The 2017 UCI World Tour was a competition that included thirty-seven road cycling events throughout the 2017 men's cycling season.[1] It was the ninth edition of the ranking system launched by the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) in 2009. The competition started with the opening stage of the Tour Down Under on 17 January and concluded with the final stage of the Tour of Guangxi on 24 October.[2] Slovakia's Peter Sagan was the defending champion.[3] The 2017 edition featured ten new events.[2]

2017 UCI WorldTour
Ninth edition of the UCI World Tour
Details
Dates17 January – 24 October
Location
  • Australia
  • China
  • Europe
  • Middle East
  • North America
Races37
Champions
Individual championGreg Van Avermaet (Belgium) (BMC Racing Team)
Teams' championTeam Sky
← 2016
2018 →

Sagan was unable to defend his World Tour title, winning just one race overall at the Grand Prix Cycliste de Québec in September,[4] as he finished fourth in the points rankings; he finished one point behind third-placed Tom Dumoulin. The rankings were topped for the first time by Belgian rider Greg Van Avermaet,[5] riding for the BMC Racing Team, who amassed 3,582 points with the newly-enlarged points-scoring system over the course of the season. Van Avermaet led the standings for the majority of the season, winning four races overall; three on home soil at Omloop Het Nieuwsblad,[6] E3 Harelbeke,[7] and Gent–Wevelgem,[8] with a single win in France at Paris–Roubaix.[9] Van Avermaet finished 130 points clear of Great Britain's Chris Froome, riding for Team Sky. Froome won two of the three Grand Tours to be held in 2017, winning his fourth Tour de France,[10] before taking a first Vuelta a España success, the first Tour–Vuelta double in 39 years.[11] The success gave him the World Tour points lead for several hours before Van Avermaet surpassed him with a seventh-place finish at the Grand Prix Cycliste de Montréal.

In the concurrent teams' standings, Team Sky prevailed with 12,806 points,[12] as Froome's victories were added to by Michał Kwiatkowski (Strade Bianche, Milan–San Remo and Clásica de San Sebastián), Sergio Henao (Paris–Nice) and Elia Viviani (EuroEyes Cyclassics and Bretagne Classic Ouest–France). 154 points behind in second place were Quick-Step Floors,[12] who took 30 victories on World Tour races (including 16 Grand Tour stages) during the 2017 season, with overall victories for Yves Lampaert (Dwars door Vlaanderen) and Philippe Gilbert (Tour of Flanders and Amstel Gold Race). With 10,961 points,[12] BMC Racing Team finished in third place primarily down to Van Avermaet's performances, with further wins to Richie Porte (Tour Down Under and Tour de Romandie) and Dylan Teuns at the Tour de Pologne.

