1997 Tour de Romandie
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1997 Tour de Romandie
Summary
1997 Tour de Romandie is a Tour de Romandie[1]. It draws 7 Wikipedia views per month (tour_de_romandie category, ranking #20 of 50).[2]
Key Facts
- 1997 Tour de Romandie won the Pavel Tonkov[3].
- 1997 Tour de Romandie won the Chris Boardman[4].
- 1997 Tour de Romandie won the Beat Zberg[5].
- 1997 Tour de Romandie is in the country of Switzerland[6].
- 1997 Tour de Romandie's instance of is recorded as Tour de Romandie[7].
- 1997 Tour de Romandie's follows is recorded as 1996 Tour de Romandie[8].
- 1997 Tour de Romandie's followed by is recorded as 1998 Tour de Romandie[9].
- 1997 Tour de Romandie's edition number is recorded as 51[10].
- 1997 Tour de Romandie's start time is recorded as +1997-05-06T00:00:00Z[11].
- 1997 Tour de Romandie's end time is recorded as +1997-05-11T00:00:00Z[12].
- 1997 Tour de Romandie's sport is recorded as road bicycle racing[13].
- 1997 Tour de Romandie's start point is recorded as Kriegstetten[14].
- 1997 Tour de Romandie's destination point is recorded as Geneva[15].
- 1997 Tour de Romandie's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/11c5rmmz60[16].
- 1997 Tour de Romandie's event distance is recorded as {'unit': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q828224', 'amount': '+760'}[17].
- 1997 Tour de Romandie's FirstCycling race ID is recorded as 12&y=1997[18].
Body
Recognition
Wins include Pavel Tonkov[3], a sport cyclist[19], b. 1969[20], of Russia[21], awarded the Honoured Master of Sports of Russia[22]; Chris Boardman[4], a track cyclist[23], b. 1968[24], of United Kingdom[25], awarded the Member of the Order of the British Empire[26]; and Beat Zberg[5], a sport cyclist[27], b. 1971[28], of Switzerland[29].
Why It Matters
1997 Tour de Romandie draws 7 Wikipedia views per month (tour_de_romandie category, ranking #20 of 50).[2]
FAQs
What awards did 1997 Tour de Romandie receive?
Honors received include Pavel Tonkov[3], Chris Boardman[4], and Beat Zberg[5].