Tour of Oman 2019 route: stage by stage

For the eighth consecutive edition, the Tour of Oman will feature a summit finish on Green Mountain

The peloton negotiate the Tour of Oman 2017 route. Image: ASO/K. D. Thorstad

The peloton negotiate the Tour of Oman 2017 route. Image: ASO/K. D. Thorstad

(Image credit: Kåre Dehlie Thorstad)

The Tour of Oman returns to the summit of Jebel Akhdar for its queen stage on the penultimate day.

An early season test for riders of all talents, the 2019 edition will feature the Green Mountain finish for the ninth year running.

Taking place from February 16 to 21, the race is expected to attract star riders like Greg Van Avermaet (CCC Team), Alexander Kristoff (UAE Team Emirates) and André Greipel with his new Professional Contintental outfit Arkéa Samsic.

Climbers and Grand Tour winners have indeed graced the podium in previous years, and past winners of the race include Vincenzo Nibali and Chris Froome – the latter having taken the win twice, in 2013 and 2014.

Here’s a look at the individual stages of the race:

Swipe to scroll horizontally
Stage 1February 16Al Sawadi Beach > Suhar Corniche138.5km
Stage 2February 17Royal Cavalry Oman > Al Bustan156.5km
Stage 3February 18Shati Al Qurum > Qurayyat192.5km
Stage 4February 19Yiti (Al Sifah) > Oman Convention and Exhibition Centre131km
Stage 5February 120Sama’il > Jabal Al Akhdhar (Green Mountain)152km
Stage 6February 21Al Mouj Muscat > Matrah Corniche135.5km

The race opens with a sprinters paradise on stage one, over 138.5km from Al Sawadi Beach to a new finish on Suhar Corniche.

Stage one features a 1.3km finishing straight along the seafront, making it a pure test for the lead-out trains to take the first leader’s jersey of the race.

Sprinters will then take a back seat over stages two and three, as Royal Cavalry Oman makes it’s debut on the second day.

Tour of Oman

The 2017 Tour of Oman. Image: Muscat Municipality/Paumer/Kåre Dehlie Thorstad

A 156.5km run to Al-Bustan on stage two will be familiar territory for attacking riders, with a crunching flurry of climbs, descents and narrow roads characterising the final 30km.

Stage three starts from Shati Al Qurum and is another puncheur's dream over 192.5km to Qurayyat.

The stage finishes with a 2.8km-long climb at 6.5 per cent, where Sunweb’s Søren Kragh Andersen took victory in 2017.

Day four will see the peloton run from Yiti (Al Sifah) to the Oman Convention and Exhibition Centre, in a 131km stretch that features three runs up the Al-Jabal Street climb before the finish.

The queen stage then follows on day five, 152km from Samayil to the summit of Jabal Al Akhdhar – the Green Mountain.

After 5.7km at 10.5 per cent, the general classification is likely to be settled only when the best reach the summit.

Then on stage six comes an anticipated return for the sprinters, with 135.5km from Al Mouj Muscat to Matrah Corniche.

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Alex Ballinger

Alex Ballinger is editor of BikeBiz magazine, the leading publication for the UK cycle industry, and is the former digital news editor for CyclingWeekly.com. After gaining experience in local newsrooms, national newspapers and in digital journalism, Alex found his calling in cycling, first as a reporter, then as news editor responsible for Cycling Weekly's online news output, and now as the editor of BikeBiz. Since pro cycling first captured his heart during the 2010 Tour de France (specifically the Contador-Schleck battle) Alex covered three Tours de France, multiple editions of the Tour of Britain, and the World Championships, while both writing and video presenting for Cycling Weekly. He also specialises in fitness writing, often throwing himself into the deep end to help readers improve their own power numbers.  Away from the desk, Alex can be found racing time trials, riding BMX and mountain bikes, or exploring off-road on his gravel bike. He’s also an avid gamer, and can usually be found buried in an eclectic selection of books.