Teams

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2017 UCI World Teams and equipment[13]
Code Official Team Name Country Groupset Road Bike(s) Time Trial Bike Wheels
ALM AG2R La Mondiale (2017 season)   France Shimano Factor Bikes 02
Factor Bikes ONE
Factor Bikes ONE–S
Factor Bikes Slick Mavic
AST Astana (2017 season)   Kazakhstan Shimano / FSA Argon 18 Gallium Pro
Argon 18 Nitrogen Pro
E-118 Next Vision Wheels
TBM Bahrain–Merida (2017 season)   Bahrain Shimano Merida Scultura
Merida Reacto
Merida Warp Fulcrum
BMC BMC Racing Team (2017 season)   United States Shimano BMC Teammachine SLR01
BMC Timemachine TMR01
BMC Granfondo GF01
BMC TimeMachine TM01 Shimano
BOH Bora–Hansgrohe (2017 season)   Germany TBC Specialized Venge
S-Works Tarmac
Specialized Roubaix
Specialized Shiv Roval
CDT Cannondale–Drapac (2017 season)   United States Shimano Cannondale SuperSix EVO
Cannondale Synapse
Cannondale Slice Mavic
DDD Team Dimension Data (2017 season)   South Africa Shimano/Rotor Cervélo S5
Cervélo R5
Cervélo C5
Cervélo P5 Enve
FDJ FDJ (2017 season)   France Shimano Lapierre Xelius SL
Lapierre Aircode SL
Lapierre Pulsium
Lapierre Aerostorm DRS Shimano
KAT Team Katusha–Alpecin (2017 season)   Switzerland SRAM Canyon Ultimate CF SLX
Canyon Aeroad CF SLX
Canyon Endurance CF SL
Canyon Speedmax CF Zipp
TLJ LottoNL–Jumbo (2017 season)   Netherlands Shimano Bianchi OltreXR2
Bianchi Specialissima
Bianchi Infinito CV
Bianchi Aquila CV Shimano
LTS Lotto–Soudal (2017 season)   Belgium Campagnolo Ridley Helium SLX
Ridley Noah SL
Ridley Fenix SL
Ridley Dean Fast Campagnolo
MOV Movistar Team (2017 season)   Spain Campagnolo Canyon Ultimate CF SLX
Canyon Aeroad CF SLX
Canyon Speedmax CF Campagnolo
ORS Orica–Scott (2017 season)   Australia Shimano Scott Foil
Scott Addict
Scott Plasma Shimano
QST Quick-Step Floors (2017 season)   Belgium Shimano
FSA
Specialized Venge
S-Works Tarmac
Specialized Roubaix
Specialized Shiv Roval
HED
SKY Team Sky (2017 season)   Great Britain Shimano Pinarello Dogma F8
Pinarello Dogma K8-S
Pinarello Bolide Shimano
SUN Team Sunweb (2017 season)   Germany Shimano Giant TCR Advanced SL
Giant Propel Advanced SL
Giant Defy Advanced SL
Giant Trinity Shimano
TFS Trek–Segafredo (2017 season)   United States Shimano Trek Emonda
Trek Madone
Trek Domane
Trek SpeedConcept Bontrager
UAD UAE Team Emirates (2017 season)   United Arab Emirates Campagnolo Colnago C60
Colnago Concept
Colnago V1-R
Colnago K-Zero Campagnolo

Events

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All events from the 2016 UCI World Tour were included, although some events were scheduled on different dates than previous editions. Ten new events were also added to the calendar.[2][14] An eleventh event, the Tour of Qatar, was originally added to the calendar in October 2016, but it was cancelled in December 2016 due to lack of sponsorship support.[15][16] Another new-for-2017 World Tour event, the Presidential Tour of Turkey, was postponed from its initial dates of 18–23 April, in February.[17] In March, following a meeting of the UCI Professional Cycling Council, the race was rescheduled for 10–15 October.[18]

A new points ranking was also introduced for the 2017 season, based upon the points scales for the UCI World Ranking. Therefore, up to 60 riders – up from a maximum of 20 riders at the Grand Tours – would be able to score points in all races.[19][20] As well as the new points rankings, the previous ranking by nations was also removed.[20]

Just as in 2016, the team time trial at the UCI World Championships, scheduled to be held on 17 September, had been due to award points towards the team rankings. In August 2017, the Association International des Groupes Cyclistes Professionels (AIGCP) agreed a deal with the UCI to avoid a boycott of the race, but no points would be awarded towards the World Tour rankings.[21]

