The 2011 UCI Women's Road Rankings is an overview of the UCI Women's Road Rankings, based upon the results in all UCI-sanctioned races of the 2011 women's road cycling season.
Final result. [1]
Top-ranked individual | Second-ranked individual | Third-ranked individual | Top-ranked team | Top-ranked nation |
---|---|---|---|---|
Marianne Vos (NED) Nederland Bloeit | Emma Johansson (SWE) Hitec Products–UCK | Judith Arndt (GER) HTC–Highroad Women | Nederland Bloeit | Netherlands |
Final result. [1]
Cyclists | Nation | Team | Age | Points | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Marianne Vos | Netherlands | ARC | 24 | 1,735 |
2 | Emma Johansson | Sweden | HPU | 28 | 1,130 |
3 | Judith Arndt | Germany | TCW | 35 | 951 |
4 | Ina Teutenberg | Germany | TCW | 37 | 791 |
5 | Annemiek van Vleuten | Netherlands | ARC | 29 | 674 |
6 | Giorgia Bronzini | Italy | FCL | 28 | 523 |
7 | Emma Pooley | Great Britain | CWT | 29 | 514 |
8 | Amber Neben | United States | TCW | 36 | 383 |
9 | Elizabeth Armitstead | Great Britain | CWT | 23 | 365.5 |
10 | Kirsten Wild | Netherlands | LNL | 29 | 345 |
11 | Tatiana Antoshina | Russia | GAU | 29 | 320.5 |
12 | Rasa Leleivytė | Lithuania | VAI | 23 | 292 |
13 | Ellen van Dijk | Netherlands | TCW | 24 | 269 |
14 | Nicole Cooke | Great Britain | MCG | 28 | 269 |
15 | Charlotte Becker | Germany | TCW | 28 | 258 |
16 | Martine Bras | Netherlands | DLT | 33 | 258 |
17 | Adrie Visser | Netherlands | TCW | 28 | 255 |
18 | Clara Hughes | Canada | 39 | 212 | |
19 | Grace Verbeke | Belgium | VLL | 27 | 211 |
20 | Liesbet De Vocht | Belgium | VLL | 32 | 211 |
21 | Christine Majerus | Luxembourg | GSD | 24 | 200 |
22 | Monia Baccaille | Italy | MCG | 27 | 197.25 |
23 | Shara Gillow | Australia | BPD | 24 | 191 |
24 | Chloe Hosking | Australia | TCW | 21 | 190 |
25 | Chantal Blaak | Netherlands | LNL | 22 | 188 |
26 | Yuliya Martisova | Russia | GAU | 35 | 182.5 |
27 | Joëlle Numainville | Canada | TIB | 24 | 176 |
28 | Svetlana Bubnenkova | Russia | 38 | 165.75 | |
29 | Rochelle Gilmore | Australia | LHT | 30 | 159 |
30 | Noemi Cantele | Italy | CWT | 30 | 154 |
31 | Tatiana Guderzo | Italy | MCG | 27 | 153.25 |
32 | Ludivine Henrion | Belgium | LHT | 27 | 152 |
33 | Shelley Olds | United States | DPZ | 31 | 143 |
34 | Megan Guarnier | United States | TIB | 26 | 141 |
35 | Larisa Pankova | Russia | 20 | 139 | |
36 | Loes Gunnewijk | Netherlands | ARC | 31 | 135 |
37 | Linda Villumsen | New Zealand | LNL | 26 | 128 |
38 | Rossella Callovi | Italy | MCG | 20 | 122 |
39 | Alexandra Burchenkova | Russia | 23 | 119 | |
40 | Ashleigh Moolman | South Africa | LHT | 26 | 119 |
40 | Ashleigh Moolman | South Africa | LHT | 26 | 119 |
41 | Evelyn Stevens | United States | TCW | 28 | 119 |
42 | Claudia Häusler | Germany | DPZ | 26 | 116 |
43 | Trixi Worrack | Germany | LNL | 30 | 109 |
