Inaugural GFNY City Marathon Quito this Sunday

First ever city marathon in Ecuador’s capital will be run under the GFNY brand

GFNY Endurance Sports Series is back in Ecuador with an inaugural running event: the GFNY Marathon Quito, the first ever marathon in Ecuador’s capital city.  Start and finish will be hosted at the Olympic Stadium Atahualpa, at 2800m above sea level.  GFNY Marathon Quito also offers a half marathon distance.

The course will start with a flat segment of more than 8km that will lead runners to the Historic Downtown Center of the city full of breathtaking colonial churches and monuments.  Athletes will then encounter rolling hills up until the turning point entering Quito´s modern downtown until they reach Olympic Stadium Atahualpa and the finish line after 42.195km.

Extending GFNY from cycling into running was a logical step for us because Lidia and I are lifelong endurance athletes,” says GFNY co-founder Uli Fluhme. “I’ve personally run dozens of marathons and am proud for the first ever city marathon in a capital to be a GFNY.”

At the heart of any GFNY, whether cycling or running, is the BE A PRO FOR A DAY(™) experience for all athletes. Athlete focus, fairness, inclusivity and innovation are the four pillars of GFNY.” 

 

Website: quitomarathon.gfny.com

 

 

About GFNY Global Endurance Sports Series

GFNY Global Endurance Sports Series is a sports event company with three decades of experience in racing, planning and organizing events. The global endurance sports brand hosts multiple events throughout the year around the world on five continents.

Working with partners around the world to deliver a first-class experience, GFNY Global Endurance Sports Series puts their athletes first.

 

Cycling

30 plus events around the world. View the latest calendar here

Riders get to BE A PRO FOR A DAY ® by competing against others, themselves and the clock in a personal endurance challenge.

Top 10% (20% at regional championships) of finishers in each age group qualify for the Racer Corral at every GFNY World event.

 

GFNY World Championship NYC

The 11th annual GFNY World Championship New York will be held on May 21, 2023. The race features the world’s most international peloton with riders from over 90 countries. Athletes take on a challenging 100-mile route from NYC to Bear Mountain to Fort Lee to compete against each other, the clock and themselves in a personal endurance challenge.

The official GFNY website is: www.gfny.com.

 

Further Material for Media Use

Official GFNY Marathon Quito Video: here

GFNY Press Images: here

GFNY Results: here

GFNY World calendar graphic: here

Previous GFNY press releases: here

 

Media Contact

Gran Fondo New York Inc.

Uli Fluhme,

Caroline Lindsay,

 

Ford GFNY Zapopan- Guadalajara: Rios and Muñiz win

1500 riders compete in inaugural edition

 

New York City, October 5, 2022 – Zapopan-Guadalajara hosted the first edition of Ford GFNY Zapopan 2022 this past Sunday. The racecourse was 129.3km with an elevation gain of only 875m making it the fastest GFNY ever held in Mexico.

Under overcast skies and in perfect temperatures, the race started off fast and right from the beginning two riders of Team Petrolike took the lead: Jose Ramon Muñiz Vazquez (Mexico) and former Giro d’Italia stage winner Miguel Angel Rubiano Chavez (Colombia).  The chase group included Mexican elite rider Miguel Arroyo and former Israel Cycling Academy pro Luis Lemus, fighting tooth and nail to close the gap to the leaders.

At the end it was Muñiz who took the win in a tight sprint finish in 2:45:18 against Rubiano. Arroyo rounded out the podium 17 seconds behind the leaders. 

In the female race,  GFNY Bogota champion Ana Rios (Colombia) took her second GFNY win in 03:00:38. Karen Villamizar (Colombia) and GFNY Monterrey champion Marcela Prieto (Mexico) rounded out the podium.

Next up on the GFNY calendar is the inaugural GFNY Marathon Quito this Sunday, October 9, 2022. Thousands of runners will hit the streets of Ecuador’s capital for its first city marathon.

 

About GFNY Global Endurance Sports Series

GFNY Global Endurance Sports Series is a sports event company with three decades of experience in racing, planning and organizing events. The global endurance sports brand hosts multiple events throughout the year around the world on five continents.

