1975 Tour de France, stage 2
0 sources
1975 Tour de France, stage 2
Summary
1975 Tour de France, stage 2 is a plain stage[1].
Key Facts
- 1975 Tour de France, stage 2 won the Ronald De Witte[2].
- 1975 Tour de France, stage 2 won the Francesco Moser[3].
- 1975 Tour de France, stage 2 won the Lucien Van Impe[4].
- 1975 Tour de France, stage 2 won the Marc Demeyer[5].
- 1975 Tour de France, stage 2 won the Carpenter-Confortluxe-Flandria 1975[6].
- 1975 Tour de France, stage 2 won the Jean-Claude Misac[7].
- 1975 Tour de France, stage 2 is in the country of France[8].
- 1975 Tour de France, stage 2's instance of is recorded as plain stage[9].
- 1975 Tour de France, stage 2's follows is recorded as 1975 Tour de France, stage 1b[10].
- 1975 Tour de France, stage 2's followed by is recorded as 1975 Tour de France, stage 3[11].
- 1975 Tour de France, stage 2's part of is recorded as 1975 Tour de France[12].
- 1975 Tour de France, stage 2's point in time is recorded as +1975-06-28T00:00:00Z[13].
- 1975 Tour de France, stage 2's sport is recorded as road bicycle racing[14].
- 1975 Tour de France, stage 2's start point is recorded as Roubaix[15].
- 1975 Tour de France, stage 2's destination point is recorded as Amiens[16].
- 1975 Tour de France, stage 2's series ordinal is recorded as 2[17].
- 1975 Tour de France, stage 2's event distance is recorded as {'unit': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q828224', 'amount': '+121.5'}[18].
- 1975 Tour de France, stage 2's FirstCycling race ID is recorded as 17&y=1975&e=3[19].
Body
Recognition
Wins include Ronald De Witte[2], a road cyclist[20], b. 1946[21], of Belgium[22]; Francesco Moser[3], a sport cyclist[23], b. 1951[24], of Italy[25]; Lucien Van Impe[4], a sport cyclist[26], b. 1946[27], of Belgium[28]; Marc Demeyer[5], a sport cyclist[29], 1950–1982[30], of Belgium[31]; Carpenter-Confortluxe-Flandria 1975[6], a cycling team season[32], in Belgium[33]; and Jean-Claude Misac[7], a sport cyclist[34], 1948–1975[35], of France[36].
FAQs
What awards did 1975 Tour de France, stage 2 receive?
Honors received include Ronald De Witte[2], Francesco Moser[3], Lucien Van Impe[4], and Marc Demeyer[5].