44 | Olga Zabelinskaya | Russia | DPZ | 31 | 107 |
45 | Christel Ferrier-Bruneau | France | GAU | 32 | 103 |
46 | Natalia Boyarskaya | Russia | 28 | 99.75 | |
47 | Lucinda Brand | Netherlands | LNL | 22 | 94 |
48 | Sofie De Vuyst | Belgium | LHT | 24 | 92 |
49 | Aude Biannic | France | 20 | 92 | |
50 | Iris Slappendel | Netherlands | CWT | 26 | 89.5 |
51 | Sara Mustonen | Sweden | HPU | 30 | 87 |
52 | Amanda Spratt | Australia | 24 | 85 | |
53 | Emilia Fahlin | Sweden | TCW | 23 | 80 |
54 | Theresa Cliff-Ryan | United States | FCL | 33 | 80 |
55 | Pauline Ferrand-Prévot | France | 19 | 76 | |
56 | Alexis Rhodes | Australia | CWT | 27 | 73 |
57 | Alyona Andruk | Ukraine | DPZ | 24 | 73 |
58 | Valentina Scandolara | Italy | GAU | 21 | 70 |
59 | Grete Treier | Estonia | MIC | 34 | 69 |
60 | Alena Amialiusik | Belarus | 22 | 69 | |
61 | Evelyn García | El Salvador | 29 | 69 | |
62 | Elena Berlato | Italy | TOG | 23 | 66 |
63 | Irene van den Broek | Netherlands | LNL | 31 | 65 |
64 | Karol-Ann Canuel | Canada | FUT | 23 | 64 |
65 | Amanda Miller | United States | TCW | 25 | 62 |
66 | Mei Yu Hsiao | Chinese Taipei | 26 | 60 | |
67 | Hanna Solovey | Ukraine | 19 | 59 | |
68 | Rhae-Christie Shaw | Canada | 36 | 59 | |
69 | Kristin Armstrong | United States | 38 | 58 | |
70 | Hanka Kupfernagel | Germany | 37 | 58 | |
71 | Lise Nøstvold | Norway | HPU | 24 | 58 |
72 | Amy Pieters | Netherlands | 20 | 56 | |
73 | Sharon Laws | Great Britain | CWT | 37 | 54 |
74 | Catherine Cheatley | New Zealand | FCL | 28 | 52 |
75 | Cherise Taylor | South Africa | LHT | 22 | 50 |
76 | Andrea Bosman | Netherlands | 32 | 50 | |
77 | Sarah Düster | Germany | ARC | 29 | 50 |
78 | Ruth Corset | Australia | BPD | 34 | 49 |
79 | Belinda Goss | Australia | 27 | 49 | |
80 | Sylwia Kapusta | Poland | GAU | 29 | 48.5 |
81 | Jeannie Longo-Ciprelli | France | 53 | 48 | |
82 | Evelyn Arys | Belgium | 21 | 48 | |
83 | Tara Whitten | Canada | TIB | 31 | 48 |
84 | Polona Batagelj | Slovenia | BPD | 22 | 47 |
85 | Pia Sundstedt | Finland | 36 | 46 | |
86 | Denise Ramsden | Canada | JSD | 21 | 42 |
87 | Isabelle Söderberg | Sweden | AGG | 22 | 42 |
88 | Vicki Whitelaw | Australia | LHT | 34 | 41 |
89 | Carla Ryan | Australia | CWT | 26 | 40.5 |
90 | Robin Farina | United States | 34 | 40 | |
91 | Aizhan Zhaparova | Russia | 22 | 40 | |
92 | Winanda Spoor | Netherlands | DLT | 20 | 40 |
93 | Jutatip Maneephan | Thailand | 23 | 40 | |
94 | Gu Sung Eun | South Korea | 27 | 40 | |
95 | Leah Kirchmann | Canada | 21 | 40 | |
96 | Bridie O'Donnell | Australia | TOG | 37 | 35 |
97 | Nathalie Lamborelle | Luxembourg | NXX | 23 | 35 |
98 | Elisa Longo Borghini | Italy | TOG | 20 | 34 |
99 | Yulia Iliynikh | Russia | 26 | 33 | |
100 | Andrea Dvorak | United States | FCL | 31 | 32 |
This is the ranking of the UCI women's teams from 2011.
