European Road Cycling Championships

The European Road Cycling Championships (Officially:UEC Road European Championships) are the set of European championship events for the various disciplines and distances in road cycling and have been regulated by the European Cycling Union since 1995. The championships are for under-23, junior (since 2005) and Elite riders (since 2016). The championships include a road race and an individual time trial since 1997, with women's events shorter than men's and junior's events shorter than under-23's. Championships are open to riders selected by their national cycling governing body. They compete in the colours of their country. As with national road race championships and the UCI Road World Championships, the winners are entitled to wear a special champion's jersey when racing throughout the year; in the case of the European Championship, a white jersey with blue bands and yellow stars, modelled on the flag of Europe, a symbolism and design adopted by both the Council of Europe and the European Union and widely used to represent the continent in sport.

European Road Cycling Championships
The champion's jersey
Race details
RegionEurope
DisciplineRoad
CompetitionUCI Europe Tour
Web siteuec.ch Edit this at Wikidata
History
First edition1995 (1995)

Editions edit

# Year Country City Category Events
Road race Time trial
1 1995   Czech Republic Trutnov Under-23 2
2 1996   United Kingdom Isle of Man Under-23 2
3 1997   Austria Villach Under-23 4
4 1998   Sweden Uppsala Under-23 4
5 1999   Portugal Lisbon Under-23 4
6 2000   Poland Kielce Under-23 4
7 2001   France Apremont Under-23 4
8 2002   Italy Bergamo Grassobbio Under-23 4
9 2003   Greece Athens Vouliagmeni Under-23 4
10 2004   Estonia Otepää Under-23 4
11 2005   Russia Moscow Under-23, Junior 8
12 2006   Netherlands Valkenburg Heerlen
Valkenburg
Under-23, Junior 8
13 2007   Bulgaria Sofia Under-23, Junior 8
14 2008   Italy Verbania
Pallanza
Arona
Stresa
Under-23, Junior 8
15 2009   Belgium Hooglede-Gits Under-23, Junior 8
16 2010   Turkey Ankara Under-23, Junior 8
17 2011   Italy Offida Under-23, Junior 8
18 2012   Netherlands Goes Under-23, Junior 8
19 2013   Czech Republic Olomouc Under-23, Junior 8
20 2014    Switzerland Nyon Under-23, Junior 8
21 2015   Estonia Tartu Under-23, Junior 8
22 2016   France Plumelec Elite, Under-23, Junior 12
23 2017   Denmark Herning Elite, Under-23, Junior 12
24 2018   Czech Republic Zlín[1] Brno[1] Under-23, Junior 8
  United Kingdom Glasgow[2] Elite 4
25 2019   Netherlands Alkmaar Elite, Under-23, Junior, Mixed 13
26 2020   France Plouay Elite, Under-23, Junior, Mixed 13
27 2021   Italy Trento Elite, Under-23, Junior, Mixed 13
28 2022   Portugal Anadia Under-23, Junior 10
  Germany Munich Elite 4
29 2023   Netherlands Drenthe Elite, Under-23, Junior, Mixed 14
30 2024   Belgium Limburg Elite, Under-23, Junior, Mixed 14

Medals (1995-2023) edit

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Italy443839121
2  Netherlands34182678
3  France20273481
4  Germany20222264
5  Russia18141850
6  Denmark1512532
7  Belgium14171849
8   Switzerland1211629
9  Ukraine912627
10  Poland86519
11  Great Britain56314
12  Norway48416
13  Czech Republic44311
14  Slovenia43613
15  Sweden36312
16  Lithuania34714
17  Spain23611
18  Slovakia2002
19  Luxembourg1405
20  Belarus1337
21  Latvia1236
22  Austria1135
23  Portugal1124
24  Croatia1102
25  Estonia0224
26  Hungary0112
  Ireland0112
28  Finland0011
Totals (28 entries)227227227681

Men's events edit

Men's elite road race edit

Men's elite time trial edit

Men's U23 road race edit

Men's U23 time trial edit

Women's events edit

Women's road race edit

Women's time trial edit

Women's U23 road race edit

Women's U23 time trial edit

Mixed events edit

Mixed time trial relay edit

Junior events edit

Men's junior road race edit

Men's junior time trial edit

Women's junior road race edit

Women's junior time trial edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Turgis, Dominique (18 April 2018). "Deux villes pour le Championnat d'Europe Espoirs" [Two cities for the U23 European Championship]. DirectVelo (in French). Association Le Peloton. Retrieved 1 July 2018. Brno accueillera les épreuves contre-la-montre. Zlin recevra les courses en ligne. [Brno will host the time trials. Zlin will receive the road races.]
  2. ^ "Sports Programme: 2–12 August 2018" (PDF). Glasgow 2018. Culture and Sport Glasgow. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 March 2017. Retrieved 14 May 2017.
  3. ^ "Elite Mixed Team Relay" (PDF). UEC. Retrieved 21 September 2023.

Older results at:

External links edit