Key points:
The 13th Tour of Oman, scheduled for 10 to 14 February, will serve up a five-course menu catering to all tastes, from sprinters and punchers to climbers. Its two iconic climbs —Eastern Mountain (stage 3) and Green Mountain (stage 5)— will be tough nuts to crack at this point in the season.
Battle-hardened favourites such as Adam Yates, Emanuel Buchmann and Jesús Herrada will have to keep a close eye on stars in the making such as the whiz kid Isaac del Toro and the new French kids on the block, Antoine Huby, Paul Magnier and Alexy Faure-Prost.
As the preamble to the Tour of Oman, the big guns will fire the opening salvo in the second edition of the Muscat Classic, on a 174.3 km course finishing on a 1.1 km with an average gradient of 10% climb that is the perfect launch pad for a puncher to launch a searing attack.
The sprinters know full well that their climber colleagues will have to wait for their day in the sun in the Tour of Oman. Alexander Kristoff, the most prolific stage hunter in the history of the race, is determined to take his tally to 10 victories, but he will have to contend with rivals such as Caleb Ewan, Fabio Jakobsen, Bryan Coquard and the precocious Paul Magnier, who let his raw speed do the talking in Spain for the first race of the season. The Norwegian will have but one shot at this goal, considering that the summit finish of stage 2 to Qurayyat, a 2.6 km ascent at an average gradient of 7%, is probably more than he can handle.
In stage 3, the finish on Eastern Mountain will take the riders over the 1,000-metre mark for the first time in the week and, perhaps, the season. The climbers will cross swords on this 4.6 km ascent at 8.5%. After this litmus test comes the up-and-down profile of stage 4, featuring the Yitti Hills, where Diego Ulissi will be coming back for seconds after his win in 2023.
However, the moment of truth will come on the slopes of Jabal al-Akhdar, or Green Mountain, where Mauri Vansevenant came a single second short of taking the win from Matteo Jorgenson last year. The Belgian is out to get his own back, but he will be facing other rivals this time round. Adam Yates constitutes the main threat in his first participation in the race, but there are a host of riders eager to use the slopes as springboards to success: Emanuel Buchmann, Isaac del Toro, Louis Meintjes, Jesús Herrada, Cristian Rodríguez and Warren Barguil have also thrown their hats into the ring.
Muscat Classic:
Al Mouj Muscat Al Bustan
2024 stages Tour of Oman:
Stage 1: Oman Across Ages Museum > Oman Convention & Exhibition Centre (OCEC)
Stage 2: As Sifah > Qurayyat
Stage 3: Bid Bid > Eastern Mountain
Stage 4: Al Rustaq Fort > Yitti Hills
Stage 5: Imty > Jabal Al Akhdhar (Green Mountain)
17 TEAMS, MAIN CONTENDERS:
Germany
Bora–Hansgrohe: Buchmann and Herzog (GER)
Australia
Team Jayco AlUla: Ewan, Hamilton (AUS) and De Marchi (ITA)
Belgium
Soudal–Quick-Step: Vansevenant (BEL), Huby and Magnier (FRA)
Lotto Dstny: T.De Gendt (BEL)
Intermarché–Wanty: Meintjes (RSA) and Faure Prost (FRA)
United Arab Emirates
UAE Team Emirates: A.Yates (GBR), Del Toro (MEX) and Ulissi (ITA)
Spain
Equipo Kern Pharma: U.Aznar (ESP)
BurgosBH: Fuentes (ESP) and Sainbayaryn (MGL)
France
Cofidis: Coquard (FRA) and J.Herrada (ESP)
Arkéa–B&B Hotels: Gesbert (FRA) and Rodríguez (ESP)
Japan
JCL Team Ukyo: Earle (AUS) and Pesenti (ITA)
Kazakhstan
Astana Qazaqstan Team: Charmig (DEN) and Schelling (NED)
Malaysia
Terengganu Cycling Team: Kudus (ERI)
Norway
Uno-X Mobility: Kristoff (NOR) and Wallin (DEN)
Oman
Oman National Team: TBC
Netherlands
Team DSM–Firmenich PostNL: Barguil (FRA) and Jakobsen (NED)
Thaïland
Rookai Insurance: Carstensen (GER)