Final result. [2]
Final result. [3]
Nation | Code | Points | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Netherlands | NED | 3,281 |
2 | Germany | GER | 2,225 |
3 | Sweden | SWE | 1,369 |
4 | Great Britain | GBR | 1,234.50 |
5 | Italy | ITA | 1,149.50 |
6 | Russia | RUS | 926.75 |
7 | United States | USA | 866 |
8 | Belgium | BEL | 714 |
9 | Australia | AUS | 698 |
10 | Canada | CAN | 559 |
11 | Lithuania | LTU | 370 |
12 | France | FRA | 343 |
13 | Luxembourg | LUX | 245 |
14 | South Africa | RSA | 208 |
15 | New Zealand | NZL | 204 |
16 | Ukraine | UKR | 186 |
17 | Poland | POL | 105.5 |
18 | Norway | NOR | 103 |
19 | Estonia | EST | 86 |
20 | Belarus | BLR | 86 |
20 | El Salvador | ESA | 86 |
22 | South Korea | KOR | 74 |
23 | Thailand | THA | 70 |
24 | Slovenia | SLO | 65 |
25 | Finland | FIN | 63 |
26 | Chinese Taipei | TPE | 60 |
27 | Switzerland | SUI | 57 |
28 | Venezuela | VEN | 57 |
29 | Brazil | BRA | 47 |
30 | Mauritius | MRI | 43 |
31 | Denmark | DEN | 40 |
32 | Japan | JPN | 39 |
33 | Portugal | POR | 30 |
33 | Turkey | TUR | 30 |
33 | Israel | ISR | 30 |
33 | Zimbabwe | ZIM | 30 |
33 | Mongolia | MGL | 30 |
33 | Greece | GRE | 30 |
33 | Ireland | IRL | 30 |
33 | Czech Republic | CZE | 30 |
41 | Spain | ESP | 30 |
42 | Mexico | MEX | 28 |
43 | Vietnam | VIE | 27 |
44 | Malaysia | MAS | 25 |
45 | Austria | AUT | 22 |
46 | Romania | ROU | 21 |
47 | Serbia | SRB | 20 |
48 | Croatia | CRO | 18 |
49 | Belize | BIZ | 18 |
50 | Eritrea | ERI | 18 |
The 2015 UCI Road World Championships took place in Richmond, Virginia, United States from September 19–27, 2015. It was the 88th Road World Championships. Peter Sagan won the men's road race and Lizzie Armitstead won the women's road race.
The Men's road race of the 2013 UCI Road World Championships was a cycling event that took take place on 29 September 2013 in the region of Tuscany, Italy.
The Women's road race of the 2013 UCI Road World Championships was a cycling event that took place on 28 September 2013 in the region of Tuscany, Italy.
The 2012 UCI Women's Road Rankings is an overview of the final UCI Women's Road Rankings, based upon the results in all UCI-sanctioned races of the 2012 women's road cycling season.
The 2013 UCI Women's Road Rankings is an overview of the UCI Women's Road Rankings, based upon the results in all UCI-sanctioned races of the 2013 women's road cycling season.
The 2010 UCI Women's Road Rankings is an overview of the UCI Women's Road Rankings, based upon the results in all UCI-sanctioned races of the 2010 women's road cycling season.
The 2009 UCI Women's Road Rankings is an overview of the UCI Women's Road Rankings, based upon the results in all UCI-sanctioned races of the 2009 women's road cycling season.
The 2008 UCI Women's Road Rankings is an overview of the UCI Women's Road Rankings, based upon the results in all UCI-sanctioned races of the 2008 women's road cycling season.
The 2007 UCI Women's Road Rankings is an overview of the UCI Women's Road Rankings, based upon the results in all UCI-sanctioned races of the 2007 women's road cycling season.
The 2006 UCI Women's Road Rankings is an overview of the UCI Women's Road Rankings, based upon the results in all UCI-sanctioned races of the 2006 women's road cycling season.
The 2008–09 UCI Track Cycling World Ranking is an overview of the UCI Track Cycling World Ranking, based upon the results in all UCI-sanctioned track cycling races of the 2008–09 track cycling season.
The 2009–10 UCI Track Cycling World Ranking is an overview of the UCI Track Cycling World Ranking, based upon the results in all UCI-sanctioned track cycling races of the 2009–10 track cycling season.
The 2010–11 UCI Track Cycling World Ranking is an overview of the UCI Track Cycling World Ranking, based upon the results in all UCI-sanctioned track cycling races of the 2010–11 track cycling season.
Belgium at the UCI Road World Championships is an overview of the Belgian results at the UCI Road World Championships. The Belgian competitors are selected by coaches of the Royal Belgian Cycling League. Apart from cycling events at the four-yearly Summer Olympics, the only times that road cyclists appear in proper national selections of one or multiple athletes are the yearly UCI Road World Championships. Because of this, all Belgian national road cycling teams only compete as such during one day per year. Belgium first sent athletes to the World Championships in the early 1920s when only amateur cyclists competed. The nation's first medal, a gold, was earned by Henri Hoevenaers in the men's amateur road race in 1925.
2014 in women's road cycling is about the 2014 women's bicycle races ruled by the UCI and the 2014 UCI Women's Teams.
The 2014 women's road cycling season was the fourth for the Team Giant–Shimano, which began as Team Skil–Argos in 2010.
The 2015 women's road cycling season was the second for the Parkhotel Valkenburg Continental Team as a UCI women's team and the third year for the team which began as Parkhotel Valkenburg p/b Math Salden in 2013.