Working with partners around the world to deliver a first-class experience, GFNY Global Endurance Sports Series puts their athletes first.

 

Cycling

30 plus events around the world. View the latest calendar here

Riders get to BE A PRO FOR A DAY ® by competing against others, themselves and the clock in a personal endurance challenge.

Top 10% (20% at regional championships) of finishers in each age group qualify for the Racer Corral at every GFNY World event.

 

GFNY World Championship NYC

The 11th annual GFNY World Championship New York will be held on May 21, 2023. The race features the world’s most international peloton with riders from over 90 countries. Athletes take on a challenging 100-mile route from NYC to Bear Mountain to Fort Lee to compete against each other, the clock and themselves in a personal endurance challenge.

The official GFNY website is: www.gfny.com.

 

Further Material for Media Use

Official GFNY Zapopan video: here

GFNY Press Images: here

GFNY Results: here

GFNY World calendar graphic: here

Previous GFNY press releases: here

 

Media Contact

Gran Fondo New York Inc.

Uli Fluhme,

Caroline Lindsay,

 

Philippe Hendrickx’s Road to Recovery

‘I clung on,’ the Niçoise rider says. “The mile became two, then 10, then 20, and finally I found Cannes.”

NICE, France — Cycling has always been part of Philippe Hendrickx’s life, from the moment he learned to ride a bike as a boy.

Hendrickx, 44, now enjoys a full life and a career in sales that has taken him and his family from Belgium to Nice, France, where he can ride along the French Riviera​​. “Starting a family, raising children, making them happy. This is the biggest adventure of a lifetime — and can be one of the least simple,” he says.

Hendrickx was born and raised in Belgium near the roads of the Liège-Bastogne-Liège — also known as La Doyenne, or “The Old Lady” — one of the oldest and most arduous of European professional road cycling races. “I always dreamt of being a professional rider,” Hendrickx says. “I like to ride because it gives me a feeling of freedom. I also like the effort necessary to ride and enjoy the solitude on the bike… the calm and serenity after intense days of work.”

Everything was perfect until September 2020, he recalls.

“During a business trip I was taken by headaches of unprecedented violence and over the day I lost my eyesight,” he says, noting he is visually impaired from optic neuritis, which is an early sign of multiple sclerosis. Temporary vision loss is a common symptom due to damage to one’s optical nerve. “Sometimes when the sun shines strong, it’s like being drunk, and it’s difficult to keep one’s balance.”

He went to the hospital, which began a long ordeal of medical exams, blood tests and CAT scans. “The verdict is hard to take. I suffer from multiple sclerosis, and my life may never be the same again.”

As for many riders, cycling has helped as both mental and physical therapy to help Hendrickx become stronger.
“I had to be remobilized; I had to find things to do, and the bike became obvious again,” he says. “Drug treatments are very hard to bear. They can cause as much pain as the disease itself.”

So he started with the first pedal stroke on the home trainer, and began with one mile, which exhausted him.

“I clung on. The mile became two, then 10, then 20, and finally I found Cannes on the GFNY page, and it became my goal to reach.”

He completed Cannes in 2022, and his new goal is GFNY in Cannes again and New York in 2023.

He has two rules to get him through the races.

“One, never give up. Two, remember number one.”

 

Have an interesting personal story to share for Inside the Peloton? Contact me at:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/waldensiew/
Twitter: @waldensiew
Email:

Inaugural Ford GFNY Zapopan Guadalajara this Sunday

GFNY descends on Mexico’s metropolis for yet another race in the country

 

Ford GFNY Zapopan offers riders a long race course of 129.3km with an elevation gain of 875m.  Start and finish will be hosted at the historic centre in front of the Basilica of our Lady of Zapopan.

Most of Zapopan is flat and surrounded by only a few hills, which makes it a very fast race.  Right at the start of the race, riders will enter the JVC Circuit onto the Guadalajara Tepic Freeway.  The course passes the historic center with its many tourist attractions.