Races in the 2017 UCI World Tour[2]
Race Date Winner Second Third Stage points Leader points
  Tour Down Under 17–22 January   Richie Porte (AUS) 500 pts   Esteban Chaves (COL) 400 pts   Jay McCarthy (AUS) 325 pts 60, 25, 10 10 pts
  Great Ocean Road Race 29 January   Nikias Arndt (GER) 300 pts   Simon Gerrans (AUS) 250 pts   Cameron Meyer (AUS) 0 pts[a]
  Abu Dhabi Tour 23–26 February   Rui Costa (POR) 300 pts   Ilnur Zakarin (RUS) 250 pts   Tom Dumoulin (NED) 215 pts 40, 15, 6 6 pts
  Omloop Het Nieuwsblad 25 February   Greg Van Avermaet (BEL) 300 pts   Peter Sagan (SVK) 250 pts   Sep Vanmarcke (BEL) 215 pts
  Strade Bianche 4 March   Michał Kwiatkowski (POL) 300 pts   Greg Van Avermaet (BEL) 250 pts   Tim Wellens (BEL) 215 pts
  Paris–Nice 5–12 March   Sergio Henao (COL) 500 pts   Alberto Contador (ESP) 400 pts   Dan Martin (IRL) 325 pts 60, 25, 10 10 pts
  Tirreno–Adriatico 8–14 March   Nairo Quintana (COL) 500 pts   Rohan Dennis (AUS) 400 pts   Thibaut Pinot (FRA) 325 pts 60, 25, 10 10 pts
  Milan–San Remo 18 March   Michał Kwiatkowski (POL) 500 pts   Peter Sagan (SVK) 400 pts   Julian Alaphilippe (FRA) 325 pts
  Volta a Catalunya 20–26 March   Alejandro Valverde (ESP) 400 pts   Alberto Contador (ESP) 320 pts   Marc Soler (ESP) 260 pts 50, 20, 8 8 pts
  Dwars door Vlaanderen 22 March   Yves Lampaert (BEL) 300 pts   Philippe Gilbert (BEL) 250 pts   Alexey Lutsenko (KAZ) 215 pts
  E3 Harelbeke 24 March   Greg Van Avermaet (BEL) 400 pts   Philippe Gilbert (BEL) 320 pts   Oliver Naesen (BEL) 260 pts
  Gent–Wevelgem 26 March   Greg Van Avermaet (BEL) 500 pts   Jens Keukeleire (BEL) 400 pts   Peter Sagan (SVK) 325 pts
  Tour of Flanders 2 April   Philippe Gilbert (BEL) 500 pts   Greg Van Avermaet (BEL) 400 pts   Niki Terpstra (NED) 325 pts
  Tour of the Basque Country 3–8 April   Alejandro Valverde (ESP) 400 pts   Alberto Contador (ESP) 320 pts   Ion Izagirre (ESP) 260 pts 50, 20, 8 8 pts
  Paris–Roubaix 9 April   Greg Van Avermaet (BEL) 500 pts   Zdeněk Štybar (CZE) 400 pts   Sebastian Langeveld (NED) 325 pts
  Amstel Gold Race 16 April   Philippe Gilbert (BEL) 500 pts   Michał Kwiatkowski (POL) 400 pts   Michael Albasini (SUI) 325 pts
  La Flèche Wallonne 19 April   Alejandro Valverde (ESP) 400 pts   Dan Martin (IRL) 320 pts   Dylan Teuns (BEL) 260 pts
  Liège–Bastogne–Liège 23 April   Alejandro Valverde (ESP) 500 pts   Dan Martin (IRL) 400 pts   Michał Kwiatkowski (POL) 325 pts
  Tour de Romandie 25–30 April   Richie Porte (AUS) 500 pts   Simon Yates (GBR) 400 pts   Primož Roglič (SLO) 325 pts 60, 25, 10 10 pts
  Eschborn-Frankfurt – Rund um den Finanzplatz 1 May   Alexander Kristoff (NOR) 300 pts   Rick Zabel (GER) 250 pts   John Degenkolb (GER) 215 pts
  Giro d'Italia 5–28 May   Tom Dumoulin (NED) 850 pts   Nairo Quintana (COL) 680 pts   Vincenzo Nibali (ITA) 575 pts 100, 40, 20, 12, 4 20 pts
  Tour of California 14–20 May   George Bennett (NZL) 300 pts   Rafał Majka (POL) 250 pts   Andrew Talansky (USA) 215 pts 40, 15, 6 6 pts
  Critérium du Dauphiné 4–11 June   Jakob Fuglsang (DEN) 500 pts   Richie Porte (AUS) 400 pts   Dan Martin (IRL) 325 pts 60, 25, 10 10 pts
  Tour de Suisse 10–18 June   Simon Špilak (SLO) 500 pts   Damiano Caruso (ITA) 400 pts   Steven Kruijswijk (NED) 325 pts 60, 25, 10 10 pts
  Tour de France 1–23 July   Chris Froome (GBR) 1000 pts   Rigoberto Urán (COL) 800 pts   Romain Bardet (FRA) 675 pts 120, 50, 25, 15, 5 25 pts
  Clásica de San Sebastián 29 July   Michał Kwiatkowski (POL) 400 pts   Tony Gallopin (FRA) 320 pts   Bauke Mollema (NED) 260 pts
  Tour de Pologne 29 July  – 4 August   Dylan Teuns (BEL) 400 pts   Rafał Majka (POL) 320 pts   Wout Poels (NED) 260 pts 50, 20, 8 8 pts
  RideLondon–Surrey Classic 30 July   Alexander Kristoff (NOR) 300 pts   Magnus Cort (DEN) 250 pts   Michael Matthews (AUS) 215 pts
 /  BinckBank Tour 7–13 August   Tom Dumoulin (NED) 400 pts   Tim Wellens (BEL) 320 pts   Jasper Stuyven (BEL) 260 pts 50, 20, 8 8 pts
  Vuelta a España 19 August  – 10 September   Chris Froome (GBR) 850 pts   Vincenzo Nibali (ITA) 680 pts   Ilnur Zakarin (RUS) 575 pts 100, 40, 20, 12, 4 20 pts
  EuroEyes Cyclassics 20 August   Elia Viviani (ITA) 400 pts   Arnaud Démare (FRA) 320 pts   Dylan Groenewegen (NED) 260 pts
  Bretagne Classic Ouest–France 27 August   Elia Viviani (ITA) 400 pts   Alexander Kristoff (NOR) 320 pts   Sonny Colbrelli (ITA) 260 pts
  GP de Québec 8 September   Peter Sagan (SVK) 500 pts   Greg Van Avermaet (BEL) 400 pts   Michael Matthews (AUS) 325 pts
  GP de Montréal 10 September   Diego Ulissi (ITA) 500 pts   Jesús Herrada (ESP) 400 pts   Tom-Jelte Slagter (NED) 325 pts
  Il Lombardia 7 October   Vincenzo Nibali (ITA) 500 pts   Julian Alaphilippe (FRA) 400 pts   Gianni Moscon (ITA) 325 pts
  Presidential Tour of Turkey 10–15 October[18]   Diego Ulissi (ITA) 300 pts   Jesper Hansen (DEN) 250 pts   Fausto Masnada (ITA) 0 pts[b] 40, 15, 6 6 pts
  Tour of Guangxi 19–24 October   Tim Wellens (BEL) 300 pts   Bauke Mollema (NED) 250 pts   Nicolas Roche (IRL) 215 pts 40, 15, 6 6 pts

