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The Victorian Cycling Grand Prix was a one-day classic road bicycle race held in October 1946. It was the longest and richest cycling race in Australia that year, and at the time the longest one-day road cycling event ever staged in Victoria. The event also carried the Victorian Long Distance Championship for 1946.

Professional cycling events were largely suspended from 1940 to 1945 as a result of the second World War, and 1946 the Victorian Cycling Grand Prix was held in October at around the time the Warrnambool to Melbourne had been held in the pre-war years. It was described at the time as "Australia's 1946 cycling classic" and the winner (Phil Thomas, SA) was lauded as the "outstanding professional roadman in Australia in 1946" as a result of his performance in the race. Unlike the Warrnambool to Melbourne, the event was a Scratch Race with a massed start of close to 100 entrants, categorised into A, B and C grades.

The race covered 195 mi, starting in Bendigo at 5:50am before passing through Castlemaine, Maryborough, Ballarat and Geelong and finishing in front of a large crowd of nearly 10,000 at the Melbourne Showgrounds, where a large all-sports carnival was held on the same day. The race was neutralised at Meredith (123 miles) while competitors were transported by truck over six miles of unmade road. Town sprints were contested at many towns along the route, and a large cash prize was available for the best breakaway. The first 20 riders to finish went on to compete in an exhibition track race at the Showgrounds that evening.