1975 Paris-Tours
0 sources
1975 Paris-Tours
Summary
1975 Paris-Tours is a Paris–Tours[1]. It ranks in the top 8% of paris_tours entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (4 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- 1975 Paris-Tours won the Freddy Maertens[3].
- 1975 Paris-Tours won the Frans Van Looy[4].
- 1975 Paris-Tours won the Roger De Vlaeminck[5].
- 1975 Paris-Tours is in the country of France[6].
- 1975 Paris-Tours's instance of is recorded as Paris–Tours[7].
- 1975 Paris-Tours's follows is recorded as 1974 Paris-Tours[8].
- 1975 Paris-Tours's followed by is recorded as 1976 Paris-Tours[9].
- 1975 Paris-Tours's part of is recorded as 1975 Super Prestige Pernod[10].
- 1975 Paris-Tours's edition number is recorded as 69[11].
- 1975 Paris-Tours's point in time is recorded as +1975-09-28T00:00:00Z[12].
- 1975 Paris-Tours's sport is recorded as road bicycle racing[13].
- 1975 Paris-Tours's participating team is recorded as Brooklyn[14].
- 1975 Paris-Tours's participating team is recorded as Filotex[15].
- 1975 Paris-Tours's participating team is recorded as Flandria[16].
- 1975 Paris-Tours's participating team is recorded as Frisol[17].
- 1975 Paris-Tours's participating team is recorded as Mercier[18].
- 1975 Paris-Tours's participating team is recorded as Gitane-Campagnolo[19].
- 1975 Paris-Tours's participating team is recorded as IJsboerke[20].
- 1975 Paris-Tours's participating team is recorded as Jobo[21].
- 1975 Paris-Tours's participating team is recorded as Maes Pils-Watney 1975[22].
- 1975 Paris-Tours's participating team is recorded as Miko-de Gribaldy-Superia[23].
- 1975 Paris-Tours's participating team is recorded as Molteni-Campagnolo[24].
- 1975 Paris-Tours's participating team is recorded as Peugeot cycling team[25].
- 1975 Paris-Tours's participating team is recorded as TI-Raleigh[26].
- 1975 Paris-Tours's general classification of race participants is recorded as Freddy Maertens[27].
Body
Recognition
Wins include Freddy Maertens[3], a sport cyclist[28], b. 1952[29], of Belgium[30]; Frans Van Looy[4], a sport cyclist[31], 1950–2019[32], of Belgium[33]; and Roger De Vlaeminck[5], a cyclo-cross cyclist[34], b. 1947[35], of Belgium[36].
Why It Matters
1975 Paris-Tours ranks in the top 8% of paris_tours entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (4 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[37]
FAQs
What awards did 1975 Paris-Tours receive?
Honors received include Freddy Maertens[3], Frans Van Looy[4], and Roger De Vlaeminck[5].