New Zealand Cycle Classic

The New Zealand Cycle Classic (previously known as the Tour of Wellington) was a road cycling race held in and around the Wairarapa near Wellington, New Zealand. The race was a men's competition over five stages and part of the UCI Oceania Tour.

New Zealand Cycle Classic
Race details
DateLate-January
RegionMasterton Region, New Zealand
English nameNew Zealand Cycle Classic
Nickname(s)NZCC
DisciplineRoad race
CompetitionUCI Oceania Tour
TypeNew Zealand's Premier Stage race
OrganiserJorge Sandoval
Race directorJorge Sandoval
Web sitewww.cycletournz.com Edit this at Wikidata
History
First edition1988 (1988)
Editions37 (as of 2024)
First winner Darren Rush (NZL)
Most wins Brian Fowler (NZL) (4 wins)
Most recent Aaron Gate (NZL)

In August 2024, it was announced by race organiser Jorge Sandoval that the race was being cancelled due to difficulty finding a naming rights sponsor.[1]

Multiple victories

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Wins Name Country Years
4 Brian Fowler   New Zealand 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992
2 Ric Reid   New Zealand 1994, 1996
Hayden Roulston   New Zealand 2006, 2007
Aaron Gate   New Zealand 2019, 2024

Winners

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Year Country Rider Team
1988   New Zealand Darren Rush
1989   New Zealand Brian Fowler
1990   New Zealand Brian Fowler
1991   New Zealand Brian Fowler
1992   New Zealand Brian Fowler
1993   New Zealand Clark Richards
1994   New Zealand Ric Reid
1995   Australia Robbie McEwen
1996   New Zealand Ric Reid
1997   Australia Corey Sweet
1998   Australia Hayden Bradbury
1999   New Zealand Julian Dean
2000   New Zealand Brendon Vesty
2001   France Chris Jenner Fuji Xerox
2002   New Zealand Robin Reid Avanti Cycles
2003   New Zealand Matthew Yates Team Subway
2004   Canada Eric Wohlberg Trust House
2005   Australia Matthew Lloyd Team Jayco
2006   New Zealand Hayden Roulston Team Subway
2007   New Zealand Hayden Roulston Trek-Zookeepers Café
2008   Australia Travis Meyer SouthAustralia.com–AIS
2009   Australia Peter McDonald Drapac–Porsche Cycling
2010   New Zealand Michael Torckler Cardno Team
2011   New Zealand George Bennett Cardno Team
2012   Australia Jay McCarthy Team Jayco–AIS
2013   Australia Nathan Earle Huon Salmon–Genesys Wealth Advisers
2014   New Zealand Michael Vink Team Budget Forklifts
2015   New Zealand Taylor Gunman Avanti Racing Team
2016   Australia Ben O'Connor Avanti Racing Team
2017   New Zealand Joseph Cooper IsoWhey Sports SwissWellness
2018   New Zealand Hayden McCormick New Zealand (national team)
2019   New Zealand Aaron Gate EvoPro Racing
2020   Australia Rylee Field Team BridgeLane
2021   New Zealand Corbin Strong[2] New Zealand (national team)
2022   Great Britain Mark Stewart[3][4] Bolton Equities Black Spoke Pro Cycling
2023   New Zealand James Oram[5] Bolton Equities Black Spoke
2024   New Zealand Aaron Gate New Zealand (national team)

Most stage wins

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Most stage wins by riders. Listed are those riders with more than three stage wins[6]

Wins Name Country
9 Hayden Roulston   New Zealand
6 Robin Reid   New Zealand
5 Nathan Earle   Australia
4 Regan Gough   New Zealand
Greg Henderson   New Zealand
Gordon McCauley   New Zealand
Brendon Vesty   New Zealand
3 Aaron Gate   New Zealand
Peter Latham   New Zealand

Stage wins by each country

Wins Country
94   New Zealand
41   Australia
9   Great Britain
5   Netherlands
3   Canada
2   Hong Kong
1    Switzerland
1   United States of America
1   South Africa

References

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  1. ^ "Wheels stop turning on New Zealand Cycle Classic". Radio New Zealand. 21 August 2024. Retrieved 21 September 2024.
  2. ^ "New Zealand Cycle Classic: Corbin Strong prevails in thrilling finish to 2021 event". Stuff. 17 January 2021. Retrieved 2 October 2021.
  3. ^ "Black Spoke Pro Cycling's Mark Stewart has taken out the 2022 New Zealand Cycle Classic - 09-Jan-2022 - NZ Cycling news". home.nzcity.co.nz. Retrieved 9 January 2022.
  4. ^ "2022 winner Mark Stewart". Facebook. Retrieved 9 January 2022.
  5. ^ ""DREAM COME TRUE" FOR JAMES ORAM WHO WINS NZ CYCLE CLASSIC". NZ Cycle Classic. 15 January 2023. Retrieved 21 January 2023.
  6. ^ "New Zealand Cycle Classic". www.cyclingarchives.com. Retrieved 11 April 2022.
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