Milan-San Remo 2023: Route and start list

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Milan-San Remo 2023 route

Milan San Remo 2023
Milan San Remo 2023

The longest Monument of the season, this year's Milan-San Remo takes place on Saturday 18 March and will showcase some of the world's best riders over a mammoth 294km.

The big news for this season a change in start location, to the town of Abbiategrasso, 22km south-west of Milan, where the race usually heads out from the city centre. The riders will rejoin the traditional route 30km into the race, from which point they will follow a well trodden route all the way to the finish on the famous Via Roma in San Remo. It will take them around six-and-a-half hours of riding.

Along the way riders will encounter the climb of the Passo Turchino at around the halfway mark, followed by the three small capi – the Capo Mele, Cervo and Berta – at around the 250km mark as the race approaches its finale. With 22km to go, riders crest the Cipressa (5.6km at 4.1%) and then finally, those who are left tackle the Poggio (3.7km at 3.7%). Often a small gap will go over the top – it then comes down to whether the escapees can cling on to their advantage on the sinuous descent and the flat 2km to the finish, or whether the chasing bunch can bring them back and unleash the sprinters within.

La Primavera
La Primavera

Milan-San Remo route history

Despite being known as the ‘Sprinters' Classic’, the Italian race would not be as prestigious as it is were it a straightforward procession to a bunch sprint, and instead the race is characterised by its tortuous length, thrilling conclusion and delicate balancing act between sprinters and attackers.

The introduction of La Manie in 2008 gave the advantage to attacking puncheurs, as a difficult, significantly-positioned climb to gain an advantage over those hoping for a bunch sprint. It contributed to a handful of more selective editions - Fabian Cancellara won from a solo break in 2008 and Simon Gerrans from a group of three in 2010, and in both 2011 and 2013 a group of seven contested the finish, won by Matt Goss and Gerald Ciolek respectively.

When La Manie was dropped in 2014, the organiser's initial intention had been to make the route even harder by replacing it with the Pompeiana in a slot far closer to the finish. But that climb was deemed unsafe due to the possibility of landslides, so since 2014, the race has featured neither climb.

Jasper Stuyven Milan-San Remo 2021
Jasper Stuyven Milan-San Remo 2021

Now, the dynamic of the route has shifted comprehensively back to the sprinters.

After Alexander Kristoff (then Katusha) won the sprint from a sizeable peloton in 2014, the finish was moved back to its traditional finishing straight of Via Roma, and another sprinter was triumphant in the form of John Degenkolb (then Giant-Alpecin) in 2015 and Arnaud Démare (Groupama-FDJ) in 2016.

For the bold and the brave, the Cipressa provides a potential launchpad for an attack at just over 20km from the finish, but for the more realistic, it’s the Poggio.

On the back of around 280km of racing the riders are exhausted upon reaching it, and, peaking at 5.5km from the finish, any rider who goes over the top first with a gap has a chance of zooming down the descent and holding off the sprinters for victory on the Via Roma.

Only two British riders have emerged victorious at the race, with Tom Simpson being the first back in 1964 for Peugeot-BP-Engelbert team. The next came several years later in 2009, when Mark Cavendish (then Team Columbia-High Road) took victory in a bunch sprint. British champion Ben Swift (Ineos Grenadiers) has come close on various occasions.

Milan-San Remo 2023 provisional start list

Team Jumbo-Visma

TRATNIK Jan
AFFINI Edoardo
LAPORTE Christophe
VALTER Attila
VAN AERT Wout
VAN HOOYDONCK Nathan
VAN EMDEN Jos

Soudal-Quick Step

SéNéCHAL Florian
ALAPHILIPPE Julian
LAMPAERT Yves
ASGREEN Kasper
BALLERINI Davide
DECLERCQ Tim
DEVENYNS Dries

UAE Team Emirates

POGA?AR Tadej
COVI Alessandro
WELLENS Tim
GRO?SCHARTNER Felix
NOVAK Domen
TRENTIN Matteo
ULISSI Davide

AG2R Citro?n

NAESEN Oliver
NAESEN Lawrence
COSNEFROY Beno?t
SCH?R Michael
H?NNINEN Jaakko
VENDRAME Andrea
WARBASSE Larry

Trek-Segafredo

PEDERSEN Mads
CATALDO Dario
HOELGAARD Markus
MOSCA Jacopo
SKUJI?? Toms
STUYVEN Jasper
VERGAERDE Otto

Bora-Hansgrohe

BENEDETTI Cesare
BENNETT Sam
DENZ Nico
HALLER Marco
MULLEN Ryan
POLITT Nils
VAN POPPEL Danny

Israel-Premier Tech

VANMARCKE Sep
GEE Derek
HOULE Hugo
NEILANDS Krists
WüRTZ SCHMIDT Mads
IMPEY Daryl
STRONG Corbin

Groupama-FDJ

MOLARD Rudy
STEWART Jake
SCOTSON Miles
KONOVALOVAS Ignatas
PACHER Quentin
DéMARE Arnaud
GENIETS Kevin

Team Jayco-AlUla

SOBRERO Matteo
P?STLBERGER Lukas
?TYBAR Zdeněk
MEZGEC Luka
HEPBURN Michael
MAAS Jan
BALMER Alexandre

