The Nevada City Classic (previously: Tour of Nevada City; Father's Day Bicycle Classic), is a one-day road cycling race[1] held in Nevada City, California. Established in 1960, the Nevada City Classic commonly occurs on Father's Day and brings in thousands of visitors to Nevada County.[2] While the first race brought out approximately 1,500 spectators,[3] the numbers have swelled to 15,000 spectators in recent years.[4] Sponsored by the Nevada City Chamber of commerce, the schedule includes Women's, Junior's, and Master's races, in addition to the Men's main event. Past winners include Greg LeMond.

Nevada City Classic
Race details
DateJune (commonly on Father's Day)
RegionNevada City, California, United States
OrganiserCharlie Allert
History
First edition1961 (1961)
First winner Bob Tetzlaff (USA)
Most recent Gavin Murray (USA)
History (women)
Most recent Eleanor Velez (USA)

Course edit

The 90-minute race includes 40 laps on a twisty and hilly 1.1 mi (1.8 km) circuit[5] with over 300 feet of climbing.[6] The course, basically unchanged since its advent, is considered by experts to be the toughest one-mile criterium in the United States.[3]

History edit

Established in 1960, the Nevada City Classic is the largest and oldest bicycle race on the West Coast, as well as the second-oldest bicycle race in the country.[6][7] It was initiated by Charlie Allert, a native of Dresden, Germany, who had been a bicycle racer and master lithographer before arriving in Nevada City by way of San Francisco.[3] With a course laid out by Allert, the first race was held on Father's Day 1961.

The 1961 and 1962 races were won by Bob Tetzlaff, a Los Gatos school teacher. Starting in 1963 when he was 18 years old, Bob Parsons from Pasadena won the race the next five years. John Howard won in 1970.[8] Greg LeMond was the winner for the three consecutive years of 1979-81 and he was subsequently honored when the Nevada City City Council proclaimed August 11, 1986 as "Greg LeMond Day".[3] Todd Gogulski (1986, 1988), Scott Moninger (1994, 1997, 1999, 2006), Alexi Grewal (1993), and Levi Leipheimer (1998) also took the top spot.[8] Having participated in the race 19 years earlier,[1] Lance Armstrong returned in 2009, and won using illegal drugs and methods, and has been disqualified with the result voided[9] It was hailed at the time as the first victory of his comeback as it preceded his return to the Tour de France.[10] Ian Boswell was the winner in 2010.[5]

In 1997, the race was designated a National Classic Pro Points Race,[11] and thirteen years later, in 2010, its course became the starting point of the Stage 1 of the Tour of California.[12]

