1997 GP Ouest-France
0 sources
1997 GP Ouest-France
Summary
1997 GP Ouest-France is a Bretagne Classic[1]. It draws 1 Wikipedia views per month (bretagne_classic category, ranking #3 of 24).[2]
Key Facts
- 1997 GP Ouest-France won the Andrea Ferrigato[3].
- 1997 GP Ouest-France won the Sergio Barbero[4].
- 1997 GP Ouest-France won the Chris Horner[5].
- 1997 GP Ouest-France is in the country of France[6].
- 1997 GP Ouest-France's instance of is recorded as Bretagne Classic[7].
- 1997 GP Ouest-France's follows is recorded as 1996 GP Ouest-France[8].
- 1997 GP Ouest-France's followed by is recorded as 1998 GP Ouest-France[9].
- 1997 GP Ouest-France's edition number is recorded as 61[10].
- 1997 GP Ouest-France's point in time is recorded as +1997-08-31T00:00:00Z[11].
- 1997 GP Ouest-France's sport is recorded as cycle sport[12].
- 1997 GP Ouest-France's sport is recorded as road bicycle racing[13].
- 1997 GP Ouest-France's start point is recorded as Plouay[14].
- 1997 GP Ouest-France's destination point is recorded as Plouay[15].
- 1997 GP Ouest-France's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/122rvk48[16].
- 1997 GP Ouest-France's event distance is recorded as {'unit': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q828224', 'amount': '+209'}[17].
- 1997 GP Ouest-France's FirstCycling race ID is recorded as 22&y=1997[18].
Body
Recognition
Wins include Andrea Ferrigato[3], a sport cyclist[19], b. 1969[20], of Italy[21]; Sergio Barbero[4], a sport cyclist[22], b. 1969[23], of Italy[24]; and Chris Horner[5], a sport cyclist[25], b. 1971[26], of United States[27].
Why It Matters
1997 GP Ouest-France draws 1 Wikipedia views per month (bretagne_classic category, ranking #3 of 24).[2]
FAQs
What awards did 1997 GP Ouest-France receive?
Honors received include Andrea Ferrigato[3], Sergio Barbero[4], and Chris Horner[5].