2024 UCI Women's World Tour | |
Edition: | 9 |
Competition: | UCI Women's World Tour |
Dates: | 12 January – 20 October 2024 |
Rounds: | 27 |
Previous: | 2023 |
Next: | 2025 |
The 2024 UCI Women's World Tour was a competition that included twenty-seven road cycling events throughout the 2024 women's cycling season. It was be the ninth edition of the UCI Women's World Tour, the ranking system launched by the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) in 2016. The competition began with the Women's Tour Down Under from 12 to 14 January, and finished with the Tour of Guangxi on 20 October.[1] [2]
Belgian rider Lotte Kopecky won the individual classification with 4596 points, after a close battle with her teammate Demi Vollering throughout the season. Kopecky had six overall victories, including Strade Bianche Donne and Paris–Roubaix Femmes.[3]
Second place went to Dutch rider Demi Vollering with 4175 points. Vollering won four events, including La Vuelta Femenina. Third place was taken by Italian rider Elisa Longo Borghini with 3327 points, with Longo Borghini winning two events – Giro d'Italia Women and Tour of Flanders.
For the fourth year in a row, the teams classification was won by – making it their eighth win in nine seasons. Thirteen different riders won races, with six riders holding the individual classification lead during the season. For the third year running, the youth classification was won by Dutch rider Shirin van Anrooij (Lidl–Trek), who finished 11th in the individual classification.
The race calendar for the 2024 season was announced in June 2023, with twenty eight races initially scheduled.[4] The calendar was largely similar to 2023, with the dates of races moved to accommodate the 2024 Summer Olympics and 2024 Summer Paralympics. Rumoured events such as women's editions of the Giro di Lombardia or Milan–San Remo, or promotion of the Thüringen Ladies Tour to the World Tour calendar did not occur.[5]
In January 2024, SweetSpot – the organiser and promoter of The Women's Tour – entered liquidation and the race was initially removed from the 2024 calendar.[6] [7] The following month, British Cycling took over the running of the race, which was to be renamed as the Tour of Britain Women, and the race returned to the calendar but over a shorter four-day itinerary.[8] [9] In May 2024, the Tour of Scandinavia was cancelled due to a lack of funding.[10]
scope=col | Race | scope=col | Date | scope=col | First | scope=col | Second | scope=col | Third | scope=col | Leader |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Women's Tour Down Under | 12–14 January | ||||||||||
Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race | 27 January | ||||||||||
scope=row | UAE Tour | 8–11 February | |||||||||
scope=row | Omloop Het Nieuwsblad | 24 February | |||||||||
scope=row | Strade Bianche Donne | 2 March | |||||||||
scope=row | Ronde van Drenthe | 10 March | |||||||||
scope=row | Trofeo Alfredo Binda-Comune di Cittiglio | 17 March | |||||||||
scope=row | Classic Brugge–De Panne | 21 March | |||||||||
scope=row | Gent–Wevelgem | 24 March | |||||||||
scope=row | Tour of Flanders | 31 March | |||||||||
scope=row | Paris–Roubaix Femmes | 6 April | |||||||||
scope=row | Amstel Gold Race | 14 April | |||||||||
scope=row | La Flèche Wallonne Féminine | 17 April | |||||||||
scope=row | Liège–Bastogne–Liège Femmes | 21 April | |||||||||
scope=row | La Vuelta Femenina | 28 April – 5 May | |||||||||
scope=row | Itzulia Women | 10–12 May | |||||||||
scope=row | Vuelta a Burgos Feminas | 16–19 May | |||||||||
scope=row | RideLondon Classique | 24–26 May | |||||||||
scope=row | Tour of Britain Women | 6–9 June | |||||||||
scope=row | Tour de Suisse Women | 15–18 June | |||||||||
scope=row | Giro d'Italia Women | 7–14 July | |||||||||
scope=row | Tour de France Femmes | 12–18 August | |||||||||
scope=row | Classic Lorient Agglomération | 24 August | |||||||||
scope=row | Tour de Romandie Féminin | 6–8 September | |||||||||
scope=row | Simac Ladies Tour | 8–13 October | |||||||||
scope=row | Tour of Chongming Island | 15–17 October | |||||||||
scope=row | Tour of Guangxi | 20 October |
The fifteen Women's WorldTeams were automatically invited to compete in events, with the two best 2023 UCI Women's Continental Teams (and) also invited automatically. Other Continental women's teams were invited by the organisers of each race.[11]