The end of the racing season is near, but the UCI Road World Championships are just around the corner.
Following last year's “Mega World Championships” in Glasgow, Scotland, this season's event will be held in Zurich, Switzerland.
The biggest stars of the men's and women's peloton, including road race champions Mathieu van der Pol (Netherlands) and Lotte Kopecky (Belgium) and time trial champions Remco Evenpole (Belgium) and Chloe Dygert (USA), will be in Switzerland for the World Championships. Aim.
These four big names hope to wear the rainbow jersey again at the end of September, but there are plenty of other strong contenders heading to Zurich dreaming of similar glory.
Tadej Pogachar (Slovenia), Richard Karapas (Ecuador), Mads Pedersen (Denmark), Michael Matthews (Australia), Pauline Ferrand-Prevot (France), Grace Brown (Australia), Kristen Faulkner (USA) are some of the stars already confirmed for the 2024 World Championships.
More riders are expected to join the start list, including Demi Vollering (Netherlands), Stefan Kühn (Switzerland), Elisa Longo Borghini (Italy), and Josh Tarling (UK).
Follow Cycling News on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram to get alerts on important stories and action during the UCI Road World Championships.
FloBikes will broadcast the UCI Road World Championships in full in the US. The annual subscription fee is $150/year.
The UCI Road World Championships will also be streamed in Canada on FloBikes.
In the UK, cycling fans can catch all the road world championship action live on Discovery+.
A “standard” subscription to Discovery+, which includes Eurosport's cycling coverage, costs £6.99 per month for the standard plan. This package includes year-round cycling streaming as well as other live sports such as snooker, tennis, and motorsports.
These, plus TNT sports (Premier League, Champions League, Europa League soccer, rugby, wrestling, UFC, and MotoGP) are included in the premium subscription for £30.99 per month.
In Australia, national broadcaster SBS will broadcast Road World live on TV and online streaming.
If you live outside your region and need to access and watch the live streaming service, access may be subject to regional restrictions.
In this case, a VPN service may be useful, allowing you to pretend your computer is at home and log into your streaming account to catch all of the racing action.
Our colleagues at TechRadar thoroughly tested several VPN services and came up with some great recommendations below.
Some other very good options that are secure, reliable, and offer good bandwidth for streaming sports are ExpressVPN and the best budget option, Surfshark.
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