Final points standings

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Individual

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[22]

Riders tied with the same number of points were classified by number of victories, then number of second places, third places, and so on, in World Tour events and stages.

Rank Name Team Points
1   Greg Van Avermaet (BEL) BMC Racing Team 3582
2   Chris Froome (GBR) Team Sky 3452
3   Tom Dumoulin (NED) Team Sunweb 2545
4   Peter Sagan (SVK) Bora–Hansgrohe 2544
5   Vincenzo Nibali (ITA) Bahrain–Merida 2196
6   Michał Kwiatkowski (POL) Team Sky 2171
7   Alejandro Valverde (ESP) Movistar Team 2105
8   Dan Martin (IRL) Quick-Step Floors 2050
9   Michael Matthews (AUS) Team Sunweb 2049
10   Alberto Contador (ESP) Trek–Segafredo 1987
11   Philippe Gilbert (BEL) Quick-Step Floors 1893
12   Richie Porte (AUS) BMC Racing Team 1882
13   Nairo Quintana (COL) Movistar Team 1811
14   Alexander Kristoff (NOR) Team Katusha–Alpecin 1806
15   Ilnur Zakarin (RUS) Team Katusha–Alpecin 1686
16   Diego Ulissi (ITA) UAE Team Emirates 1569
17   Bauke Mollema (NED) Trek–Segafredo 1524
18   Julian Alaphilippe (FRA) Quick-Step Floors 1465
19   Romain Bardet (FRA) AG2R La Mondiale 1464
20   Rigoberto Urán (COL) Cannondale–Drapac 1360
21   Tim Wellens (BEL) Lotto–Soudal 1326
22   Thibaut Pinot (FRA) FDJ 1317
23   Ion Izagirre (ESP) Bahrain–Merida 1276
24   Domenico Pozzovivo (ITA) AG2R La Mondiale 1275
25   Sergio Henao (COL) Team Sky 1266
  • 436 riders scored points. 200 other riders finished in positions that would have earned them points, but they were ineligible as members of non-UCI WorldTeams.