“We’re excited to bring GFNY to such a vibrant city which has welcomed us with open arms,”  says Parides Sports Management CEO Shaun Gad.  “Rarely have I worked with a government that has such passion for cycling and is ready to bring all the support needed for a perfect race.”

Race week activities will take place at the Estadio Akron.  It includes the traditional GFNY Group Ride on Saturday where cyclists get to enjoy a casual ride together.

Zapopan, located in Jalisco, was conquered by the Spanish in 1541 and is surrounded by historic sites and colonial style streets. It is the perfect opportunity for riders and families to immerse in Mexican history, flavors and traditions.

 

Website: zapopan.gfny.com

 

About GFNY Global Endurance Sports Series

GFNY Global Endurance Sports Series is a sports event company with three decades of experience in racing, planning and organizing events. The global endurance sports brand hosts multiple events throughout the year around the world on five continents.

Working with partners around the world to deliver a first-class experience, GFNY Global Endurance Sports Series puts their athletes first.

 

Cycling

30 plus events around the world. View the latest calendar here

Riders get to BE A PRO FOR A DAY ® by competing against others, themselves and the clock in a personal endurance challenge.

Top 10% (20% at regional championships) of finishers in each age group qualify for the Racer Corral at every GFNY World event.

 

GFNY World Championship NYC

The 11th annual GFNY World Championship New York will be held on May 21, 2023. The race features the world’s most international peloton with riders from over 90 countries. Athletes take on a challenging 100-mile route from NYC to Bear Mountain to Fort Lee to compete against each other, the clock and themselves in a personal endurance challenge.

The official GFNY website is: www.gfny.com.

 

Further Material for Media Use

Official GFNY Zapopan video: here

GFNY Press Images: here

GFNY Results: here

GFNY World calendar graphic: here

Previous GFNY press releases: here

 

Media Contact

Gran Fondo New York Inc.

Uli Fluhme,

Caroline Lindsay,

 

Zambrano and Molineros win 4th GFNY Ecuador Manta

The race brought $2.5m into the local economy according to the sports minister

 

New York City, September 27, 2022 – Manta, located on the coast of Ecuador, hosted the 4th edition of GFNY Ecuador Manta 2022 this past Sunday. The racecourse was 142.2 km long with 2030m of climbing. 

The race started off at Barbasquillo Manta, where the first 5km were neutralised allowing the peloton to group until Piedra Larga.  By Santa Marianita, fifty racers formed the lead group.  

 

During the 7km climb of El Aromo, Jean Paul Aguirre (Ecuador) put in an attack which was matched by locals Renzo Molineros and Javier Fiallo.  Molineros was racing his sixth GFNY but was yet to crack the top 10.

With 25 km to go, descending to Manta, Molineros put in the decisive attack and took the solo win in 3:58:43, followed by Cornejo (4:00:33) and Fiallo (4:00:34) who rounded out the all Ecuadorian podium.

In the female race, local Daniela Zambrano took the win in 04:18:12. Estefania Rivera (Ecuador) and Diana Cano (United States) rounded out the podium.

It is the 4th time for GFNY in Manta. The event has resulted in an economic benefit of 2.5 million dollars for the city with hundreds of visitors. Manta is, without a doubt, the sports capital of the country“, said Mario Álava, Manta’s Sports Minister.

Next up on the GFNY calendar is the inaugural GFNY Zapopan – Guadalajara in Mexico this Sunday, October 2, 2022.

 

 

About GFNY Global Endurance Sports Series

GFNY Global Endurance Sports Series is a sports event company with three decades of experience in racing, planning and organizing events. The global endurance sports brand hosts multiple events throughout the year around the world on five continents.

Working with partners around the world to deliver a first-class experience, GFNY Global Endurance Sports Series puts their athletes first.

 

Cycling

30 plus events around the world. View the latest calendar here

Riders get to BE A PRO FOR A DAY ® by competing against others, themselves and the clock in a personal endurance challenge.

Top 10% (20% at regional championships) of finishers in each age group qualify for the Racer Corral at every GFNY World event.

