Grand Prix Cycliste de Montréal

Canadian one-day road cycling race From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Grand Prix Cycliste de Montréal is a one-day professional bicycle road race held in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Its first edition was held on September 12, 2010, as the final event in the 2010 UCI ProTour.

DateSeptember
RegionMontreal, Quebec, Canada
LocalnameGrand Prix Cycliste de Montréal
DisciplineRoad
Quick facts Race details, Date ...
Grand Prix Cycliste de Montréal
2025 Grand Prix Cycliste de Montréal
Race details
DateSeptember
RegionMontreal, Quebec, Canada
Local nameGrand Prix Cycliste de Montréal
DisciplineRoad
CompetitionUCI World Tour
TypeOne-day race
OrganiserÉvenements GPCQM (AA+ EVT inc)
Race directorJoseph Limare
Web sitegpcqm.ca Edit this at Wikidata
History
First edition2010 (2010)
Editions14
First winner Robert Gesink (NED)
Most wins Greg Van Avermaet (BEL)
 Tadej Pogačar (SLO) (2)
Most recent Brandon McNulty (USA)
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The Grand Prix Cycliste de Montréal and the Grand Prix Cycliste de Québec, held two days earlier, are collectively known as the "Laurentian Classics".[1] In 2014, Simon Gerrans became the first to achieve the "Laurentian Double" by winning both the Grand Prix Cycliste de Québec and the Grand Prix Cycliste de Montréal in the same year. In 2018, Michael Matthews became the second cyclist to achieve this.[2]

The race uses a hilly circuit around Mount Royal, similar to that used at the 1974 UCI Road World Championships, 1976 Summer Olympics and other previous races. In 2024, organisers noted that they wished to stage a women's race in future, potentially as part of the UCI Women's World Tour.[3] In September 2026, the 2026 UCI Road World Championships will be held on a similar course to the race.

The peloton descending Mont Royal during the 2019 edition

Route

The Grand Prix Cycliste de Montréal is not like many single day events, a point to point race, but a circuit based race. The riders race for 18 laps on a 12.3 kilometres (7.6 mi) long circuit. Each lap of the circuit requires completing four climbs on the slopes around Mount Royal: Côte Camilien-Houde (1.8 km long and 8% average grade), Côte de la Polytechnique (780m long and 6% average grade) and Avenue du Parc (560m long and 4% average grade) and (as of 2022) the new section on Pagnuelo street (534m long at 7.5% average grade). The finish is uphill on the Avenue du Parc.

The race has 4,842 metres (15,886 ft) of cumulative climbing, similar to that found in a mountain stage in the Tour de France, though at a lower altitude.[4]

Iterations of the circuit have been used for:

Winners

References

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