Team

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Team rankings were calculated by adding the ranking points of all the riders of a team in the table.[23]

Rank Team Points Point-scoring riders
1 Team Sky 12806
27 riders
Froome (3452), Kwiatkowski (2171), Ser. Henao (1266), Landa (1170), Viviani (1031), Poels (797), Moscon (690), Thomas (611), Nieve (427), Rowe (263), D. van Poppel (151), Boswell (129), Geoghegan Hart (120), Kennaugh (113), Rosa (101), Seb. Henao (52), Kiryienka (51), Dibben (45), D. López (37), Stannard (24), Deignan (23), Gołaś (21), Puccio (20), Elissonde (17), Wiśniowski (11), Doull (8), Knees (5)
2 Quick-Step Floors 12652
27 riders
D. Martin (2050), Gilbert (1893), Alaphilippe (1465), Gaviria (1159), Jungels (704), Kittel (686), Trentin (677), Štybar (667), Terpstra (649), Lampaert (471), de la Cruz (452), Vakoč (420), Boonen (339), Richeze (248), Brambilla (162), Mas (102), Devenyns (94), Bauer (84), Vermote (72), De Plus (68), Cavagna (58), Schachmann (50), Serry (40), Keisse (23), Capecchi (13), Declercq (5), Martinelli (1)
3 BMC Racing Team 10961
28 riders
Van Avermaet (3582), Porte (1882), Dennis (830),[c] Teuns (763), Caruso (735),[d] van Garderen (735), Roche (522), Drucker (384), Küng (335), Dillier (215), Bookwalter (209),[e] Hermans (193),[f] Vliegen (80), Oss (75), S. Sánchez (69), Schär (62), Ventoso (52), Wyss (45), Bohli (41), Moinard (36), De Marchi (35), Quinziato (33), Frankiny (19), Rosskopf (16), Senni (5), Gerts (4), Scotson (3), Elmiger (1)
4 Team Sunweb 8033
22 riders
T. Dumoulin (2545), Matthews (2049), Kelderman (1049), Barguil (977), Arndt (377), Oomen (367), Kragh Andersen (119), Teunissen (110), Bauhaus (104), ten Dam (69), Preidler (51), Sinkeldam (42), Geschke (42), Walscheid (38), Hofstede (33), Hamilton (18), De Backer (14), Kämna (11), Curvers (8), Fröhlinger (5), Haga (3), Lunke (2)
5 Trek–Segafredo 7934
24 riders
Contador (1987), Mollema (1524), Stuyven (1120), Degenkolb (990), Felline (749), Theuns (418), Pantano (246), Guerreiro (208), Gogl (149), Zubeldia (111), Stetina (82), de Kort (59), Reijnen (41), Cardoso (41), Bernard (35), Nizzolo (32), Hernández (29), B. van Poppel (28), Rast (26), Didier (22), Brändle (15), Beppu (12), Pedersen (5), Daniel (5)
6 Movistar Team 7399
26 riders
Valverde (2105), N. Quintana (1811), Je. Herrada (668), G. Izagirre (500), Soler (462), Rojas (393), Castroviejo (229), D. Moreno (170), Sütterlin (163), Amador (121), de la Parte (106), Bennati (101), Betancur (100), Fernández (66), Anacona (63), Oliveira (61), Jo. Herrada (54), Barbero (52), Carapaz (43), Dowsett (35), Erviti (34), D. Quintana (24), Pedrero (15), Sutherland (12), Carretero (8), Arcas (3)
7 Orica–Scott 7190
24 riders
S. Yates (1067), Albasini (830), A. Yates (776), Chaves (619), Keukeleire (608), Ewan (608), Durbridge (577), Cort (432), Gerrans (281), Haig (273), Impey (230), Verona (155), Kreuziger (150), Juul-Jensen (134), Hayman (104), Mezgec (98), Howson (82), Docker (77), Edmondson (38), Plaza (32), Hepburn (16), Kluge (1), Tuft (1), Bewley (1)
8 Bora–Hansgrohe 6516
25 riders
P. Sagan (2544), Majka (1117), S. Bennett (548), McCarthy (505), Pöstlberger (414), Buchmann (389), Konrad (353), Bodnar (142), Poljański (125), Burghardt (74), Selig (68), Mühlberger (45), J. Sagan (40), Mendes (28), Herklotz (24), Schwarzmann (22), Pelucchi (15), Pfingsten (14), Saramotins (12), Ackermann (11), Bárta (10), König (5), Schillinger (5), Benedetti (5), Archbold (1)
9 AG2R La Mondiale 6316
26 riders