 

GFNY World Championship NYC

The 11th annual GFNY World Championship New York will be held on May 21, 2023. The race features the world’s most international peloton with riders from over 90 countries. Athletes take on a challenging 100-mile route from NYC to Bear Mountain to Fort Lee to compete against each other, the clock and themselves in a personal endurance challenge.

The official GFNY website is: www.gfny.com.

 

Further Material for Media Use

Official GFNY Manta video: here

GFNY Press Images: here

GFNY Results: here

GFNY World calendar graphic: here

Previous GFNY press releases: here

 

Media Contact

Gran Fondo New York Inc.

Uli Fluhme,

Caroline Lindsay,

 

4th GFNY Ecuador Manta

Manta on the Pacific Coast hosts the latest edition of Ecuador’s first ever granfondo this Sunday September 25

 

GFNY Manta offers riders a challenging course of 142.2km with 2030m of climbing.  This year’s race will start and finish at Hotel Wyndham Manta located in the lively center of this coastal city with breathtaking Pacific Ocean views.

Ecuador is living a road cycling boom right now that wasn’t even stoppable by the pandemic,” says GFNY CEO Uli Fluhme. “GFNY Ecuador Manta was the first ever granfondo in the country in 2019 and has been held every year since. It’s one of the select few endurance races globally that were never cancelled or postponed in the last two years. This speaks volumes for the professional work that the team around Elena Nolasco and Christian Mendez are putting in.”

With GFNY Marathon Quito on October 9, GFNY Panama City on October 30 and GFNY Cycling Quito on November 13, Elena and Christian have expanded their offerings in Ecuador and even Panama – and there’s more to come!” 

Race week activities will take place at the Hotel Wyndham Manta.  It includes the 40km fun warm up group ride on Saturday where riders get to do a relaxed ride together with friends and competitors.  On Sunday, riders will tackle a spectacular and challenging route which will combine rolling hills along the Pacific coastline and the Pacoche Forest.  

 

Website: manta.gfny.com

 

About GFNY Global Endurance Sports Series

GFNY Global Endurance Sports Series is a sports event company with three decades of experience in racing, planning and organizing events. The global endurance sports brand hosts multiple events throughout the year around the world on five continents.

Working with partners around the world to deliver a first-class experience, GFNY Global Endurance Sports Series puts their athletes first.

 

Cycling

30 plus events around the world. View the latest calendar here

Riders get to BE A PRO FOR A DAY ® by competing against others, themselves and the clock in a personal endurance challenge.

Top 10% (20% at regional championships) of finishers in each age group qualify for the Racer Corral at every GFNY World event.

 

GFNY World Championship NYC

The 11th annual GFNY World Championship New York will be held on May 21, 2023. The race features the world’s most international peloton with riders from over 90 countries. Athletes take on a challenging 100-mile route from NYC to Bear Mountain to Fort Lee to compete against each other, the clock and themselves in a personal endurance challenge.

The official GFNY website is: www.gfny.com.

 

Further Material for Media Use

Official GFNY Manta video: here

GFNY Press Images: here

GFNY Results: here

GFNY World calendar graphic: here

Previous GFNY press releases: here

 

Media Contact

Gran Fondo New York Inc.

Uli Fluhme,

Caroline Lindsay,

 

A Not-So Surprising Double Standard on Technological Cheating

By Chris Geiser (@ThisGeiser)

ETHICS! If you can’t trust the fix, what can you trust?

It warms my heart every time I hear the late, great Jon Polito discuss the topic of ethics in Joel and Ethan Coen’s Miller’s Crossing. Ethics in character Johnny Caspar’s view is what separates us from the beasts of burden, what keeps us from anarchy. The subtext for honor among thieves.

Now if you can’t trust the fix, what can you trust? For a good return, you gotta go bettin’ on chance, and then you’re back with anarchy, right back in the jungle. That’s why ethics is important — what separates us from the animals, the beasts of burden, the beasts of prey. Ethics.

Let’s finish it here with our own version:

Whereas, uh, dopers of any kind, is a horse of a different color, ethics-wise. As in, they ain’t got any.