Winners edit

Men edit

Year Winner Second Third
1961   Bob Tetzlaff
1962   Bob Tetzlaff
1963   Bob Parsons   Dave Capron   Ian Mahon
1964   Bob Parsons   Tim Kelly   Sharp
1965   Bob Parsons   David Brink   Ward Thompson
1966   Bob Parsons
1967   Bob Parsons   David Brink (cyclist)   Dan Butler
1968   David Brink   John Allis   Dan Butler
1969   Bill Wild
1970   John Howard
1971   Fred Fisk   Geoffrey Conley   Richard Baronna
1972   Dave Walters   Don Davis   Harry Morton
1973   Keith Vierra   Gary Fisher   Steve Lundgren
1974   Ed Parrot   Bill Wild
1975   Bill Wild   Don Davis
1976   Mark Pringle   Larry Malone   Tim Kelly
1977   Rick Baldwin   Bob Cook   Larry Shields
1978   Bob Cook   Kent Bostick   Ron Miller
1979   Greg LeMond   William Watkins
1980   Greg LeMond   Toby Power   Keith Vierra
1981   Greg LeMond   Greg Demgen   Wayne Stetina
1982   Toby Power   Jeff Pierce   Glenn Sanders
1983   Dale Stetina
1984   Greg Demgen
1985   Jeff Pierce
1986   Todd Gogulski
1987   Gervais Rioux
1988   Todd Gogulski
1989   Mark Caldwell
1990   Nate Reiss   Scott Moninger   Bart Bowen
1991   Chris Huber
1992   Michael Engleman   Scott Moninger   Wayne Morgan
1993   Alexi Grewal
1994   Scott Moninger   Michael Engleman   Bobby Julich
1995   Michael Engleman   Tyler Hamilton   Nate Reiss
1996   Chad Gerlach   Thurlow Rogers   Scott Moninger
1997   Scott Moninger   Chris Horner   Chad Gerlach
1998   Michael Engleman   Levi Leipheimer   David Clinger
1999[13]   Scott Moninger   David Clinger   Chad Gerlach
2000[14]   John Peters   Trent Klasna   Frank McCormack
2001   Ernesto Lechuga
2002   Antonio Cruz
2003[15]   Eric Wohlberg   James Mattis   Justin England
2004   Justin England   Antonio Cruz   Philip Zajicek
2005[16]   Burke Swindlehurst   Andrew Bajadali   Alex Candelario
2006[17]   Scott Moninger   Gordon McCauley   Antonio Cruz
2007[18]   Darren Lill   Scott Moninger   Antonio Cruz
2008[19]   Justin England   Scott Nydam   Graham Howard
2009[20] · [21]   Lance Armstrong   Ben Jacques-Maynes   Levi Leipheimer
2010[22]   Ian Boswell   Paul Mach   Zachary Davies
2011[23]   Ian Boswell   Evan Huffman   Nathaniel English
2012   Stephen Leece   Nathaniel English   Chuck Hutcheson
2013[24]   Stephen Leece   Roman Kilun   Jon Hornbeck
2014[25]   Walton Brush   Torey Philipp   Chris Harland-Dunaway
2015[26]   Nathaniel English   Max Jenkins   Colin Daw
2016[27]   Jason Saltzman   Cameron Bronstein   Chris Riekert
2017[28]   Chris Riekert   Cameron Bronstein   Torey Philipp
2018[29]   Chris Riekert   Aria Kiani   Robert Skinner
2019[30]   Gavin Murray   William Myers   Ford Murphy
2020 Cancelled

Women edit

Year Winner Second Third
1978   Heidi Hopkins
1979   Heidi Hopkins
1980   Cindy Olivarri
1981   Cindy Olivarri
1982 Cancelled
1983   Charlene Nicholson
1984   Cindy Olivarri
1985   Inga Thompson
1986   Rebecca Twigg
1987   Chris Paragary
1988   Katrin Tobin
1989   Inga Thompson
1990   Katrin Tobin
1991   Sally Zack
1992   Suzie Forsyth   Michelle Blain   Jacquie Phelan
1993   Shari Kain   Jacquie Phelan   Julie Young
1994   Shari Kain   Linda Jackson   Susy Pryde
1995   Stace Cooper   Ellen Krimmel   Belinda Heerwagen
1996   Laura Mullen
1997   Julie Hudetz   Cynthia Mommsen   Helena Drumm
1998   Joan Wilson
1999[13]   Karen Kurreck   Julie Hanson   Caren Spore
2000[14]   Belem Guerrero   Julie Young   Susy Pryde
2001   Cynthia Mommsen
2002 ?
2003[15]   Eryn Hanna   Jane Despas   Cynthia Mommsen
2004   Cindy Carroll
2005[16]   Barbara Howe   Cynthia Mommsen   Taitt Sato
2006[17]   Helene Drumm   Kimberly Anderson   Amber Rais
2007   Shelley Olds
2008[19]   Sarah Bamberger   Betina Hold   Ally Stacher
2009[21]   Shelley Olds   Brooke Miller   Kateřina Nash
2010[22]   Kateřina Nash   Megan Guarnier   Kendall Ryan
2011[23]   Kateřina Nash   Emily Kachorek   Susannah Breen
2012   Kateřina Nash   Flávia Oliveira   Amy Thornquist
2013[24]   Elle Anderson   Joanna Bechtel   Cristina Hughes
2014[25]   Katie Hall   Kathryn Donovan   Alison Starnes
2015[26]   Shelley Evans   Chloé Dygert   Liza Rachetto
2016[27]   Diane Moug   Sara Enders   Amy Cameron
2017[28]   Amy Cameron   Megan Ruble   Melanie Wong
2018[29]   Lisa Cordova   Amity Gregg   Ellie Velez
2019[30]   Ellie Velez   Jennifer Tafoya   Megan Brinkmeyer
2020 Cancelled

