Lancaster Classic

Bicycle race in Lancaster, Pennsylvania From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lancaster Classic

The Tom Bamford Lancaster Classic was a professional road bicycle race held in late May or early June between 1992 and 2007 in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, USA. With the exception of the first race, which was 57.6 miles (92.7 km), the Lancaster Classic covered about 91 miles (146 km).[1][2][3][4] Due to the "short, winding hills," it had a very low attrition rate, with 37% of starters finishing the race on average.[5][6] 2003's 14% attrition was lower than that of the 2021 Tour de France, in which 23% of starters finished.[7]

Quick Facts Race details, Region ...
Tom Bamford Lancaster Classic
Thumb
Jakob Piil, the racer with the most wins at Lancaster (2)
Race details
RegionLancaster, Pennsylvania, U.S.
DisciplineRoad bicycle racing
CompetitionICP Tour of America (1993-1996)
First Union Cycling Series (1998-2002)
Wachovia Cycling Series (2003-2005)
UCI America (2006)
US Cycling Pro Tour (2007)
History
First edition1992 (1992)
Final edition2007 (2007)
First winnerRoberto Pelliconi (1992)
Most winsJakob Piil (1999, 2003)
Final winnerDavid Clinger (2007)
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History

Summarize
Perspective

The race was established in part by Lancaster mayor Janice Stork, along with sponsor CoreStates Financial Corporation (and its acquisitions, Hamilton Bank, First Union, and Wachovia National Bank), in an attempt to revitalize the downtown area.[8]

The race underwent several name changes:

It was part of the following tours:

In 2006, two additional races were added: the women's and elite amateur men's race lasted for 25 miles (40 km) and 30 miles (48 km), respectively, around a 0.68 miles (1.09 km) circuit in downtown Lancaster.[1][18][34]

The Lancaster Classic ended abruptly after the 2007 event and was replaced by the Lehigh Valley Classic in nearby Allentown.[35]

Winners

Men's

More information Year, Winner ...
YearWinnerTimeTeamStartersFinishersRefs
1992Italy Roberto Pelliconi2:04:05Mercatone Uno[36][3]
1993Latvia Arvis Piziks3:13:14Latvian National Cycling Team13042[36][10][37]
1994Italy Andrea Peron3:13:13Team Polti13350[36][6]
1995United States Fred Rodriguez3:07:12USA Cycling12750[36][19][38]
1996United States Chris Horner3:28:25Nutra Fig Cycling Team12044[36][39]
1997United States Chann McRae3:22:15Saturn[36][11]
1998United States Frankie Andreu3:23:17US Postal Service150[36][21]
1999Denmark Jakob Piil3:19:42Acceptcard12045[36][13][40]
2000United States Trent Klasna3:21:04Saturn140[36][41][42]
2001Netherlands Léon van Bon3:20:13Mercury Viatel15065[36][43]
2002United States David Clinger3:18:52US Postal Service[36]
2003Denmark Jakob Piil3:23:42CSC Denmark16323[36][44]
2004Netherlands Max van Heeswijk3:17:27US Postal Service20057[45]
2005New Zealand Greg Henderson3:21:28Health Net - Maxxis16676[27]
2006United States Jackson Stewart3:09:20Kodakgallery.com-Sierra Nevada10651[5][46][18][16]
2007Austria Bernhard Eisel3:18:41T-Mobile Team21584[1][47][48]
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Women's

More information Year, Winner ...
YearWinnerTimeTeamStartersFinishersRefs
2006Germany Ina Teutenberg54:21T-Mobile[49][50]
2007Germany Ina-Yoko Teutenberg55:10T-Mobile[51][48]
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Amateur men's

More information Year, Winner ...
YearWinnerTimeTeamStartersFinishersRefs
2006United States Jamie Carney[49]
2007[52]
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References

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