It’s a movie. I don’t believe a word of it, but it entertains me as it accurately paints the world that Caspar lives in. Honor among thieves. The fix. The silence. The acceptance of the fix and the silence as a code of ethics allows thieves to protect each other.

Somehow, in cycling, we watch a similar world. Honor among thieves. Silence. Omerta. So as Caspar would say, “back to this topic…ethics”. Leaving biological doping aside, while we watch governing bodies punt to new organizations that are likely underfunded, we can at least see an admission that the UCI understands that the only way to stop doping is to innovate. The 2022 UCI Agenda spells out their vision for credibility in catching cheaters of all kinds. Specifically, the plan on technological cheats feels vague and out of date. In summary:

  • Develop a new generation tablet that is more efficient and cheaper and thus more likely to be used around the world by our National Federations (2019).
  • Use X-ray technology with recognized partners in checking bikes before and after races (2018).
  • Conduct more thorough checks by taking bikes apart if necessary (2018–2022).
  • Develop onboard magnetometer technology to prevent, in real-time, the possible use of electric aids in competition (2020).
  • Have measuring tools validated by scientifically renowned, independent laboratories (2018–2020).

With the possible exception of taking bikes apart, many of the controls feel like a rehash of the same-old/same-old. As anyone who is familiar with anything I have ever written, no mention of the use of data, no mention of machine learning, or synthesis of performance results to start understanding where to look. But I digress. This isn’t necessarily meant to be an indictment of UCI’s “bad for business” policies on policing. Even though in their agenda they have declared a restoration of credibility and a forward-thinking vigilance to maintaining the credibility of the sport.

While our sport has restored its previously tarnished credibility, it needs sustained support to ensure that remains the case. The fight against technological fraud, the ongoing support against doping, and the safeguarding of rider integrity are among my priorities in that respect.

Again, if you can’t trust the fix, what can you trust? It’s a hard rule of mathematics that you probably won’t find more cheaters if you’re not looking that hard. Not without luck. And likely not without someone forgetting their ethics.

 

Omerta — The Backbone of Ethics

So we are all caught up on ethics. All caught up on technological doping. I could cite the examples, cite the ghost pedaling bikes, talk about “hide the bike”, and get into a whole riff on mechanical doping that went uncaught, untested, unfound. The racket of bike changes, unruly cadences, and cadences that went above zero RPM without anyone pedaling. It’s all there to unpack but it would take weeks, months maybe, and while the UCI can only rely on technology that is being outpaced, and therefore very beatable. But that’s just prevention. Root cause analysis goes back to ethics and Omerta.

The ancient mafia code of silence. Omerta. The ethics of protecting the status quo and honor among thieves, versus clearing the air. Johan Bruyneel was banned from cycling for his role in running the systematic doping program for U.S. Postal until the bill came due, the jig was up, and Armstrong confessed. “Singled out as scapegoats for an entire generation”, was Bruyneel’s defense of his situation. He may be right. Like cockroaches, where there’s one, there are thousands. And still, outside of a lack of test data, or any real advancement in the technology used to catch cheats (of any kind), to single out that one generation as the only doping generation, while the watts per kilogram continue to go up to ridiculous levels would be pretty naive. The problems are not even close to solving. Credibility has not been restored in the eyes of anyone that is actually paying attention.

It’s a question of ethics, everything above board, so you know who’s s a friend and who’s an enemy. — Johnny Caspar

And so on Twitter — several questions were posed to Bruyneel:

 


“If you had been offered motor technology would you have used it?”

The answer was that there were never motors used. The ensuing threads and arguments kicked up a theme of the honor among thieves that there is a line you don’t cross. Somehow, it was ok to dope — biologically — it’s still the athlete (however chemically enhanced), rather than some “artificial” means of creating the differentiation they needed to get ahead or stay ahead of the Peloton. Regardless of the bionic creation of half-drugs/half-human that is now powering their way up an HC climb without regard to the attainment of previously impossible numbers — it doesn’t matter. The ego tells them it’s ok, and that everyone is doing it. “Ethics”. Honor among thieves.

