2000 - The Santos Tour Down Under includes a 180-kilometre McLaren Vale stage, which remains the longest stage in the race's history. The overall winner is Frenchman Gilles Maignan from AG2R Prévoyance
Stage 1: Adelaide- 96kms | Winner: Robbie McEwen
Stage 2: North Adelaide to Goolwa - 152km | Winner: Michael Rogers
Stage 3: Glenelg to McLaren Vale - 184km | Winner: Stéphane Bergès
Stage 4: Unley to Modbury- 136km| Winner: Steffen Wesemann
Stage 5: Gawler to Tanunda - 156km | Winner: Erik Zabel
Stage 6: Adelaide - 96km | Robbie McEwen
The Tour Down Under is a cycling race in and around Adelaide, South Australia, and is traditionally the opening event of the UCI World Tour and features all 19 UCI World Tour Teams.
The race was established in 1999. It has seen rapid growth in its first two decades, having notably become the first race to be granted UCI ProTour status in 2008, and becoming the first event of the UCI World Ranking calendar in 2009.
The race is traditionally held in the middle of the Australian summer season and features a series of stages incorporating hills and flat sections over a six-day period.
The rider with the lowest cumulative time after each stage is honoured with the Ochre Jersey. Similarly, leaders in the Sprint, Mountains and Youth classifications wear jerseys to signify their positions in those standings.
The Tour Down Under is currently the highest-ranked professional road cycling race in the southern hemisphere by start list quality.
From its inception Michael Turtur, has been its internationally recognized Race Director. Turtur officially handed over the reins of Race Director to Stuart O'Grady at the end of 2020 race.