Bardet (1464), Pozzovivo (1275), Naesen (910), Vuillermoz (881), Bakelants (515), Frank (304), Barbier (166), Latour (155), Gautier (95), Houle (64), Gastauer (62), Jaurégui (60), Dupont (52), Cherel (46), Domont (43), Bidard (38), Bagdonas (34), Montaguti (27), Peters (26), Geniez (24), Vandenbergh (22), Gougeard (21), Duval (13), Chevrier (13), Denz (5), Bérard (1)
10 Cannondale–Drapac 6049
23 riders
Urán (1360), Vanmarcke (917), Slagter (589), Woods (585), van Baarle (491), Langeveld (404), Bettiol (312), Talansky (301),[g] Formolo (208), Rolland (187), Villella (153), Wippert (152), Van Asbroeck (75), Bevin (73), Brown (56), Carthy (55), S. Clarke (31), Canty (28), Howes (23), Dombrowski (20), Koren (12), Mullen (10), Scully (7)
11 Team Katusha–Alpecin 5619
23 riders
Kristoff (1806), Zakarin (1686), Špilak (748), Zabel (326), Restrepo (272), Gonçalves (98), M. Lammertink (96), T. Martin (80), Politt (75), Taaramäe (65), Kochetkov (61), Kišerlovski (58), Planckaert (52), Hollenstein (36), Bystrøm (35), Mamykin (30), Machado (26), Kuznetsov (24), Losada (20), Würtz Schmidt (10), Vicioso (7), Biermans (6), Mørkøv (2)
12 UAE Team Emirates 5494
23 riders
Ulissi (1569), Costa (929), Meintjes (758), Modolo (364), Polanc (296), Mohorič (259), Atapuma (180), Conti (174), Stake Laengen (155), Swift (155), Kump (130), Consonni (125), Marcato (88), Ferrari (76), Niemiec (75), Petilli (71), Đurasek (29), Mori (23), Aït El Abdia (10), Ravasi (10), Zurlo (8), Bono (5), Troia (5)
13 Lotto–Soudal 5466
25 riders
Wellens (1326), Gallopin (853), Greipel (788), Benoot (541), Valls (313), Marczyński (292), De Gendt (285), Armée (172), Debusschere (154), Monfort (139), J. Vanendert (132), Maes (93), Roelandts (60), Van der Sande (53), De Clercq (48), Wallays (44), Bak (41), De Buyst (25), Vervaeke (24), Sieberg (24), A. Hansen (24), Shaw (15), De Bie (11), Hofland (8), Frison (1)
14 Bahrain–Merida 5277
20 riders
V. Nibali (2196), I. Izagirre (1276), Colbrelli (887), Visconti (203), Pellizotti (101), Cink (82), Grmay (80), Bonifazio (78), Brajkovič (75), Bole (73), Gasparotto (67), Pibernik (37), Haussler (28), García (26), Sivtsov (22), Arashiro (21), Božič (16), J. Moreno (4), Insausti (4), Agnoli (1)
15 Astana 5018
28 riders
Aru (1214), Fuglsang (776), M. López (520), Lutsenko (409), Valgren (405), J. Hansen (309), L. Sánchez (247), Gatto (190), Bilbao (174), Chernetskiy (161), Breschel (95), Zeits (93), Cataldo (89), Hrivko (86), De Vreese (64), Kangert (49), Scarponi (35), Tleubayev (24), Korsæth (20), Minali (11), Kozhatayev (10), Stalnov (8), Tiralongo (5), Bizhigitov (5), Moser (5), Gruzdev (5), Fominykh (5), Zakharov (4)
16 LottoNL–Jumbo 4846
23 riders
Roglič (1191), Groenewegen (678), Kruijswijk (667), G. Bennett (566), Gesink (359), Lobato (225), van Emden (218), Boom (158), Martens (123), Battaglin (103), Clement (98), Bouwman (89), Tankink (73), Tolhoek (63), De Tier (60), Olivier (46), Roosen (38), Van Hoecke (27), Wynants (24), Vermeulen (22), Grøndahl Jansen (12), Van den Broeck (3), Wagner (3)
17 FDJ 3616
20 riders
Pinot (1317), Démare (1128), Molard (247), Roux (204), Reichenbach (124), Gaudu (108), Eiking (90), Cimolai (83), Vichot (82), Ladagnous (55), Manzin (40), Konovalovas (37), Morabito (24), Ludvigsson (20), Le Gac (19), Maison (16), Delage (10), Vincent (8), Bonnet (2), Roy (2)
18 Team Dimension Data 2575
22 riders
Haas (775), Boasson Hagen (561), Fraile (180), Thwaites (141), Pauwels (127), Morton (115), Sbaragli (113), Kudus (98), Cavendish (88), Debesay (70), Antón (54), J. Janse van Rensburg (54), O'Connor (52), R. Janse van Rensburg (48), Berhane (32), Gibbons (21), King (12), Eisel (10), Cummings (10), Dougall (7), Teklehaimanot (5), Venter (2)