And what of it? The difference, that is, between biological doping to motor doping? What makes one more acceptable than the other? What could possibly create the sense of embarrassment and offense that Armstrong and his crew took to the insinuation that they might have had mechanical help as well as pharmacological help? The honor among thieves blurs the line and creates a notion of acceptable versus unacceptable and creates judgment within the ranks. But if everyone truly saw it as so offensive, why the headline on technological doping within the UCI Credibility manifesto? Clearly, there is an admission of the problem, along with a tacit if ineffective, and predictable “strategy” for dealing with it or at least appearing to deal with it. Perhaps only the biological dopers can tell us the answer to this question — IF — they are willing to speak about it. But again, we come to the misguided sense of ethics that steers the Omerta.

An aside about the use of honor among thieves — when fraud is committed, those that commit fraud, have stolen. Thieves. Let’s be clear on that.

Almost a decade has passed since Armstrong’s grift of a confession on national television. The notions of friendship, character, and ethics, were abandoned as deals were worked out to minimize the damage.

You are pissed that you were singled out. Why not change that? You have enough info on others.

The reply: “And, whatever I may know or not know, I’m not a rat unlike some of your heroes.

Friendship. Character. Ethics. Bruyneel’s unwillingness to answer the questions, to put the record straight — hey it’s been a while, why not turn it around for yourself — speaks volumes about the culture. The Omerta persists, and we are left with only the notion of Johnny Caspar’s ethics. The friendship, character, and ethics of silence on what matters, while professing to know what’s good for the sport. 

The jerseys still hang on the wall. They get posted for cheap sycophantic responses and clickbait, while Armstrong and his cronies have gone out of their way on The Move to dispel as ridiculous that they had ever used motors. Assuming as preposterous that they would never cheat in such an unethical way. That, in spite of everything else, they still believe they were the greatest ever. Giving us all the high hat, and then expecting us all to buy into it. Because, well, that dirty laundry they post pictures of still gets applause from those who aren’t looking closely.

The Parallel

So what’s the parallel with Miller’s Crossing? Well if you’re not there yet, I get it. I tend to wax a little poetic, and I own it. Bruyneel’s world, like Caspar’s world, has a code of ethics built around a criminal conspiracy. Owning those that control the enforcement of the rules, while making sure to pretend that those who enforce the rules are somehow still in charge. Differentiation on levels of criminality, fraud, and cheating, within those worlds comes down to maintaining the honor among thieves. To violate that code is an offense punishable by ostracization in the cycling world and Caspar’s world a bullet to the brain (always one in the brain).

To those of us that sit outside those worlds, we only see one thing, and it’s not ethics.

 

GFNY expands in Asia with Krabi Thailand

GFNY Krabi is adding to races in Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines and will take place on February 26, 2023

 

GFNY Global Endurance Sports Series adds GFNY Krabi, scheduled for February 26, 2023. The competitive long distance is 135.4km long with 2115m of climbing.  Start and finish will be hosted directly aside Krabi´s most famous, central and prominent beach: Ao Nang.

GFNY’s expansion in Asia had been paused due to the pandemic but we’re back on track now with this spectacular new destination,” says GFNY CEO Uli Fluhme.  The GFNY events in South East Asia attract a much younger demographic compared to mass participation events in Europe or North America. Similar to Latin America, there is also a much higher percentage of women racing which is exciting.”

In traditional cycling countries there is concern about the lack of young riders. Having held races in Asia since 2016 and seen the excitement for the sport, I have been confident ever since that the popularity of road cycling among young people there will ultimately extend back to Europe.”  

Krabi, located in the southern west coast of Thailand, is one of the most popular tourist destinations in Thailand.  It’s famous for stunning views, breathtaking beaches and islands, as well as being home to one of the most beautiful coral reefs around the world.  Krabi also features some of the most photogenic sunsets in Thailand accompanied by spectacular cloud displays and dramatic limestone formations.

