Milan-San Remo 2024
Latest News from the Race
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Women's Milan-San Remo is set to become reality in 2025 with confirmation expected this week
Potential date clash with Trofeo Alfredo Binda resolved -
Remco Evenepoel set to ride Tour of Flanders, Milan-San Remo, Liège and Tour de France in 2025
Soudal-QuickStep manager Patrick Lefevere reveals Classics-heavy 2025 spring for Belgian star -
The longest, fastest day - Milan-San Remo 2024 gallery
All the best photos as Jasper Philipsen sprinted to the win in La Primavera
Milan-San Remo overview
Date | March 16, 2024 |
Length | 288km |
Start location | Pavia |
Finish location | Sanremo |
Category | Men's WorldTour |
Previous edition | 2023 Milan-San Remo |
2023 Milan-San Remo winner | Mathieu van der Poel |
Milan-San Remo: Jasper Philipsen snatches narrow victory in fastest edition
Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck) emerged as the winner in a scintillating 2024 edition of Milan-San Remo, out-sprinting Michael Matthews and Tadej Pogačar in an attack-filled final 10km.
Milan-San Remo is the first major Spring Classic of the season and the first of the five Monuments of cycling.
Taking place on March 16, 2024, Milan-San Remo brings riders from Milan southward to the Mediterranean coast, and proceeds southwest toward France, ending in Sanremo.
The race is the longest of the Classics at almost 300km, and one of the few that are accessible for pure sprinters.
However, the two steep climbs in the finale - the Cipressa and Poggio - have not been in the sprinters' favour in recent years.
Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Deceuninck) put in a blistering surge over the summit of the Poggio and powered away for a solo victory at 2023 Milan-San Remo, much like Matej Mohorič did in 2022, Jasper Stuyven in 2021 and Vincenzo Nibali in 2018.
More often than not in recent years, the race is decided by a small group. The last bunch sprint was won by Arnaud Démare in 2016.
Milan-San Remo history
The idea of having a race between Milan and the Ligurian coastal town of San Remo came about at a time when racing from city to city was a popular contest, and the Unione Sportiva Sanremese first put the challenge to the people as an amateur event in 1906. Gazzetta dello Sport took on the organisation of it the next year for its first official edition as a professional race.
Lucien Petit-Breton won the first edition of Milan-San Remo in 1906. Luigi Ganna gave Italy its first victory in 1906. After World War I, it was the era of Costante Girardengo, who amassed six victories and 11 podium placings from 1917 to 1928.
Other greats to win the race include Alfredo Binda, Gino Bartali, and Fausto Coppi. Tom Simpson was the first British Milan-San Remo winner in 1963 before Eddy Merckx began his era of domination, taking seven titles.
Classics greats Roger De Vlaeminck, Sean Kelly, Laurent Jalabert, Andre Tchmil, and Fabian Cancellara as well as top sprinters like Erik Zabel, Oscar Freire, Mario Cipollini, and Mark Cavendish have all made their mark on the race.
Back in 1960, the decisive climb of the Poggio was added, giving the race its current flavour and the perennial battle between the attackers and the sprinters.
Milan-San Remo 2024 Teams
- Alpecin-Deceuninck
- Arkéa-B&B Hotels
- Astana Qazaqstan
- Bahrain Victorious
- Bora-Hansgrohe
- Cofidis
- Corratec Vini Fantini
- Decathlon AG2R la Mondiale
- EF Education-EasyPost
- Groupama-FDJ
- Ineos Grenadiers
- Intermarché-Wanty
- Israel-Premier Tech
- Lidl-Trek
- Lotto Dstny
- Movistar Team
- Soudal QuickStep
- Team dsm-firmenich-PostNL
- Team Jayco-Alula
- Team Polti Kometa
- Team Visma-Lease a Bike
- Tudor Pro Cycling Team
- UAE Team Emirates
- Uno-X Mobility
- VF Group – Bardiani CSF – Faizane’
Milan-San Remo records
Poggio climbing record: 5 minutes 40 seconds, Mathieu van der Poel 2023 Milan-San Remo
Most wins: Eddy Merckx - seven (1966, 1967, 1969, 1971, 1972, 1975, 1976)
Most recent multi-time winner: Oscar Freire (2004, 2007, 2010)
Most successful nation: Italy with 51 wins, with Belgium a distant second with 22
Bunch sprints vs solos and small groups: The last full bunch sprint was in 2016, won by Arnaud Démare. In the past six editions, three have been settled from small groups, while three have been won by solo riders (Vincenzo Nibali in 2018, Jasper Stuyven in 2021, Matej Mohoric in 2022 and Mathieu van der Poel in 2023).
Youngest winner: Ugo Agostoni, 20, in 1914
Oldest winner: Andrei Tchmil, 36, in 1999
Fastest edition: 45.806 kph in 1990, won by Gianni Bugno
Races
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Milan-San Remo 202417 March 2024 | San Remo | WorldTour
Top News on the Race
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Jasper Philipsen: 'I begged Mathieu not to work with Pogačar because I had great legs' in Milan-San Remo
'Oh how I would have loved to have ridden to the finish with Tadej,' admits world champion Van der Poel -
'It sucks but I can't change it now' – No sprint regrets for Matthews at Milan-San Remo
Australian a close second after sportingly not blocking winner Philipsen in Via Roma sprint finish -
Tom Pidcock's final-kilometre attack falls short in Milan-San Remo
Briton says 'maybe in another year' the late move could have worked
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Record-breaking Milan-San Remo 'one of the easiest races ever', says Tadej Pogačar
Slovenian takes third despite 'incredible legs' and plan 'executed almost to perfection' -
Sonny Colbrelli helped foil attempt to steal Bahrain Victorious' bikes ahead of Milan-San Remo
2022 winner Matej Mohorič eschews dropper post to take advantage of Merida aero frame -
How to watch Milan-San Remo 2024
Where to stream full live coverage of Van der Poel, Pogacar, Ganna, Mohoric and more taking on the Poggio
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Tadej Pogačar keeps his Milan-San Remo race strategy under wraps
'You need to have the best legs on the final two climbs' -
‘The underdog role suits us’ - Visma-Lease A Bike look to surprise at Milan-San Remo
Dutch squad look to Kooij and Laporte in Van Aert's absence -
‘I love this race’ - Tom Pidcock takes aim at Milan-San Remo
Briton could give Ineos Grenadiers their 500th victory
Related Features
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The longest, fastest day - Milan-San Remo 2024 gallery
All the best photos as Jasper Philipsen sprinted to the win in La Primavera -
The agony and ecstasy of Milan-San Remo - Analysis
Cyclingnews' Stephen Farrand examines why the unpredictable Italian race is the best hour of the whole season -
How can Tadej Pogačar blow up Milan-San Remo? - Analysis
The Slovenian could attack with others on the Cipressa or alone on the Poggio -
Milan-San Remo 2024 - 5 favourites, 5 outsiders
Our picks for La Primavera, from Van der Poel and Pogacar to Ganna and Pedersen -
'It's a year to rebuild and find my feet again' – Caleb Ewan starts over at Jayco-AlUla
Fresh start, familiar team as Australian sets out on road back to the top of the WorldTour sprint hierarchy