Baltimore Sun

Major profession­al bike race coming to area

UCI event to be held in 2020, beyond

- By Phil Davis

Baltimore will host a major internatio­nal cycling race for three years beginning in 2020, after a Maryland bid was accepted by the Union Cycliste Internatio­nale, the governing body for global bike racing.

The race, to be called the Maryland Cycling Classic, was included Wednesday when the UCI announced its 2020 calendar for its ProSeries races with a date of Sept. 6. The ProSeries is a step below the Switzerlan­dbased organizati­on’s WorldTour races, which include the Tour de France and similar multi-day stage races in Italy and Spain.

The 110- to 125-mile Maryland race would ideally start and end in the city, but travel into surroundin­g counties, said Terry Hasseltine, executive director of Maryland Sports Commission.

Few details of the planned Baltimore race have been ironed out. The route still needs to be chosen and the event’s budget and cost remain up in the air, Hasselstin­e said.

“Over the next 60 to 90 days, working with our city and county partners, we’ll determine a route that’s good for cyclists,” but also takes other needs into considerat­ion, he said.

The Baltimore Department of Transporta­tion said the city has not officially agreed to host the race and is continuing to study the issue, but Visit Baltimore is one of the partners in the group organizing the event along with the sports commission and Medalist Sports.

The event will secure needed permits after working with the city and any counties the race

enters on determinin­g the best route, said Hasseltine, also vice president of communicat­ions for the Maryland Stadium Authority.

Georgia-based Medalist will manage the event and has experience running large bike races, including the Tour of Utah and the Colorado Classic.

Major bike races usually require some road closures, much like the ill-fated Grand Prix of Baltimore that ran in the city from 2011 to 2013, but couldn’t attract enough sponsors. While the start and finish areas and any finishing circuits would need to be closed for a bike race, such races often use what’s knownasaro­lling enclosure that only shut down roads they pass only once for as long as it takes the cyclists and the race entourage to pass by.

He added that while the Baltimore region is the focus of the event and organizers have preliminar­y support from city officials, if talks were to break down, the event would remain in the state and could be run outside the city. But given Visit Baltimore’s support, he said that’s unlikely to happen.

“We wouldn’t be going forward with the announceme­nt … if we didn’t have a commitment from a city agency and a partner in the city,” Hasseltine said.

He anticipate­s the event should bring a “$20 million benefit” to the region, drawing tourists as well as spending by the racers’ teams.

For those close to the sport, Baltimore hosting a UCI road race is a significan­t win for the region, especially when the organizati­on hasn’t had any significan­t races on the East Coast in several years.

Ben King, a profession­al cyclist from Richmond, Virginia, said the last major event on the East Coast was the 2015 UCI Road World Championsh­ips in his hometown. TheBaltimo­re race is expected to bring in110 to 125 cyclists racing for profession­al teams from across the globe, he said.

King, 30, said he is excited to bring profession­al bike racing to Baltimore, which he described as a region with a strong amateur cycling scene.

“I think the East Coast has a lot to offer and there are a lot of passionate fans of cycling on the East Coast who will finally have an opportunit­y to, in a way, participat­e in the action and be there up close and personal with their heroes,” said King, who raced this year’s Tour de France and Vuelta de Espana — the Spanish tour — for Team Dimension Data, a South Africa-based team.

Hasseltine said the event is locked in for the Labor Day weekend over the next three years. The organizers want to leverage the event’s popularity into a full Labor Day weekend celebratio­n, hosting block parties and wellness events with a cycling focus on the Friday and Saturday before the race.

“At the end of the day … this is bigger than just a one-day ProSeries cycling event,” he said. “We think this has a net big win for the city beyond just cycling.”

The Baltimore Sun’s Christophe­r Dinsmore contribute­d to this article.

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