Krabi presents GFNY riders, families and friends a wide range of countless nature attractions, cultural activities,  a variety of hotels and restaurants, fantastic cuisine and tourism options which will make the GFNY adventure of a lifetime.

 

Website: krabi.gfny.com

 

 

About GFNY Global Endurance Sports Series

GFNY Global Endurance Sports Series is a sports event company with three decades of experience in racing, planning and organizing events. The global endurance sports brand hosts multiple events throughout the year around the world on five continents.

Working with partners around the world to deliver a first-class experience, GFNY Global Endurance Sports Series puts their athletes first.

 

Cycling

30 plus events around the world. View the latest calendar here

Riders get to BE A PRO FOR A DAY ® by competing against others, themselves and the clock in a personal endurance challenge.

Top 10% (20% at regional championships) of finishers in each age group qualify for the Racer Corral at every GFNY World event.

 

GFNY World Championship NYC

The 11th annual GFNY World Championship New York will be held on May 21, 2023. The race features the world’s most international peloton with riders from over 90 countries. Athletes take on a challenging 100-mile route from NYC to Bear Mountain to Fort Lee to compete against each other, the clock and themselves in a personal endurance challenge.

The official GFNY website is: www.gfny.com.

 

Further Material for Media Use

Official GFNY Krabi video: here

GFNY Press Images: here

GFNY Results: here

GFNY World calendar graphic: here

Previous GFNY press releases: here

 

Media Contact

Gran Fondo New York Inc.

Uli Fluhme,

Caroline Lindsay,

 

GFNY announces GFNY Krabi

GFNY announces GFNY Krabi
February 26, 2023

 

The Course

 

Ao Nang Landmark, Krabi’s beach-front shopping, dining and entertainment center, will serve as the Race Village of GFNY Krabi. The start line is located directly aside Krabi’s most famous, central and prominent beach, Ao Nang Beach. A sunrise over pristine blue waters, gently splashing waves, longtail boats, and stunning limestone formations will provide a sense of tranquility before the adrenaline rush of the race kicks off.

After a short stretch along the coast, the course turns inland, with both long and medium riders racing through the center of Krabi City, past the University, and heading to hinterlands of Krabi province along fantastic road surfaces. The start will be fast and feel flat, with a few short, steep climbs to test the peloton.

After 20km, the course split separates the medium route riders, who will turn left and ride along a flat and fast section, and long route riders, who will go straight and start an undulating climb for 5km.

Long route riders will travel on smaller, rural roads, ride past palm plantations and mango plantations, small local villages and lots of twisty roads and rolling hills, all the while enjoying beautiful tropical nature and imposing limestone formations. The rolling hills will be relentless, a course that constantly goes up and down and totals 2125m of climbing over 135km.

Three significant climbs that are longer and steep will challenge you between KM 35 and KM 85 as you race along the foothills of the Khao Phanom Bencha National Park, with views of its imposing 1397m peak and the range’s lower peaks sprawled out as far as the eye can see. You’ll climb to the highest point on the course, at 212m, along the main pass over the Khao Phanom Bencha mountain range and head back to the coast.

On a parallel road, the medium route riders will take on a flatter and fast course, with one main climb of 10km reaching 120m. Both routes will come together near the remote, wild coast north of Krabi. Keep an eye out for the iconic statue of the reclining Buddha under a cliff.

There is one last short, steep climb before reaching the finish line back at Ao Nang Beach and enjoying the post-race banquet and celebrations.

Join us at GFNY Krabi and be spellbound by the beauty of Krabi, the beaches, the limestone formations, the National Park. Savor the standard of hotels and restaurants and service, while enjoying sport and all the tourism attractions that Krabi has to offer.

 

 

Long Route – 135.4 Km / 2115m+

 

Medium Route – 86.3 Km / 1233m+

 

About Krabi

 

Krabi is one of the most popular tourist destinations in Thailand. It’s famous for stunning views, breathtaking beaches and islands, as well as being home to one of the most beautiful coral reefs around the world.

