Tirreno – Adriatico
Updated with results up to the 2021 edition
On this page you can find all sorts of historical Tirreno – Adriatico cycling statistics. This page is permanently under construction and will be expanded and improved with more cycling statistics and visualizations. If you are interested in cycling betting don’t forget to check out our predictions page. The 2021 Tirreno – Adriatico predictions will be published once the startlist is (almost) final.
Most figures and tables below should be self explanatory. For some we provide some additional explanation. If you still have questions don’t hesitate to send us a tweet or email.
Race details
- country
-
- edition
-
56th
- class
-
2.UWT
- start
-
Wednesday March 10, 2021
- end
-
Tuesday March 16, 2021
- stages
-
7
- ITT
-
TBD
- TTT
-
TBD
- race length
-
TBD km
- 2020 winner
-
Simon Yates
-
@TirrenAdriatico
- website
-
Most frequent participants
Figure 1: Most Tirreno – Adriatico participations since 2012. Only the top 20 riders are shown.
Most stage wins
Figure 2: Most Tirreno – Adriatico stage wins since 2012. Only the top 20 riders are shown.
Most top 10 classifications
Figure 3: Most Tirreno – Adriatico stage top 10 positions since 2012. Only the top 20 riders are shown.
Most stage wins by country
Figure 4: Most Tirreno – Adriatico stage wins since 2012 by country.
Most top 10 classifications by country
Figure 5: Most Tirreno – Adriatico stage top 10 positions since 2012 by country. Only the top 20 countries are shown.
General classification winners
Figure 6: Tirreno – Adriaticoclassifications winners since 2012. GC=general classification, PC=points classification, YC=youth classification and MC=mountain classification.
Most mountain points
Figure 7: Most Tirreno – Adriatico mountain points since 2012. Only the top 20 riders are shown.
Most sprint points
Figure 8: Most Tirreno – Adriatico sprint points since 2012. Only the top 20 riders are shown.
Cumulative number of abandoned riders
Figure 9: The cumulative number of abandoned riders over the Tirreno – Adriatico stages since 2012, excluding Team Time Trials (TTT).
Position GC winner stage-by-stage
Figure 10: Position in GC through the stages for Tirreno – Adriatico winners since 2012.
In our last analysis, shown in Figure 10, we take a look at how the GC winner moves within the GC as the race matures. The figure is a bit complex, but what you see is the following:
The horizontal axis shows each stage of the race, the vertical axis is the time difference with respect to the GC leader after each stage.
Each line is the overall GC winner from 2012 up to now. So from each year there is one name.
The height of the line shows the lead (negative values) or the lag of the GC winner from stage 1 until the end. If the dot is above 0 the GC winner is still behind, once the dot is below zero the GC winner is in the lead. The further below zero it gets the larger the gap with the runnerup in the general classification.
The figure is interactive so by hovering over the dots you can see the exact details and the full GC top 3.