anna van der Breggen (NED) Boels–Dolmans + 2' 05"
5 Elisa Longo Borghini (ITA) Trek–Segafredo + 2' 11"
6 Marianne Vos (NED) CCC Liv + 2' 26"
7 Cecilie Uttrup Ludwig (DEN) FDJ Nouvelle-Aquitaine Futuroscope + 2' 40"
8 Lisa Brennauer (GER) Ceratizit–WNT Pro Cycling + 3' 26"
9 Karol-Ann Canuel (CAN) Boels–Dolmans + 4' 20"
10 Marta Bastianelli (ITA) Alé BTC Ljubljana + 5' 20"