While you are coming here to race GFNY, the city and its surroundings provide great attractions like hot springs, wildlife sanctuary, sea caves, flourishing coral reefs, exotic marine life, limestone cliffs and national parks including the paradise islands.

Krabi also features some of the most photogenic sunsets in Thailand, accompanied by spectacular displays of cloud to cloud lighting, and dramatic scenery with limestone formations at every turn.

Besides the countless nature attractions, there are also cultural activities like temples that will impress you. A full variety of accommodation options, fantastic cuisine and tourism options await for this GFNY adventure of a lifetime.

Getting Here

 


AIRPORTS

The relevant GFNY Krabi airports are:

Suvarnabhumi International Airport, Bangkok (BKK)
Don Muang International Airport, Bangkok (DMK)
Phuket International Airport (HKT)
Krabi International Airport (KBV)

Krabi has several direct flights from Asia, Australia and Europe. Flight Times from:

  • Singapore 1h30
  • Hong Kong 1h30
  • Kuala Lumpur 2h
  • Perth 4h
  • Europe 11h

For other international travelers, we recommend flying into Bangkok (BKK, DMK), and connect onward to a flight to Krabi (KBV) This presents an ideal opportunity to stop over in Bangkok to visit the capital of Thailand.

Combine the race with a stay in Phuket by flying into the international Phuket airport (HKT) and take a 2hr30 taxi to Krabi.

 

 

 

Col de la Croix de Fer, Col du Glandon and Vaujany were the three major obstacles

New York City, August 30, 2022 – The third annual GFNY Alpes Vaujany in the French Alps had a 119.6 km long course with 4023m of climbing including the legendary Col de la Croix de Fer and Col du Glandon on the menu.

GFNY Alpes Vaujany started from the bottom of Croix de Fer: 15 riders formed an early lead group including GFNY NYC runner-up Mattia Gaffuri (Italy) and Frederic Glorieux (Belgium), third at GFNY Grand Ballon earlier this year. During the first switchbacks of Col du Glandon, double GFNY Alpe d’Huez champ Tim Alleman (Belgium) and Archie Cross (United Kingdom) put in several attacks and managed to escape from the main group, reaching the summit of Col du Glandon about a minute ahead of Gaffuri, Glorieux and David de Vecchi (France).

After the 25km long descent, Alleman used the final, difficult 5km climb up to Vaujany that he knows so well from winning GFNY L’Alpe d’Huez, to take the lead in his hands. He crossed the finish line with a time of 4:04:17.  Cross followed in 04:05:56 and Gaffuri (04:07:42) in third.

In the female race, local Celine Schuller took the win in 5:26:09,  18 minutes ahead of Claire Hoffbeck and Amélie de Vecchi who completed the all french podium in a time of 5:52:50.

 

Next up is the fourth annual GFNY Manta in Ecuador on September 25.

 

 

About GFNY Global Endurance Sports Series

GFNY Global Endurance Sports Series is a sports event company with three decades of experience in racing, planning and organizing events. The global endurance sports brand hosts multiple events throughout the year around the world on five continents.

Working with partners around the world to deliver a first-class experience, GFNY Global Endurance Sports Series puts their athletes first.

 

Cycling

30 plus events around the world. View the latest calendar here

Riders get to BE A PRO FOR A DAY ® by competing against others, themselves and the clock in a personal endurance challenge.

Top 10% (20% at regional championships) of finishers in each age group qualify for the Racer Corral at every GFNY World event.

 

GFNY World Championship NYC

The 11th annual GFNY World Championship New York will be held on May 21, 2023. The race features the world’s most international peloton with riders from over 90 countries. Athletes take on a challenging 100-mile route from NYC to Bear Mountain to Fort Lee to compete against each other, the clock and themselves in a personal endurance challenge.

The official GFNY website is: www.gfny.com.

 

Further Material for Media Use

GFNY Alpes Vaujany video: here

GFNY Press Images: here

GFNY Results: here

GFNY World calendar graphic: here

Previous GFNY press releases: here

 

Media Contact

Gran Fondo New York Inc.

Uli Fluhme,

Caroline Lindsay,

 

Partners - Global