Leader progress

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Event
(Winner)
Individual Team
Tour Down Under
(Richie Porte)
Richie Porte BMC Racing Team
Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race
(Nikias Arndt)
Orica–Scott
Omloop Het Nieuwsblad
(Greg Van Avermaet)
BMC Racing Team
Abu Dhabi Tour
(Rui Costa)
Strade Bianche
(Michał Kwiatkowski)
Paris–Nice
(Sergio Henao)
Tirreno–Adriatico
(Nairo Quintana)
Milan–San Remo
(Michał Kwiatkowski)
Peter Sagan
Dwars door Vlaanderen
(Yves Lampaert)
Quick-Step Floors
E3 Harelbeke
(Greg Van Avermaet)
Greg Van Avermaet
Volta a Catalunya
(Alejandro Valverde)
Gent–Wevelgem
(Greg Van Avermaet)
Tour of Flanders
(Philippe Gilbert)
Tour of the Basque Country
(Alejandro Valverde)
Paris–Roubaix
(Greg Van Avermaet)
Amstel Gold Race
(Philippe Gilbert)
La Flèche Wallonne
(Alejandro Valverde)
Liège–Bastogne–Liège
(Alejandro Valverde)
Tour de Romandie
(Richie Porte)
Eschborn-Frankfurt – Rund um den Finanzplatz
(Alexander Kristoff)
Tour of California
(George Bennett)
Giro d'Italia
(Tom Dumoulin)
Critérium du Dauphiné
(Jakob Fuglsang)
Tour de Suisse
(Simon Špilak)
Tour de France
(Chris Froome)
Clásica de San Sebastián
(Michał Kwiatkowski)
RideLondon–Surrey Classic
(Alexander Kristoff)
Tour de Pologne
(Dylan Teuns)
BinckBank Tour
(Tom Dumoulin)
EuroEyes Cyclassics
(Elia Viviani)
Bretagne Classic Ouest–France
(Elia Viviani)
Grand Prix Cycliste de Québec
(Peter Sagan)
Vuelta a España
(Chris Froome)
Chris Froome Team Sky
Grand Prix Cycliste de Montréal
(Diego Ulissi)
Greg Van Avermaet
Il Lombardia
(Vincenzo Nibali)
Presidential Tour of Turkey
(Diego Ulissi)
Tour of Guangxi
(Tim Wellens)

Notes

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  1. ^ As Meyer rode for the Australian national team, which is not a UCI WorldTeam, he was ineligible to score points towards the UCI World Tour standings.
  2. ^ As Masnada was riding for Androni–Sidermec–Bottecchia, which is not a UCI WorldTeam, he was ineligible to score points towards the UCI World Tour standings.
  3. ^ Listed on 810 by the UCI; missing leader points at the Vuelta a España.
  4. ^ Listed on 755 by the UCI; attributed leader points at the Vuelta a España when not the leader.
  5. ^ Listed on 217 by the UCI; attributed leader points at the Volta a Catalunya when not the leader.
  6. ^ Listed on 185 by the UCI; missing leader points at the Volta a Catalunya.
  7. ^ Talansky's points are not attributed to any team according to the UCI.

