Vuelta a Aragón is a professional bicycle road race held in Spain in May of each year. The event was first run in 1939, and was not held between 2006 and 2017. The future of the race is uncertain; there had been plans to organise it again, but an effort to revive it in 2009 failed due to a lack of sufficient sponsorship to be held.[1] It was not until May 2018 that another race was organized; it was added to the UCI road calendar as a 2.1 road race event on the Europe Tour.[2]

Vuelta a Aragón
Race details
DateMid-May
RegionAragón, Spain
English nameTour of Aragón
Local name(s)Vuelta a Aragón (in Spanish)
DisciplineRoad
CompetitionUCI Europe Tour
TypeStage race
Web sitewww.vueltaaragon.es Edit this at Wikidata
History
First edition1939 (1939)
Editions45 (as at 2019)
First winner Antonio Andrés (ESP)
Most wins Leonardo Piepoli (ITA) (3 wins)
Most recent Eduard Prades (ESP)

Winners edit

Year Country Rider Team
1939   Spain Antonio Andrés
1939–
1953
No race
1954   Spain Francisco Alomar
1955–
1964
No race
1965   Spain José Pujol
1966   Spain Salvador Canet
1967   Spain José Luis Uribezubia Kas–Kaskol
1968   Spain José Manuel Abellán
1969   Spain Jesús Manzaneque La Casera–Peña Bahamontes
1970   Spain Pedro Santamaría Werner
1971   Spain Ramón Sáez Werner
1972 No race
1973   Spain Jesús Manzaneque La Casera–Peña Bahamontes
1974   Spain Francisco Elorriaga Kas–Kaskol
1975   Spain Agustín Tamames Super Ser
1976   Spain Francisco Elorriaga Super Ser–Zeus
1977   Spain Javier Nazabal Kas–Campagnolo
1978   Spain Jesús Suárez Cueva Kas–Campagnolo
1979   Spain Roque Moya Novostil–Helios–Alan
1980   Spain Faustino Fernández Ovies Henninger–Aquila Rossa–Zeus
1981   Spain Antonio Coll Colchon C.R
1982   Spain Carlos Hernández Reynolds
1983   Spain Pedro Delgado Reynolds
1984   Spain José Recio Kelme
1985   Spain José Recio Kelme–Merckx
1986    Switzerland Stephan Joho Kas
1987   Spain Anselmo Fuerte BH Sport
1988   Spain Francisco Javier Mauleón Kas–Canal 10
1989   Spain Iñaki Gastón Kelme
1990   Belgium Nico Emonds Teka
1991   Colombia Edgar Corredor Sicasal–Acral
1992   Colombia Luis Herrera Postobón
1993   Spain Alfonso Gutiérrez Artiach
1994   Spain Marino Alonso Banesto
1995   Spain Fernando Escartín Mapei–GB–Latexco
1996   Spain Melcior Mauri ONCE
1997   Spain Aitor Garmendia Banesto
1998   Spain Aitor Garmendia Banesto
1999   Spain Juan Carlos Domínguez Vitalicio Seguros
2000   Italy Leonardo Piepoli Banesto
2001   Spain Juan Carlos Domínguez iBanesto.com
2002   Italy Leonardo Piepoli iBanesto.com
2003   Italy Leonardo Piepoli iBanesto.com
2004   Italy Stefano Garzelli Vini Caldirola–Nobili Rubinetterie
2005   Spain Rubén Plaza Comunidad Valenciana–Elche
2006–
2017
No race
2018   Spain Jaime Rosón Movistar Team
2019   Spain Eduard Prades Movistar Team

References edit

  1. ^ Salmerón, Antonio J. (1 March 2009). "No Vuelta a Aragon in 2009". Cyclingnews. Archived from the original on 2009-10-26. Retrieved 17 July 2009.
  2. ^ "UCI announces 2018 road calendar". Cyclingnews. 22 September 2017. Archived from the original on 2017-09-23. Retrieved 13 May 2018.