| Milan-Sanremo | |
|---|---|
| Local name: | Milano-Sanremo |
| Region: | North West Italy |
| Date: | Mid March |
| Type: | One-day race |
| History | |
| First Edition: | 1907 |
| Editions: | 97 |
| First Winner: | Lucien Petit-Breton () |
| Most Recent: | Filippo Pozzato () |
| Most Wins: | Eddy Merckx (), 7 times |
Milan-Sanremo is often called the sprinters' classic while its sister Italian race the Giro di Lombardia held in the autumn season is often called the climbers' classic. "Milan-San Remo" is a frequent misspelling based in turn on a misspelling of "Sanremo".
The most successful rider in Milan-Sanremo was Eddy Merckx; he won 7 times. The most recent edition (2006) was won by Filippo Pozzato. In recent times, the most successful rider in the Via Roma of Sanremo has been German Erik Zabel who has won it four times in his career and only lost the 2004 edition to Óscar Freire because he lifted his arms to celebrate too early. It was the opening race of the UCI World Cup series until the series was replaced by the UCI ProTour in 2005.
Despite its flat parcours and long finishing straight, the sprinters teams have been foiled from time-to-time by a determined attack on the last hills towards the finish. Good exmaples of this include Laurent Jalabert and Maurizio Fondriest escaping the peloton in the 1995 edition and staying away to the finish line. In the 2003 race, classics specialist Italian Paolo Bettini attacked with several riders who all stayed away and in 2006 Filippo Pozzato and Alessandro Ballan attacked on the last hill and stayed away from the sprinters.
The 2006 edition saw more hills added into the route which make it more challenging for the sprinters teams, much to the chagrin of many previous winners who complained that the addition will change the character of the race, including Bettini himself. He remarked that he will take certain pride in winning the race that was more suited for the sprinters teams.
UCI ProTour | Cycle races | Classic cycle races | Cycle racing in Italy
Milà-San Remo | Mailand-San Remo | Milán-San Remo | Milan-San Remo | Milano-Sanremo | מילאנו - סן רמו | ミラノ~サンレモ | Milano - Sanremo | Milaan-San Remo | Mediolan-San Remo
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"Milan-Sanremo".
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