TEAMS of international cyclists will be racing through the district’s streets again when the inaugural Tour De Yorkshire comes to the area.

The full route, which takes in Haworth, Oxenhope and Ilkley, has just been announced by famous Yorkshire cyclists past and present in Bridlington, the town where the race will start in May.

Ben Swift, Team Sky pro rider and Brian Robinson, the first British man to win a stage of the Tour de France, were in Bridlington to celebrate the international cycle race, a direct legacy of the 2014 Yorkshire Grand Départ, which will take place in 100 days time on May 1, 2 and 3.

The race has three stages and includes a women’s event on May 2, a mass participation sportive on May 3 and a cultural festival.

Stage one, on Friday, May 1, will start in seaside town of Bridlington and 174km later finish further up the coast in Scarborough. Riders will head along the Flamborough Head Heritage Coast before turning away from the coast into the North York Moors National Park, through Dalby Forest and towards Pickering.

They’ll then go back to the coast at Whitby, and then south to Robin Hood’s Bay with the ultimate race to the finish line on the seafront at Scarborough.

The following day’s race will start outside Selby Abbey. The route takes in much of the Wolds, and from Selby will take the peloton towards Market Weighton, through North Newbald and on to Beverley, where they will turn north to Malton, then on to Stamford Bridge. Spectators will have the chance to see a circuit of York and organisers are hoping for a dramatic finish in the city.

On the final day, the peloton will return to some of the roads raced in the 2014 Yorkshire Grand Départ of the Tour de France, only with a twist.

Riders will start in Wakefield and travel south to Barnsley before heading to Holmfirth where they pick up the Grand Départ route in reverse, racing to Ripponden before riding the Cragg Vale - which in the Tour de France was the country’s longest continual climb and now becomes the longest continual descent.

The riders will then ride to Hebden Bridge, Oxenhope and through the famous cobbled streets of Haworth. After a steep climb at Goose Eye the riders will once again see Ilkley, with the famous climb up the Cow & Calf before a sprint point at Arthington and cross the finish line in Roundhay Park in Leeds.

The race will be shown live on television in the UK and across Europe and a huge television audience is expected, once again shining a spotlight on Yorkshire.

Council leader Councillor David Green said: "We are pleased our district has been chosen for part of the route of the Tour de Yorkshire, building on the success of last year’s Tour de France Grand Départ in our district. We hope that people really get behind this new event in the same way as they did last July.” 

The race is being organised by Welcome to Yorkshire and Amaury Sport Organisation (A.S.O.), with support from British Cycling and local authorities throughout the county, especially the start and finish towns and cities; Bridlington, Leeds, Scarborough, Selby, Wakefield, York and North Yorkshire County Council and East Riding Council.

Christian Prudhomme, Director of the Tour de France at A.S.O, said: “After the grandest of Grand Départs of the Tour de France, we were keen to return to Yorkshire. With its stunning landscapes, iconic cities and tough climbs, Yorkshire offers all the ingredients needed for a great cycling race. The welcome we received in Yorkshire in July 2014 was simply spectacular and I am very much looking forward to returning there in May for the Tour de Yorkshire.”

The inaugural Tour de Yorkshire route takes in places predominantly in areas which missed out on the Tour de France as it passed through Yorkshire.

Thierry Gouvenou, Tour de France’s Sports Director, who designed the race route, said; “Yorkshire offers so much with its huge variety of landscapes. For this first edition we have three quite different stages, each with their own challenges and, seen as a whole, a very exciting addition to European racing. This first edition will suit a strong all-rounder rider. In the following years we will change the routes, taking in new places and offering something new each time.”

Gary Verity, Chief Executive of Welcome to Yorkshire said: “Before the Grand Départ had even finished people all across Yorkshire were asking when we can have more cycling!

“The Tour de Yorkshire will bring back many of the world’s top cycling teams and there will be an opportunity for ordinary people to ride the same roads on the same day in the sportive. And this is a free event to watch so there is an opportunity for everyone in the county to be part of Tour de Yorkshire in one way or another.”

Welcome to Yorkshire is also organising a month long Tour de Yorkshire Festival, to showcase the country’s rich and diverse cultural offering. The Yorkshire Festival, which accompanied the Tour de France Grand Depart, will be held in 2016. The Tour de Yorkshire will be annual event and the organiser hope it will grow year on year to be one of the biggest events in the cycling calendar and position Yorkshire as the heartland of cycling in Europe.

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