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Lance Armstrong Wins Nevada City Classic". CBS 13. June 21, 2009. Archived from the original on 25 June 2009. Retrieved 16 November 2010.
  2. ^ "Nevada City Classic Bicycle Race". nevadacityclassic.com. Retrieved 2009-06-22.
  3. ^ a b c d Wyckoff, Bob (June 14, 2010). "Father of the Nevada City Classic". The Union. Retrieved 16 November 2010.
  4. ^ "Armstrong takes Nevada City". ESPN. June 22, 2009. Retrieved 16 November 2010.
  5. ^ a b Matthews, Wil. "Bissell goes 1-2 at 50th Nevada City Classic". Velonews. Retrieved 16 November 2010.
  6. ^ a b "June 19th Nevada City Bicycle Classic 45th Year". historichwy49.com. Retrieved 16 November 2010.
  7. ^ "Nevada City Bicycle Classic". Nevada City Chamber. Archived from the original on 14 July 2011. Retrieved 16 November 2010.
  8. ^ a b Hamilton, Brian (June 16, 2010). "Past masters of the Nevada City Classic". The Union. Retrieved 16 November 2010.
  9. ^ "Lance Armstrong: Governing body strips American of Tour wins". BBC News. 22 October 2012. Retrieved 22 October 2012.
  10. ^ Moore, Richard (22 June 2009). "Lance Armstrong wins Nevada City Classic". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 November 2010.
  11. ^ Giesin, Dan (June 20, 1997). "Chain of Events Moves Race / Nevada City Classic brings cyclists to foothills on Sunday". SF Gate. Retrieved 16 November 2010.
  12. ^ "Amgen Tour of California: Tour of California Stage 1 Nevada City, CA". Nevada City Chamber. Retrieved 16 November 2010.[permanent dead link]
  13. ^ a b "Nevada City Bicycle Classic - Sunday June 13, 1999 - Results". bikecal.com..
  14. ^ a b "Results and Reports for June 24-25 - 40th Anniversary Nevada City Classic". autobus.cyclingnews.com..
  15. ^ a b "Results and Reports from the USA - Nevada City Classic". autobus.cyclingnews.com..
  16. ^ a b "Nevada City Classic - NE". autobus.cyclingnews.com..
  17. ^ a b Josh Kadis (18 June 2006). "46th Nevada City Classic - NE". autobus.cyclingnews.com..
  18. ^ "47th Nevada City Classic - NE". autobus.cyclingnews.com. 17 June 2007..
  19. ^ a b "Toyota-United's Justin England takes his second Nevada City crown". velonews.com. 20 June 2008..
  20. ^ Bruce Hildenbrand (22 June 2009). "Nevada City Classic 2009: Men Results". cyclingnews.com..
  21. ^ a b Mark Deterline (21 June 2009). "Armstrong wins Nevada City in solo break". velonews.com..
  22. ^ a b "Bissell goes 1-2 at 50th Nevada City Classic". velonews.com. 21 June 2010..
  23. ^ a b "Nevada City Bicycle Classic • Jun 19 2011". road-results.com..
  24. ^ a b "53rd Annual Nevada City Bicycle Classic • Jun 16 2013". road-results.com..
  25. ^ a b "54th Annual Nevada City Classic Bicycle Race • Jun 15 2014". road-results.com..
  26. ^ a b "Nevada City Bicycle Classic • Jun 21 2015". road-results.com..
  27. ^ a b Kael Newton (21 June 2016). "CYCLING: Saltzman wins 56th Nevada City Classic, adds to event's storied past". theunion.com..
  28. ^ a b Walter Ford (18 June 2017). "CYCLING: Riekert wins mens pro race at 57th annual Nevada City Classic". theunion.com..
  29. ^ a b Elias Funez (24 June 2018). "Riding on; Nevada City Classic bounces back from dismal year". theunion.com..
  30. ^ a b Kael Newton (2 June 2019). "59th Nevada City Classic: a day of tough racing, hard falls and hope for the future". theunion.com..

External links edit