References

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  1. ^ "UCI expands WorldTour to 37 events". Cycling News. Retrieved 2 October 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d "The UCI reveals expanded UCI WorldTour calendar for 2017". UCI. Retrieved 2 October 2016.
  3. ^ "Sagan, Movistar top final UCI WorldTour rankings". Cycling News. Retrieved 2 October 2016.
  4. ^ "Peter Sagan wins Grand Prix Cycliste de Quebec". Cyclingnews.com. Immediate Media Company. 8 September 2017. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  5. ^ "Roche and Hermans lead BMC at inaugural Tour of Guangxi". Cyclingnews.com. Immediate Media Company. 16 October 2017. Retrieved 18 October 2017. As expected, there is no place in the BMC line-up for Greg Van Avermaet, though the Belgian is expected to attend the UCI Gala on the final evening of the race, where he will be crowned winner of the 2017 WorldTour.
  6. ^ Wynn, Nigel (25 February 2017). "Greg Van Avermaet pips Peter Sagan to Omloop Het Nieuwsblad victory". Cycling Weekly. Time Inc. UK. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  7. ^ "Van Avermaet wins E3 Harelbeke". Cyclingnews.com. Immediate Media Company. 24 March 2017. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  8. ^ "Greg Van Avermaet wins Gent-Wevelgem". Cyclingnews.com. Immediate Media Company. 26 March 2017. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  9. ^ "Van Avermaet wins Paris-Roubaix". Cyclingnews.com. Immediate Media Company. 9 April 2017. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  10. ^ Fletcher, Paul (23 July 2017). "Tour de France 2017: Chris Froome wins yellow jersey for the fourth time". BBC Sport. BBC. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  11. ^ Fotheringham, William (10 September 2017). "Chris Froome seals Vuelta a España title to win historic Vuelta-Tour double". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  12. ^ a b c Fletcher, Patrick (24 October 2017). "Van Avermaet and Van der Breggen crowned 2017 WorldTour champions". Cyclingnews.com. Immediate Media Company. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  13. ^ "WorldTour team bike guide - Cyclingnews.com". Retrieved 1 December 2016.
  14. ^ "Tour of Guangxi added to 2017 WorldTour calendar - Cyclingnews.com". Retrieved 1 December 2016.
  15. ^ "UCI statement on Tour of Qatar". UCI. Retrieved 28 December 2016.
  16. ^ "Tour of Qatar and Ladies Tour of Qatar cancelled". Cycling News. Retrieved 28 December 2016.
  17. ^ "UCI statement on the Presidential Cycling Tour of Turkey". UCI.ch. Union Cycliste Internationale. 15 February 2017. Retrieved 15 February 2017.
  18. ^ a b "New dates announced for the 2017 Presidential Cycling Tour of Turkey". UCI.ch. Union Cycliste Internationale. 30 March 2017. Retrieved 31 March 2017.
  19. ^ "A single points scale for calculating the UCI World Ranking and UCI WorldTour rankings from 2017". UCI.ch. Union Cycliste Internationale. 22 December 2016. Retrieved 28 December 2016.
  20. ^ a b "Amendments to regulations as from 01.01.2017" (PDF). UCI.ch. Union Cycliste Internationale. 22 December 2016. pp. 19–25. Retrieved 28 December 2016.
  21. ^ Brown, Gregor (18 August 2017). "UCI strikes deal with teams to prevent boycott of World Championship team time trial". Cycling Weekly. Time Inc. UK. Retrieved 24 August 2017.
  22. ^ "WorldTour Ranking – 2017: Individual Ranking (24/10/2017)". UCI World Tour. Infostrada Sports; Union Cycliste Internationale. 24 October 2017. Archived from the original on 13 August 2017. Retrieved 24 October 2017.
  23. ^ "WorldTour Ranking – 2017: Team Ranking (24/10/2017)". UCI World Tour. Infostrada Sports; Union Cycliste Internationale. 24 October 2017. Archived from the original on 30 July 2017. Retrieved 24 October 2017.
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