Spring Classics
The Spring Classics form the most spectacular window of the professional road season. Between mid-February and late April, prestigious one-day races in Belgium, the Netherlands, France and Italy are decided – often in changeable weather, on cobblestones and over short, brutal climbs. For teams and riders, the spring classics are simultaneously a media highlight, UCI points engine and career-defining weeks: a Monument victory can define an entire season.
In the UCI WorldTour calendar, the spring classics mark the phase after the Australian season opener and before Grand Tour preparation. Those who dominate these weeks count among the best-paid and most visible professionals of the year.
What distinguishes spring classics
Spring classics are not a formal UCI category, but a technical collective term for high-class one-day races in the first quarter of the season. They differ from summer stage races through the focus on a single day, extreme course profiles and tactical unpredictability.
Typical characteristics
- One-day format: No time to recover – a crash, mechanical or dip in form costs victory immediately.
- Regional focal points: Flanders and Wallonia (Belgium), northern France, Netherlands, northern Italy.
- Weather as a factor: Rain, wind and cold amplify equipment and positioning errors.
- High media reach: Classics attract global TV and streaming audiences – sponsors reward victories disproportionately.
- WorldTour mandatory starts: WorldTour teams must compete with minimum squads; the field is correspondingly deep.
Important: Four of the five Monument classics fall in the spring phase: Milan–San Remo, Tour of Flanders, Paris–Roubaix and Liège–Bastogne–Liège. Only the Tour of Lombardy belongs in autumn.
Calendar and season rhythm
The spring classics follow a fixed dramatic arc. Teams rotate squads so specialists are in top form on the right race days – often with only a few days recovery between highlights.
Typical rest periods of 2–4 days lie between individual blocks – teams use these windows for regeneration and fine-tuning.
The five Monuments in spring
Further WorldTour highlights in spring
Besides the Monuments, semi-classics and stage races shape the form curve:
- Omloop Het Nieuwsblad – first serious test in Flanders, often wet and windy
- Strade Bianche – gravel sectors in Tuscany, bridge between winter training and classics form
- E3 Saxo Classic – direct dress rehearsal for Flanders with many of the same hellingen
- Gent-Wevelgem – longer, often wind-exposed variant with Kemmelberg
- Paris–Nice and Tirreno–Adriatico – stage races as form building for Sanremo and later Grand Tours
WorldTour one-day races between March and April
in 6 weeks
course length for most Monuments
UCI WorldTour points for the winner (depending on race)
Rider types and team roles
Spring classics reward specialization. GC riders who dominate three-week stage races in summer rarely win Roubaix or Flanders at the same time – the physiological and technical demands differ too greatly.
Who wins which race?
- Sprinters with Poggio ability – Milan–San Remo: pure flatland sprinters often fail on the final climb.
- Classics kings – Flanders: explosive, technical on cobbles, high pain tolerance.
- Cobble rouleurs – Roubaix: 100+ km/h on poor surfaces, equipment management.
- Ardennes puncheurs – Liège: repeated short climbs, high anaerobic capacity.
- Noble domestiques with winning chances – domestiques may start as captain in selected races when the team leader is absent.
Requirement profiles of spring Monuments
Team tactics in classics week
Classics are rarely decided "beautifully" in the peloton. Decisive factors are:
- Control early breakaways – strong WorldTeams neutralize dangerous groups before key passages
- Positioning before sectors – at Flanders and Roubaix, place 1–20 in the field before each cobble sector counts
- Protect captain – mechanics, drinks and draft until 50 km before the finish
- Second wave – when the leader fails, the noble domestique steps in as Plan B
Typical Roubaix tactics
Preparation and periodization
Pros often begin classics preparation in December with base endurance and gym work. From January come training camps in Spain or Mallorca; from February intensity rises with race simulations on cobbles and short climbs.
Training building blocks for spring classics
- Threshold and sweet-spot sessions for the long Sanremo kilometres
- Sprint repetitions after hills for Poggio and Ardennes scenarios
- Technique training on cobbles – line choice, seating position, tyre pressure
- Race simulations – Omloop and E3 as form tests before Flanders
Equipment check before Roubaix
- Wider tyres (28–32 mm)
- Reduced tyre pressure
- Robust wheels
- Double bar tape
- Backup bike in team car
- Special cobbles setup geometry
- Fresh brake pads
- Spare chain checked
Tip: Many teams ride Roubaix with lower tyre pressure than in normal races – often 4.5–5.5 bar instead of 6.5 bar, depending on rider weight and weather.
Economic and sporting significance
Spring classics victories disproportionately increase a rider's market value and media presence. Sponsors associate classics with authenticity, tradition and hard work – narrative values that are less tangible in stage races.
The dense race schedule between Flanders, Roubaix and the Ardennes classics frequently leads to overload. Many riders consciously skip Roubaix or Liège to stay healthy long-term.
Historical development
The spring classics date back to the early 20th century. Milan–San Remo (1907) and Paris–Roubaix (1896) are among the oldest still-run bicycle races. Belgian races shaped the image of "hard" cycling after World War I – cobblestones as a symbol of the working class and endurance.
Milestones:
- 1896 – First Paris–Roubaix edition
- 1913 – Founding of Tour of Flanders
- 1907 – First Milan–San Remo
- 1980s – Professionalization through live TV in Flanders
- 2010s – WorldTour mandatory starts and global streaming reach
FAQ: Frequently asked questions about spring classics
What is the difference between a Monument and a semi-classic?
Monuments are the five most prestigious one-day races; semi-classics have less historical weight but are WorldTour-relevant.
Can a rider win all spring Monuments in one year?
Extremely rare; different profiles and short gaps make it nearly impossible.
Why do some teams skip Roubaix?
Equipment risk and injury danger for GC candidates.
What role does weather play?
Decisive: rain transforms Roubaix and Flanders into significantly harder races.
How many races does a classics specialist ride per spring?
Typically 8–14 starts between Omloop and Liège.