Amstel Gold Race

Road Β· One Day
When Third Sunday in April
Course One Day
Since 1966
Format One Day
Category WorldTour
Why watch?

A spring classic built on short climbs, tight corners, and late-race chaos in the hills of Limburg. The race is won in the final hour, not the first four.

Race guide

Amstel Gold Race

Amstel Gold Race is a one-day WorldTour classic held each April in the southern Netherlands. The route loops through the rolling Limburg countryside, linking dozens of short, sharp climbs that fragment the field without offering anywhere to hide.

From Eddy Merckx and Philippe Gilbert to Mathieu van der Poel's astonishing 2019 comeback, Amstel Gold Race has a habit of producing winners and moments that stick.

Why this race matters

Amstel Gold Race is the Dutch answer to the Ardennes classics and the only real classic on the men's calendar in the Netherlands. The route loops through Limburg's narrow roads and punchy bergs, stacking climbs close enough together that recovery becomes tactical rather than physiological. The finale is rarely a pure sprint or a long-range procession, which makes it one of the more volatile and watchable one-day races of the spring.

How this race is usually won

The race is defined by repetition rather than a single defining climb. Riders face somewhere between thirty and forty short ascents, most under a kilometre, many steep enough to hurt but none long enough to create decisive selection on their own. The Cauberg, climbed multiple times in the closing circuits around Valkenburg, is the most famous, but it is rarely where the race is won outright. Instead, the cumulative fatigue and the narrow, twisting roads create a war of attrition in the final thirty kilometres.

Positioning becomes critical as the field splinters into small groups. The winner is usually someone who can survive the repeated accelerations, stay near the front through technical descents and tight corners, and still respond when the decisive move goes. Pure climbers often struggle with the stop-start rhythm, while classics specialists who can handle short power efforts tend to thrive. Weather, particularly wind or rain, can turn the race into a positioning lottery even earlier than usual.