1957 Paris–Nice
0 sources
1957 Paris–Nice
Summary
1957 Paris–Nice is a Paris–Nice[1]. It draws 4 Wikipedia views per month (paris_nice category, ranking #9 of 77).[2]
Key Facts
- 1957 Paris–Nice won the Jacques Anquetil[3].
- 1957 Paris–Nice won the Seamus Elliott[4].
- 1957 Paris–Nice won the Helyett-Hutchinson[5].
- 1957 Paris–Nice won the Désiré Keteleer[6].
- 1957 Paris–Nice won the Jean Brankart[7].
- 1957 Paris–Nice is in the country of France[8].
- 1957 Paris–Nice's instance of is recorded as Paris–Nice[9].
- 1957 Paris–Nice's follows is recorded as 1956 Paris–Nice[10].
- 1957 Paris–Nice's followed by is recorded as 1958 Paris–Nice[11].
- 1957 Paris–Nice's edition number is recorded as 15[12].
- 1957 Paris–Nice's has part is recorded as 1957 Paris-Nice, Stage 1[13].
- 1957 Paris–Nice's has part is recorded as 1957 Paris-Nice, Stage 2[14].
- 1957 Paris–Nice's has part is recorded as 1957 Paris-Nice, Stage 3[15].
- 1957 Paris–Nice's has part is recorded as 1957 Paris-Nice, Stage 4[16].
- 1957 Paris–Nice's has part is recorded as 1957 Paris-Nice, Stage 5a[17].
- 1957 Paris–Nice's has part is recorded as 1957 Paris-Nice, Stage 5b[18].
- 1957 Paris–Nice's has part is recorded as 1957 Paris-Nice, Stage 6[19].
- 1957 Paris–Nice's start time is recorded as +1957-03-12T00:00:00Z[20].
- 1957 Paris–Nice's end time is recorded as +1957-03-17T00:00:00Z[21].
- 1957 Paris–Nice's sport is recorded as road bicycle racing[22].
- 1957 Paris–Nice's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/05yrws7[23].
- 1957 Paris–Nice's number of participants is recorded as {'amount': '+88'}[24].
- 1957 Paris–Nice's number of participants is recorded as {'amount': '+67'}[25].
- 1957 Paris–Nice's start point is recorded as Paris[26].
- 1957 Paris–Nice's destination point is recorded as Nice[27].
Body
Recognition
Wins include Jacques Anquetil[3], a sport cyclist[28], 1934–1987[29], of France[30], awarded the Knight of the Legion of Honour[31], specialised in cycling[32]; Seamus Elliott[4], a sport cyclist[33], 1934–1971[34], of Ireland[35]; Helyett-Hutchinson[5], a professional cycling team[36], in France[37], founded in 1932[38]; Désiré Keteleer[6], a sport cyclist[39], 1920–1970[40], of Belgium[41]; and Jean Brankart[7], a sport cyclist[42], 1930–2020[43], of Belgium[44].
Why It Matters
1957 Paris–Nice draws 4 Wikipedia views per month (paris_nice category, ranking #9 of 77).[2]
FAQs
What awards did 1957 Paris–Nice receive?
Honors received include Jacques Anquetil[3], Seamus Elliott[4], Helyett-Hutchinson[5], and Désiré Keteleer[6].