Cofidis

CONSONNI Simone
WOOD Harrison
DELETTRE Alexandre
CIMOLAI Davide
COQUARD Bryan
RENARD Alexis
THOMAS Benjamin

Ineos Grenadiers

NARVáEZ Jhonatan
KWIATKOWSKI Micha?
HEIDUK Kim
GANNA Filippo
ROWE Luke
SHEFFIELD Magnus
SWIFT Ben

Astana Qazaqstan Team

SYRITSA Gleb
BASSO Leonardo
BOL Cees
CAVENDISH Mark
FEDOROV Yevgeniy
VELASCO Simone
RIABUSHENKO Alexandr

Bahrain Victorious

MOHORI? Matej
BILBAO Pello
PASQUALON Andrea
CARUSO Damiano
MILAN Jonathan
WRIGHT Fred
ARNDT Nikias

Lotto-Dstny

VAN GILS Maxim
DRIZNERS Jarrad
EWAN Caleb
DE LIE Arnaud
DE BUYST Jasper
FRISON Frederik
GUARNIERI Jacopo

EF Education-EasyPost

BETTIOL Alberto
WI?NIOWSKI ?ukasz
RUTSCH Jonas
POWLESS Neilson
HONORé Mikkel Fr?lich
CORT Magnus
BISSEGGER Stefan

Movistar Team

GARCíA CORTINA Iván
MAS Lluís
JACOBS Johan
SERRANO Gonzalo
ARANBURU Alex
LAZKANO Oier
GAVIRIA Fernando

Team DSM

BITTNER Pavel
DINHAM Matthew
DEGENKOLB John
EECKHOFF Nils
MAYRHOFER Marius
STORCK Florian
VERMAERKE Kevin

Intermarché-Wanty-Gobert Matériaux

BYSTR?M Sven Erik
BONIFAZIO Niccolò
DE GENDT Aimé
ROTA Lorenzo
VLIEGEN Lo?c
TEUNISSEN Mike
GIRMAY Biniam

Alpecin-Deceuninck

DILLIER Silvan
VERMEERSCH Gianni
SBARAGLI Kristian
KRAGH ANDERSEN S?ren
HERMANS Quinten
PHILIPSEN Jasper
VAN DER POEL Mathieu

TotalEnergies

FERRON Valentin
DUJARDIN Sandy
TURGIS Anthony
SOUPE Geoffrey
OSS Daniel
BODNAR Maciej
SAGAN Peter

Arkéa-Samsic

BARGUIL Warren
MOZZATO Luca
LOUVEL Matis
VERRE Alessandro
BIERMANS Jenthe
GUGLIELMI Simon
RUSSO Clément

Green Project-Bardiani-CSF-Faizanè

GABBURO Davide
TAROZZI Manuele
LUCCA Riccardo
TONELLI Alessandro
ZOCCARATO Samuele
MULUBRHAN Henok
MAGLI Filippo

Eolo-Kometa

MARTIN David
BEVILACQUA Simone
RIVI Samuele
MAESTRI Mirco
BAIS Mattia
GAVAZZI Francesco
SEVILLA Diego Pablo

Tudor Pro Cycling Team

THALMANN Roland
PLUIMERS Rick
KLUCKERS Arthur
HEMING Mika
CHARRIN Alo?s
BOHLI Tom
WIRTGEN Luc

Q36.5 Pro Cycling Team

PUPPIO Antonio
MOSCHETTI Matteo
LUDVIGSSON Tobias
FEDELI Alessandro
DONOVAN Mark
BRAMBILLA Gianluca
ABREHA Negasi Haylu

How to watch Milan-San Remo on TV

The race is broadcast on Eurosport and GCN Race Pass, with live coverage as well as a highlights package.

Our full guide on how to watch Milan - San Remo can be found here.

Elsewhere in the world, you can catch it live on Sporza (Dutch) and RTBF (French); Italy's Rai Sport 2 and SBS in Australia will also show footage.

You can follow the action via Twitter, via the handle @Milano_Sanremo.

Milan-San Remo: Recent winners

2021: Jasper Stuyven (Bel) Trek-Segafredo
2020: Wout van Aert (Bel) Jumbo-Visma
2019: Julian Alaphilippe (Fra) Deceuninck–Quick-Step
2018: Vincenzo Nibali (Ita) Bahrain-Merida
2017: Michal Kwiatkowski (Pol) Team Sky
2016: Arnaud Démare (Fra) FDJ
2015: John Degenkolb (Ger) Giant-Alpecin
2014: Alexander Kristoff (Nor) Katusha
2013: Gerald Ciolek (Ger) MTN-Qhubeka
2012: Simon Gerrans (Aus) GreenEdge
2011: Matt Goss (Aus) HTC-Highroad
2010: Oscar Freire (Spa) Rabobank
2009: Mark Cavendish (GBr) Columbia-Highroad
2008: Fabian Cancellara (Sui) CSC
2007: Oscar Freire (Spa) Rabobank

Previous editions: 2018 | 2017 | 2016 | 2015 | 2014 | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009