Settimana Internazionale di Coppi e Bartali

The Settimana Internazionale di Coppi e Bartali (English: International Week of Coppi and Bartali), also known as Coppi e Bartali,[1] is an Italian cycle road race. It is run typically in late March over five days in the Emilia-Romagna region of Italy.

Settimana Ciclistica Internazionale di Coppi e Bartali
Race details
DateLate March
RegionEmilia-Romagna, Italy
English nameInternational Week of Coppi and Bartali
Local name(s)Settimana Internazionale di Coppi e Bartali (in Italian)
DisciplineRoad
TypeStage race
OrganiserGruppo Sportivo Emilia
Web sitewww.gsemilia.it Edit this at Wikidata
History
First edition1984; 40 years ago (1984)
Editions39 (as of 2024)
First winner Moreno Argentin (ITA)
Most wins Moreno Argentin (ITA)
 Damiano Cunego (ITA)
(2 wins)
Most recent Koen Bouwman (NED)

History

Between 1999 and 2000 it was called Memorial Cecchi Gori while it was also previously held as Giro di Sardegna and Giro di Sicilia. The race is named after Italian cyclists Gino Bartali and Fausto Coppi.

Since 2005, the race has been organised as a 2.1 event on the UCI Europe Tour. It is considered one of the most important stage races in Italy and is organized by Gruppo Sportivo Emilia.

In 2004 the organization of the race retired the number 145, worn by Marco Pantani in 2003 when he placed tenth and finished second in one stage after Ruslan Ivanov, allowing him to stand on the podium for the last time in his life. At the start of the race a flock of white doves was also released to remember him.

In 2009 at the 24th edition of the race, Damiano Cunego was the overall victor after two stage wins and a second place on the last day.

Damiano Cunego won by 24 seconds over Cadel Evans in 2nd place and by 38 seconds over Massimo Giunti in 3rd place.

Both Damiano Cunego and Cadel Evans said this was an important part of their training lead up to both Giro d'Italia 2009 for Cunego and Tour de France 2009 for Cadel Evans.

List of winners

YearCountryRiderTeam
1984  ItalyMoreno ArgentinSammontana
1985  FranceLaurent FignonRenault–Elf
1986  ItalyGiuseppe SaronniDel Tongo
1987  ItalyMaurizio RossiEcoflam–BFB Bruciatori–Mareco–Alfa Lum
1988  ItalyAdriano BaffiGIS–Ecoflam–Jolly
1989  ItalyBruno LealiGewiss–Bianchi
1990  DenmarkRolf SørensenAriostea
1991  AustraliaPhil AndersonMotorola
1992  ItalyMoreno ArgentinAriostea
1993  ItalyMichele BartoliMercatone Uno–Zucchini–Medeghini
1994  ItalyRodolfo MassiAmore & Vita–Galatron
1995No race
1996  ItalyGabriele ColomboGewiss Playbus
1997  ItalyRoberto PetitoSaeco–Estro
1998No race
1999  LatviaRomāns VainšteinsVini Caldirola
2000  ItalyPaolo BettiniMapei–Quick-Step
2001  MoldovaRuslan IvanovAlessio
2002  ItalyFrancesco CasagrandeFassa Bortolo
2003  ItalyMirko CelestinoSaeco
2004  ItalyGiuliano FiguerasCeramica Panaria–Margres
2005  ItalyFranco PellizottiLiquigas–Bianchi
2006  ItalyDamiano CunegoLampre–Fondital
2007  ItalyMichele ScarponiAcqua & Sapone–Caffè Mokambo
2008  AustraliaCadel EvansSilence–Lotto
2009  ItalyDamiano CunegoLampre–NGC
2010  ItalyIvan SantaromitaLiquigas–Doimo
2011  ItalyEmanuele SellaAndroni Giocattoli
2012  Czech RepublicJan BártaTeam NetApp
2013  ItalyDiego UlissiLampre–Merida
2014  Great BritainPeter KennaughTeam Sky
2015  South AfricaLouis MeintjesMTN–Qhubeka
2016  RussiaSergey FirsanovGazprom–RusVelo
2017  FranceLilian CalmejaneDirect Énergie
2018  ItalyDiego RosaTeam Sky
2019[2]  AustraliaLucas HamiltonMitchelton–Scott
2020[3]  EcuadorJhonatan NarváezIneos Grenadiers
2021[4]  DenmarkJonas VingegaardTeam Jumbo–Visma
2022[5]  IrelandEddie DunbarIneos Grenadiers
2023   SwitzerlandMauro SchmidSoudal–Quick-Step
2024  NetherlandsKoen BouwmanVisma–Lease a Bike

References