1996 Japan Cup
0 sources
1996 Japan Cup
Summary
1996 Japan Cup is a Japan Cup[1]. It draws 1 Wikipedia views per month (japan_cup category, ranking #2 of 3).[2]
Key Facts
- 1996 Japan Cup won the Mauro Gianetti[3].
- 1996 Japan Cup won the Pascal Hervé[4].
- 1996 Japan Cup won the Andrea Peron[5].
- 1996 Japan Cup is in the country of Japan[6].
- 1996 Japan Cup's instance of is recorded as Japan Cup[7].
- 1996 Japan Cup's follows is recorded as 1995 Japan Cup[8].
- 1996 Japan Cup's followed by is recorded as 1997 Japan Cup[9].
- 1996 Japan Cup's part of is recorded as 1996 UCI Road World Cup[10].
- 1996 Japan Cup's edition number is recorded as 5[11].
- 1996 Japan Cup's point in time is recorded as +1996-10-27T00:00:00Z[12].
- 1996 Japan Cup's sport is recorded as road bicycle racing[13].
- 1996 Japan Cup's number of participants is recorded as {'amount': '+134'}[14].
- 1996 Japan Cup's number of participants is recorded as {'amount': '+28'}[15].
- 1996 Japan Cup's start point is recorded as Utsunomiya[16].
- 1996 Japan Cup's destination point is recorded as Utsunomiya[17].
- 1996 Japan Cup's participating team is recorded as Polti 1996[18].
- 1996 Japan Cup's participating team is recorded as Festina[19].
- 1996 Japan Cup's participating team is recorded as Q1929027[20].
- 1996 Japan Cup's participating team is recorded as Mapei[21].
- 1996 Japan Cup's participating team is recorded as Refin-Mobilvetta 1996[22].
- 1996 Japan Cup's participating team is recorded as Rabobank 1996[23].
- 1996 Japan Cup's participating team is recorded as T-Mobile[24].
- 1996 Japan Cup's participating team is recorded as Aki[25].
- 1996 Japan Cup's participating team is recorded as Gewiss-Ballan[26].
- 1996 Japan Cup's participating team is recorded as Panaria-Vinavil 1996[27].
Body
Recognition
Wins include Mauro Gianetti[3], a sport cyclist[28], b. 1964[29], of Switzerland[30]; Pascal Hervé[4], a sport cyclist[31], 1964–2024[32], of France[33]; and Andrea Peron[5], a sport cyclist[34], b. 1971[35], of Italy[36].
Why It Matters
1996 Japan Cup draws 1 Wikipedia views per month (japan_cup category, ranking #2 of 3).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[37]
FAQs
What awards did 1996 Japan Cup receive?
Honors received include Mauro Gianetti[3], Pascal Hervé[4], and Andrea Peron[5].