Calgary

Tour of Alberta cycling race opens Tuesday in Calgary

More urban routes for spectators and "Canadian cobblestone" have been incorporated into the second Tour of Alberta cycling stage race. What's missing is a mountain stage and the defending champion.

Edmonton's Ryan Anderson, who finished eighth overall last year, returns to his home province

Australia's Rohan Dennis, centre with yellow jersey, climbs a hill with the rest of the pack during stage four of the Tour of Alberta cycling race in Black Diamond in 2013. (Jeff McIntosh/Canadian Press)

More urban routes for spectators and "Canadian cobblestone" have been incorporated into the second Tour of Alberta cycling stage race. What's missing is a mountain stage and the defending champion.

The 2014 Tour of Alberta opens with Tuesday's prologue in Calgary. The six-day race features 120 racers from 13 countries, including 24 Canadians.

The penultimate leg near Edmonton includes sections of dirt road, which presents a very Canadian surface for Europeans accustomed to racing on cobblestones.

"We have some Canadian cobblestone," Tour of Alberta executive director Duane Vienneau says. "It's called gravel."

Edmonton's Ryan Anderson finished eighth overall and wore the Maple Leaf jersey as top Canadian in the inaugural Tour of Alberta in 2013. The 27-year-old returns to his home province with his U.S.-based Optum Pro Cycling team.

No Ryder Hesjedal

But Canadian cycling star Ryder Hesjedal of Victoria will be absent. He is currently racing the Tour of Spain, which is one of cycling's three Grand Tours alongside the Tour de France and Tour of Italy.

Rohan Dennis of Australia was expected to mount a defence of his Tour of Alberta title until a mid-season transfer from the Garmin-Sharp team to BMC Racing stuck a spoke in that wheel.

BMC isn't entered in the Tour of Alberta and Dennis is currently racing the Tour of Spain. Garmin-Sharp is sending a team to Alberta,but it doesn't include Hesjedal, whom the team also assigned to Spain.

"You don't go to cyclists directly," Vienneau explains. "We invite the teams. The teams accept and then the teams choose the cyclists.

"The teams look at our race and try to match skill sets of their team. They ultimately want to come and win this race. Ryder is not in our race, but it could be because Ryder is better suited for another race."

Prize money

The Tour of Alberta offers $125,000 in prize money. After Tuesday's prologue, the 734-kilometre route winds through
Lethbridge, Innisfail, Red Deer, Wetaskiwin and Sherwood Park before concluding Sunday in Edmonton.

Rogers Sportsnet will carry the race domestically with networks such as ESPN and Eurosport providing international coverage.

Part of the television appeal of cycling stage races is scenery. But despite its proximity to the Rocky Mountains, the Tour of Alberta will remain on the plain.

No mountain legs

A mountain leg from Black Diamond to Canmore was on last year's itinerary. Flooding in Southern Alberta altered the stage to a race through the foothills and back to Black Diamond.

Both Canmore and Banff west of Calgary were approached about hosting a mountain stage this year, but neither community wanted to put up the money, according to Vienneau.

Rights fees range from $100,000 to $350,000 depending on the stage, he says. The Alberta government put $4 million towards the first race in 2013, but that grant dropped to $1.5 million this year.

"We had to make up a huge gap of money, about two and a half million bucks," Vienneau says. "We did that by increasing our corporate support, like Alberta Treasury Branch, and also community support because we have a rights-fee model in place to host the race.

"I can tell you we have plans to hit the mountains in Year 3."

The prairies pose their own challenges for the cyclists.

"Wind will play a big factor in the overall outcome of the race," Anderson said. "Last year, we had the one day into
Drumheller and it was extremely windy. The roads are a lot more like a grid, so you're headed in the same direction all day."

Building an audience

This year's Tour of Alberta travels into and through urban areas to be accessible to spectators. Stage 1 in Lethbridge and Sunday's final stage in Edmonton will be multiple laps of the same loop, which allows more views of the peleton.

"We want to build this race and make it an annual event every year," Vienneau says. "We're still at the stage where we want to go to the people to build audience versus them having to come to us."

Wednesday's Stage 1 is 143 kilometres of laps in and around Lethbridge. Thursday's Stage 2 is a 145-km dash from Innisfail to Red Deer with a two-lap detour around Sylvan Lake.

Friday's Stage 3 is 157 kilometres from Wetaskiwin to CFB Edmonton via Fort Saskatchewan. The aforementioned gravel patches are featured on Saturday's 163-km leg from Edmonton into Sherwood Park.

The final leg is 11 laps of an 11-km loop through downtown Edmonton.

"There's not a lot of sport events of international calibre these days that you can go to for free," Vienneau points out. "We have a festival in every community we hit. It's really to promote the sport of cycling."