The Coppa Collecchio is an annual one-day cycling race held in the Collecchio commune of Province of Parma, Italy. It is organized by G.S. Virtus Collecchio. In 2020 the race was cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic.[1]

Coppa Collecchio
Race details
DateMid September
RegionParma, Italy
English nameCollecchio Cup
Local name(s)Coppa Collecchio (in Italian)
DisciplineRoad
TypeOne-day race
OrganiserG.S. Virtus Collecchio
Web sitewww.gsvirtuscollecchio.com/1/coppa_collecchio_3978229.html Edit this at Wikidata
History
First edition1929 (1929)
Editions87 (as of 2023)
First winner Ettore Morellini (ITA)
Most wins Mario Sgrinzato (ITA) 3 wins
Most recent Egor Igoshev (RUS)

The route edit

 
Route segment in Boschi di Carrega

Every year the route is almost the same. It commences in the square in front of Collecchio's historic Town Hall (Municipio). It features a demanding course with eight loops through the Parco naturale regionale dei Boschi di Carrega [it] and three loops through Talignano, including a notable GPM (Gran Premio della Montagna) ascent at Segalara. The race concludes at the starting point. [2]

Book about Coppa Collecchio edit

In September 2016, a book was launched to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the event. The book "Coppa Collecchio, 80 years on two wheels" (Italian: Coppa Collecchio, 80 anni sulle due ruote) commemorates the rich history of the Coppa Collecchio cycling race, one of Italy's oldest, and includes details on winners and key cyclists. The event, now focused on elite and under-23 categories, has played a pivotal role in the careers of many cyclists. The presentation featured Stefano Risoli, President of G.S. Virtus Collecchio, Paolo Bianchi, Collecchio's Mayor, and Silvia Dondi, Sports Councilor of the Collecchio Municipality.[3]

Results edit

Year Winner Second Third
1929   Ettore Morellini
1930   Vasco Bergamaschi
1931   Mario Borsari
1932   Bruno Negri
1933   Edoardo Molinar
1934   Armando Zucchini
1935   Pietro Rimoldi   Rinaldo Gerini   Renato Scorticati
1936   Aldo Postè
1937   Angelo Fava
1938   Corrado Ardizzoni
1939   Francesco De Rosa
1940   Arnaldo Cristofori
1941 Not disputed due to World War II
1942   Federico Rozzi
1943-1944 Not disputed due to World War II
1945   Giovanni Ronco
1946   Nello Spreafichi
1947   Luciano Pezzi
1948 No race
1949   Gianni Ghidini
1950   Angelo Venturoli
1951   Renzo Cella
1952   Aldo Gandini
1953   Renato Ponzini
1954   Gino Reggiani
1955   Gianni Ferlenghi
1956   Nello Olivetti
1957   Colombo Cassano
1958   Ercole Baldini
1959   Guido Carlesi
1960   Remo Amici
1961   Guido Neri
1962   Lorenzo Lorenzi
1963   Alberto Pellizzaro
1964   Emilio Casalini
1965   Pietro Guerra
1966   Luciano Greci
1967   Ernesto Jotti
1968   Paolo Zini
1969   Giovanni Varini
1970 No race
1971   Bruno Reggenini
1972   Claudio Guarnieri
1973   Massimo Tremolada
1974   Paolo Simboli
1975   Wainer Reggiani
1976   Emanuele Bombini
1977   Daniele Antinori
1978   Fabrizio Rizzolini
1979   Paolo Maini
1980 No race
1981   Fabio Benotti
1982   Daniele Simboli
1983 No race
1984   Roberto Pelliconi
1985   Maurizio Vandelli
1986   Marco Lietti
1987   Gianluca Tonetti
1988   Gianluca Tonetti
1989   Stefano Zanini
1990   Enrico Cecchetto
1991   Alessandro Bertolini
1992   Elio Aggiano
1993   Daniele Sgnaolin
1994   Sergio Previtali
1995   Michele Bedin
1996   Diego Ferrari
1997   Ruslan Ivanov
1998   Michele Gobbi
1999   Luigi Giambelli
2000   Dmitrij Dement'ev
2001   Volodymyr Starchyk
2002   Roman Luhovyy   Andrea Moletta   Davide Silvestri
2003   Davide Silvestri   Riccardo Riccò   Andrea Sanvido
2004   Marco Vettoretti   Paolo Bailetti   Domenico Pozzovivo
2005   Alessandro Raisoni   Carlo Scognamiglio   Maurizio Biondo
2006   Federico Masiero   Mauro Colombera   Sergej Rudaskov
2007   Davide Bonuccelli   Damiano Margutti   Emanuele Moschen
2008   Leonardo Pinizzotto   Sacha Modolo   Daniel Oss
2009   Andrea Vaccher   Matteo Collodel   Giorgio Cecchinel
2010   Mario Sgrinzato   Andrea Pasqualon   Rafael Andriato
2011   Enrico Battaglin   Andrea Palini   Francesco Lasca
2012   Mario Sgrinzato   Oleksandr Polivoda   Ricardo Pichetta
2013   Mario Sgrinzato   Paolo Colonna   Andrei Nechita
2014   Damiano Cima   Stefano Perego   Simone Bettinelli
2015   Nicola Toffali   Fausto Masnada   Marco Bernardinetti
2016   Aleksandr Riabushenko   Davide Orrico   Andrea Vendrame
2017   Federico Sartor   Francesco Romano   Davide Gabburo
2018   Simone Ravanelli   Luca Mozzato   Ottavio Dotti
2019   Edoardo Faresin   Alexander Konychev   Yuri Colonna
2020 Cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021   Andrea Piccolo   Luca Rastelli   Alessio Martinelli
2022   Andrea Guerra   Alessandro Romele   Lorenzo Quartucci
2023[4]   Egor Igoshev   Michael Belleri   Nicolò Garibbo

Wins by country edit

Position Country Wins
1   Italy 75
2   Russia 2
3   Moldova 1
4   Belarus 1
5   Ukraine 1

Multiple wins edit

Position Country Wins
1   Mario Sgrinzato 3
2   Gianluca Tonetti 2

External links edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Annullamento gare 2020" (in Italian). gsvirtuscollecchio.it. 29 July 2020. Retrieved 8 September 2023.
  2. ^ "CoppaCollecchio Planimetria" (PDF). comune.collecchio.pr.it. Retrieved 8 September 2023.
  3. ^ "Coppa Collecchio: tutte le 80 edizioni raccontate in un libro". gsvirtuscollecchio.com (in Italian). 10 September 2016. Retrieved 8 September 2023.
  4. ^ "Coppa Collecchio 2023: Igoshev vince la corsa emiliana davanti a Belleri e Garibbò" (in Italian). BiciSport. 19 September 2023. Retrieved 20 September 2023.

44°45′27″N 10°12′41″E / 44.7576°N 10.2115°E / 44.7576; 10.2115