2008 UCI ProTour

The 2008 UCI ProTour is the fourth year of the UCI ProTour system. Following protracted disagreement between the organisers of the Grand Tours (ASO, RCS and Unipublic) and the UCI, all races organized by ASO, RCS and Unipublic were withdrawn from the ProTour calendar. This removed all three Grand Tours (Giro d'Italia, Tour de France and Vuelta a España), four of the five monuments (Milan–San Remo, Paris–Roubaix, Liège–Bastogne–Liège and Giro di Lombardia) and four further races (Paris–Nice, Tirreno–Adriatico, La Flèche Wallonne and Paris–Tours). As such, the quality of the races of the ProTour was diminished. The Australian race, the Tour Down Under was added to the calendar, making it the first race outside Europe on the ProTour (although races had previously been held outside Europe as part of the UCI Road World Cup).

2008 UCI ProTour
Fourth edition of the UCI ProTour
Details
Dates22 January – 21 September
LocationAustralia and Europe
Races15
Champions
Individual champion Alejandro Valverde (ESP) (Caisse d'Epargne)
Teams' championCaisse d'Epargne
Nations' champion Spain
← 2007
2009 (UCI ProTour) →
2009 (UCI World Ranking) →

The highly successful U.S. Postal Service ceased operations at the end of the 2007 season. Johan Bruyneel signed on to become the directeur sportif and revamp the embattled Astana; joining him are 2007 Tour de France champion Alberto Contador and 2007 Tour of California champion Levi Leipheimer. Other major signings included American George Hincapie moving to Team High Road and Daniele Bennati from Lampre to Liquigas, while Giro d'Italia winner Danilo Di Luca left Liguigas for the UCI Professional Continental team LPR Brakes–Ballan.

2008 UCI ProTour races

As of September 28, 2008.[1]

DatesRaceWinnerProTour leader
22–27 January Tour Down Under  André Greipel (GER)
(Team High Road)
 André Greipel (GER)
(Team High Road)
6 April Tour of Flanders  Stijn Devolder (BEL)
(Soudal–Quick-Step)
7–12 April Vuelta al País Vasco  Alberto Contador (ESP)
(Astana)
9 April Gent–Wevelgem  Óscar Freire (ESP)
(Rabobank)
20 April Amstel Gold Race  Damiano Cunego (ITA)
(Lampre)
 Damiano Cunego (ITA)
(Lampre)
29 April–4 May Tour de Romandie  Andreas Klöden (GER)
(Astana)
19–25 May Volta a Catalunya  Gustavo César (ESP)
(Karpin–Galicia)
8–15 June Dauphiné Libéré  Alejandro Valverde (ESP)
(Caisse d'Epargne)
 Cadel Evans (AUS)
(Silence–Lotto)
14–22 June Tour de Suisse  Roman Kreuziger (CZE)
(Liquigas)
 Damiano Cunego (ITA)
(Lampre)
2 August Clásica de San Sebastián  Alejandro Valverde (ESP)
(Caisse d'Epargne)
 Alejandro Valverde (ESP)
(Caisse d'Epargne)
20–27 August / Eneco Tour of Benelux  Iván Gutiérrez (ESP)
(Caisse d'Epargne)
25 August GP Ouest-France  Pierrick Fédrigo (FRA)
(Bouygues Télécom)
29 August–
6 September
Deutschland Tour  Linus Gerdemann (GER)
(Team Columbia)
7 September Vattenfall Cyclassics  Robbie McEwen (AUS)
(Silence–Lotto)
15–21 September Tour de Pologne  Jens Voigt (GER)
(CSC–Saxo Bank)

Teams

As of 6 December 6, 2007[2][3]

CodeOfficial Team NameCountryWebsite
ALMAg2r–La Mondiale  France[1] Archived 2007-05-21 at the Wayback Machine
ASTAstana  Luxembourg[2]
BTLBouygues Télécom  France[3]
GCECaisse d'Epargne  Spain[4]
COFCofidis  France[5]
C.ACrédit Agricole  France[6]
CSCTeam CSC  Denmark[7]
SILSilence–Lotto  Belgium[8]
EUSEuskaltel–Euskadi  Spain[9]
FDJFrançaise des Jeux  France[10]
GSTGerolsteiner  Germany[11]
LAMLampre  Italy[12]
LIQLiquigas  Italy[13]
MRMTeam Milram  Germany[14]
QSTQuick-Step  Belgium[15]
RABRabobank  Netherlands[16]
SDVSaunier Duval–Scott  Spain[17]
THRTeam High Road  United States[18] Archived 2020-09-23 at the Wayback Machine

Unibet.com Cycling Team, whose sponsors have pulled out of cycling, failed to submit its application renewal by the November 20, 2007 deadline.

Individual standings

RankNameTeamPoints
1  Alejandro Valverde (ESP)Caisse d'Epargne123
2  Damiano Cunego (ITA)Lampre104
3  Andreas Klöden (GER)Astana96
4  Roman Kreuziger (CZE)Liquigas94
5  Cadel Evans (AUS)Silence–Lotto85
6  André Greipel (GER)Team High Road62
7  Mikel Astarloza (ESP)Euskaltel–Euskadi60
8  Alberto Contador (ESP)Astana58
9  Thomas Dekker (NED)Rabobank54
10  Stijn Devolder (BEL)Quick-Step50
  • 107 riders have scored at least one point on the 2008 UCI ProTour.

Team standings

RankTeamNationalityPoints
1Caisse d'Epargne  Spain147
2Astana  Kazakhstan145
3Team CSC  Denmark126
4Euskaltel–Euskadi  Spain114
5Team High Road  United States111
6Saunier Duval–Scott  Spain109
7Silence–Lotto  Belgium108
8Liquigas  Italy107
9Rabobank  Netherlands105
10Gerolsteiner  Germany102
11Française des Jeux  France102
12Quick-Step  Belgium95
13Crédit Agricole  France76
14Ag2r–La Mondiale  France94
15Bouygues Télécom  France93
16Cofidis  France73
17Lampre  Italy63
18Team Milram  Germany54

Nation standings

RankNationPoints
1  Spain336
2  Italy237
3  Germany198
4  Belgium155
5  France147
6  Australia113
7  Czech Republic94
8  Luxembourg94
9  Netherlands80
10  Russia86
  • Riders from 23 nations have scored at least one point on the 2008 UCI ProTour.

2008 ProTour Points System

PlaceTour Down Under
Tour of Flanders
Vuelta Ciclista al Pais Vasco
Tour de Romandie
Volta Ciclista a Catalunya
Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré
Tour de Suisse
Deutschland Tour
Eneco Tour
Tour de Pologne
Gent–Wevelgem
Amstel Gold Race
Vattenfall Cyclassics
Clasica Ciclista San Sebastian
GP Quest France-Plouay
Eindhoven Team Time Trial
Overall Classification
1st504010
2nd40309
3rd35258
4th30207
5th25156
6th20115
7th1574
8th1053
9th532
10th211
Stage wins (if applicable)
1st3
2nd2
3rd1
  • If a rider is not part of UCI ProTour, no points are given. The points corresponding to the place are not awarded
  • Top 20 teams get points in scale 20-19-18...1.
  • Team time trials in stage races doesn't give points for riders.
  • In Eindhoven time trial rider has to finish to earn points.
  • In country ranking, top 5 riders of each country count towards the ranking.

[4]

References

External links